Skid-Steer Loader Operations SWMS
Skid-steer loader operations across construction, landscaping, demolition and agricultural use β attachment change, confined-yard work, pedestrian exclusion, tip-over and run-away prevention.
SWMS variants reference your stateβs WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.
Skid-steer loader operations expose workers and bystanders to one of the highest-risk classes of mobile plant on Australian worksites β tight-radius machines with rapid attachment changes, restricted visibility, and a documented history of crush, rollover and run-over fatalities across construction, landscaping, demolition and agricultural settings. Under Model WHS Regulations Chapter 4 Part 4.5, the operation of powered mobile plant is a prescribed High Risk Construction Work activity requiring a documented Safe Work Method Statement before work commences. The SWMS must identify the specific hazards of the task, the controls selected against the hierarchy of control, and the consultation undertaken with operators and exposed workers. This SWMS template addresses the full operational envelope including pre-start inspection, attachment coupling, pedestrian exclusion zones, slope and tip-over management, and safe shutdown β aligning to the Safe Work Australia Code of Practice for Managing the Risks of Plant in the Workplace and AS 2294 rollover/falling object protective structure requirements.
Hazards identified
7 hazards covered, sorted by priority.
Operator crush fatality or severe spinal injury; PCBU faces s32 reckless conduct prosecution and ROPS adequacy inquiry
Fatal run-over or amputation; coroner referral and prosecution under WHS Reg 215 for failure to separate plant from persons
Fatal thoracic crush or traumatic amputation; Category 1 offence for omitting locked-out energy isolation procedure
Bystander fatality or property destruction; PCBU liable under WHS Reg 213 for inadequate plant control measures
Falling attachment strikes operator or ground worker causing fatal head or limb injury; non-conformance with AS 4024
Sub-dermal oil injection injury requiring surgical decompression; permanent tissue necrosis if treatment delayed beyond hours
Chronic lumbar disc degeneration and noise-induced hearing loss; workers compensation claims and Reg 57 exposure-standard breach
Control measures
Hierarchy-of-controls order: elimination β substitution β isolation β engineering β administrative β PPE.
- 1Elimination β Eliminate operator-on-foot proximity by completing earthworks with larger ride-on plant where the work envelope permits, removing skid-steer use entirely from confined pedestrian zones.
- 2Elimination β Remove the need to enter the lift arm zone during maintenance by scheduling attachment servicing off-site at a workshop with overhead crane support.
- 3Substitution β Substitute manual quick-hitch couplers with hydraulic auto-locking couplers compliant with AS 4024.1 to remove the requirement for the operator to dismount for attachment changes.
- 4Substitution β Replace open-ROPS legacy machines with enclosed FOPS/ROPS cab models meeting AS 2294.1 for falling object and rollover protection on demolition tasks.
- 5Engineering β Install proximity detection systems, reversing cameras and audible travel alarms on all skid-steers operating where pedestrians cannot be physically excluded per Plant Code of Practice section 4.3.
- 6Engineering β Fit lift-arm mechanical support struts and isolate hydraulic and electrical energy sources using lockout-tagout devices before any worker enters the articulation zone.
- 7Administrative β Establish and physically barricade a pedestrian exclusion zone extending a minimum of the machine's maximum reach plus three metres, controlled by a dedicated spotter in radio contact with the operator.
- 8Administrative β Verify operator competency through documented VOC assessment, conduct daily pre-start inspections using the manufacturer's checklist, and prohibit operation on slopes exceeding the rated gradient.
- 9PPE β Issue and enforce wearing of the integrated seat belt or lap restraint at all times the engine is running, in accordance with WHS Reg 215 and manufacturer specifications.
- 10PPE β Provide Class H high-visibility garments compliant with AS/NZS 4602.1, Class 5 hearing protection, AS/NZS 1801 hard hats, and AS/NZS 2210.3 safety footwear to all personnel within the operating zone.
Applicable Codes of Practice
Imposes PCBU duty to identify plant hazards, apply hierarchy of controls, and ensure operator competency under Regs 200, 213 and 215 specifically.
Provides the approved guidance for mobile plant separation, exclusion zones, ROPS adequacy and pre-start inspection regimes referenced in Reg 274.
Sets the certified rollover and falling object protection performance standard that skid-steer cabs must demonstrate for compliant use on Australian sites.
Defines the interlock and quick-hitch coupler integrity standard required to prevent inadvertent attachment release during normal operation cycles.
High-Risk Construction Work triggered
Skid-steer loaders are powered mobile plant by definition under Reg 5, and all operational tasks fall within the Schedule 1 Category 13 trigger requiring a documented SWMS.
PCBUs must prepare, consult workers on, and retain the SWMS for the duration of work plus two years after a notifiable incident; penalties are substantial and indexed, with the current maximum following the prevailing WHS schedule.
Who this is for
- βCivil contractors operating skid-steers on residential subdivisions
- βLandscaping crews undertaking confined-yard earthworks
- βDemolition contractors performing internal strip-out works
- βAgricultural operators using skid-steers in livestock yards
What you receive
- βEditable DOCX template β Microsoft Word compatible
- βState-specific WHS legislation schedule (NSW/VIC/QLD/SA/WA/TAS/NT/ACT)
- βHazard register with risk ratings + hierarchy-of-control mapping
- βWorker sign-on register, pre-start checklist, and incident escalation flow
Worked example
On a suburban townhouse civil package, a site supervisor convenes the pre-start brief at the skid-steer compound before commencing footing excavation in a confined rear-yard envelope bounded by a neighbouring boundary fence and an active scaffold. The supervisor opens this SWMS on the site tablet and walks the two-person crew β operator and ground spotter β through the hazard register, pausing on the tip-over and pedestrian-strike entries because the slab edge sits within the machine's reach envelope. The crew agrees to deploy temporary water-filled barriers to establish the exclusion zone, confirms the operator holds a current VOC, and the spotter takes possession of a UHF handset on the agreed channel. During sign-on, each worker initials the consultation panel acknowledging the lift-arm energy isolation procedure required for the planned four-in-one bucket swap at smoko. Two hours in, a concrete delivery arrives and reshapes the pedestrian path; the supervisor pauses work, reopens the SWMS on the tablet, adds the revised exclusion zone as a field amendment, and re-briefs the crew before resuming. The SWMS sign-on sheet is photographed and uploaded to the project compliance folder at shift end, satisfying the retention duty under WHS Reg 300 and providing the audit trail required if a notifiable incident were to occur.
Related legislation
- WHS Act 2011 (model)
- WHS Regulation 2025
- AS 2550 β Cranes, hoists and winches; AS 1418 series