Window Cleaning SWMS
Commercial and residential window cleaning at ground level and first-storey using poles, ladders, and cherry pickers. Covers chemical handling, slip/trip hazards, and working near traffic.
SWMS variants reference your stateβs WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.
Window cleaning at ground level and up to first-storey height presents a deceptive risk profile β workers routinely combine ladder work, extension pole manipulation, chemical handling, and operation near pedestrian or vehicular traffic. Under WHS Regulation 2025, any task involving a foreseeable fall of more than two metres is classified as High Risk Construction Work (HRCW Category 1) and triggers a mandatory Safe Work Method Statement before work commences. Even sub-2m work attracts the PCBU's primary duty under section 19 of the WHS Act to eliminate or minimise risks so far as is reasonably practicable. This SWMS addresses the specific hazard cocktail of fall-from-height, glycol-ether and ammonia exposure, ladder instability on uneven surfaces, public interface, and ergonomic loading from overhead pole work. It is purpose-built for commercial and residential cleaners working from poles, A-frame and extension ladders, and small EWPs β and excludes rope access or building maintenance unit work which require a separate height-specific SWMS.
Hazards identified
7 hazards covered, sorted by priority.
Fractures, spinal injury, traumatic brain injury or fatality; PCBU prosecution under WHS Act s32 reckless conduct provisions
Sudden ground impact causing pelvic fracture, wrist fracture or head strike on adjacent hard surfaces
Corneal burns, chemical conjunctivitis, permanent vision impairment requiring emergency eye irrigation and ophthalmology referral
Crush injuries, multi-trauma or fatality; SafeWork notifiable incident under WHS Act Part 3 reporting obligations
Rotator cuff tendinopathy, cervical strain, chronic shoulder impingement leading to workers compensation claims and lost-time injury
Same-level fall causing wrist fracture, coccyx injury, or secondary impact with glass shopfront
Electrocution, cardiac arrest, severe burns; breach of WHS Reg 2025 Part 4.7 electrical exclusion zones
Control measures
Hierarchy-of-controls order: elimination β substitution β isolation β engineering β administrative β PPE.
- 1Elimination β Use water-fed carbon-fibre pole systems from ground level wherever first-storey glass is reachable, eliminating ladder use and removing the fall-from-height hazard entirely.
- 2Elimination β Decline scope items requiring access above 2m unless an EWP or rope access SWMS is in place; document refusal in pre-job risk assessment.
- 3Substitution β Replace ammonia and glycol-ether cleaners with low-toxicity surfactant or pure deionised water systems, reducing inhalation and dermal exposure per HSIS exposure standards.
- 4Substitution β Use non-conductive fibreglass or carbon-fibre poles in place of aluminium where any overhead electrical infrastructure is present within 3m of the work zone.
- 5Engineering β Deploy industrial-rated ladder stabilisers, anti-slip feet, and ground mats (AS/NZS 1892.5) on all ladder setups; isolate work area with bollards or A-frame barriers.
- 6Engineering β Install drip trays and absorbent runoff mats beneath wash zones on smooth flooring to prevent slip hazards in public thoroughfares.
- 7Administrative β Conduct documented pre-start briefing using this SWMS, confirm sign-on by every worker, and complete a site-specific ladder/EWP setup checklist before each access cycle.
- 8Administrative β Schedule shopfront cleaning outside peak pedestrian and vehicle hours; deploy a dedicated spotter when working within 2m of any active trafficked area.
- 9PPE β Wear ANSI/AS-rated chemical splash safety goggles (AS/NZS 1337.1), nitrile chemical gloves, and slip-resistant footwear (AS/NZS 2210.3) throughout all cleaning operations.
- 10PPE β Don high-visibility vest (AS/NZS 4602.1 Class D/N) for any work within 5m of vehicle movement areas, and use forearm-supported pole harness for sustained overhead pole work exceeding 30 minutes.
Applicable Codes of Practice
Establishes the hierarchy for fall prevention; triggers mandatory SWMS where fall risk exceeds 2m and prescribes ladder selection and setup duties.
Mandates ladder angle, footing, three-point contact, and load rating obligations directly applicable to all first-storey window cleaning ladder operations.
Defines fall above 2m as HRCW Category 1, requiring a SWMS prepared, communicated, and retained for the duration of the work plus two years.
Requires SDS access, exposure controls, and PPE selection for ammonia and glycol-ether window cleaning products under WHS Reg 2025 Part 7.1.
High-Risk Construction Work triggered
First-storey window access via extension ladder or EWP routinely places the worker's feet above 2m, satisfying the Schedule 1 Category 1 threshold.
PCBU must prepare the SWMS before work starts, consult workers during development, retain it for two years post-incident or job completion; penalties are substantial and indexed annually under the prevailing WHS penalty schedule.
Who this is for
- βCommercial window cleaning contractors and sole traders
- βResidential cleaning franchisees servicing two-storey homes
- βFacility managers procuring external glazing maintenance
- βShopping centre and strata cleaning service providers
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
A two-person window cleaning crew arrives at a suburban medical centre to clean ground-floor and first-storey external glazing. Before unloading equipment, the lead cleaner opens this SWMS on a tablet at the rear of the van and walks through it as the pre-start brief. They identify three site-specific hazards: a sloped concrete apron at the entry (slip and ladder slip-out risk), an overhead 240V service drop running parallel to the eastern wall (electrical contact risk via metal pole), and a busy carpark aisle within 3m of the shopfront (struck-by risk). Referencing the controls register, they swap the aluminium pole for a carbon-fibre water-fed pole on the eastern elevation, deploy bollards and an A-frame sign in the carpark aisle, and lay an absorbent runoff mat at the sloped entry. Both workers sign on to the SWMS, confirming PPE β splash goggles, nitrile gloves, hi-vis vest, slip-resistant boots. Midway through the job, a delivery vehicle attempts to reverse into the work zone; the spotter halts work, the crew steps back, and the lead cleaner notes the near-miss on the SWMS review section, upgrading the traffic control to require a second physical barrier for the remainder of the shift. The completed SWMS is uploaded to the contractor's compliance folder and retained for two years.
Related legislation
- WHS Act 2011 (model)
- WHS Regulation 2025
- Managing the Risk of Falls at Workplaces CoP