Workplace Health and Safety in Victoria
Reviewed by the Commoner Law Editorial Team. Sourced from Commonwealth Acts of Parliament, federal regulations, and official government guidance. State-level information reflects each state's own Acts and court decisions. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
What is this right?
Under the Work Health and Safety (WHS) Act 2011, your employer (called a PCBU — Person Conducting a Business or Undertaking) has a primary duty of care to ensure your health, safety, and welfare at work, so far as is reasonably practicable.
This means your employer must:
- Provide a safe work environment, safe equipment, and adequate training.
- Identify and manage risks to health and safety.
- Provide adequate facilities (toilets, drinking water, first aid).
- Consult with workers about health and safety matters that affect them.
Workers also have the right to elect Health and Safety Representatives (HSRs) who can represent them on safety issues, issue Provisional Improvement Notices, and direct a cease-work if there is a serious and immediate risk.
You have the right to cease or refuse unsafe work if you have a reasonable concern that carrying out the work would expose you to a serious risk to your health or safety.
When does it apply?
- You are a worker — this includes employees, contractors, subcontractors, apprentices, volunteers, and work experience students.
- The WHS Act applies to Commonwealth workplaces directly and has been adopted as model law by every state and territory except Victoria (which has its own OHS Act) and Western Australia (which adopted it in 2022).
What to Do If Your Australian Workplace Is Unsafe or Ignoring Safety Hazards
- Report any hazard to your supervisor or Health and Safety Representative immediately.
- If there is a serious risk, you may cease work — tell your employer straight away and stay at the workplace.
- Report serious incidents (death, serious injury, dangerous incidents) to Safe Work Australia or your state/territory regulator immediately.
- If your employer retaliates, lodge a general protections claim with the Fair Work Commission.
What should you NOT do?
- Don't ignore safety concerns — even small hazards can lead to serious injuries.
- Don't assume raising safety issues will get you fired. The law protects you from retaliation under the adverse action provisions of the Fair Work Act (s 340-352).
- Don't tamper with or remove safety equipment — workers have a duty to comply with reasonable safety instructions.
How Victoria differs from federal law
Victoria has not adopted the national model Work Health and Safety Act. Instead, Victoria retains its own Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004 (Vic), enforced by WorkSafe Victoria.
- WorkSafe Victoria is both the workplace safety regulator and the workers' compensation insurer for Victoria. It inspects workplaces, prosecutes offences, and manages claims — a dual role unique among Australian states.
- Under the OHS Act 2004, employers must provide and maintain a working environment that is safe and without risks to health, so far as is reasonably practicable (s 21). Workers have the right to cease unsafe work (s 74).
- Workers' compensation in Victoria is governed by the Workplace Injury Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2013 (Vic) (WIRC Act). Injured workers receive weekly payments, medical and like expenses, and lump-sum compensation for permanent impairment.
- Victoria introduced the Workplace Injury Rehabilitation and Compensation Amendment (WorkCover Scheme Modernisation) Act 2023, which significantly reformed the scheme — including time limits on mental injury claims for certain conditions and changes to weekly payment step-downs.
- Disputes go to the Workplace Injury Commission (formerly the Accident Compensation Conciliation Service) and then the County Court of Victoria for serious injury claims.
Additional Steps in Victoria
Report unsafe workplaces to WorkSafe Victoria (1800 136 089 or worksafe.vic.gov.au). Lodge workers' compensation claims through your employer to WorkSafe. For disputes, contact the Workplace Injury Commission. Free legal advice is available from JobWatch and community legal centres.
Relevant Law: Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004 (Vic); Workplace Injury Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2013 (Vic); Dangerous Goods Act 1985 (Vic)
Common Questions
When does workplace health and safety apply?
You are a worker — this includes employees, contractors, subcontractors, apprentices, volunteers, and work experience students.The WHS Act applies to Commonwealth workplaces directly and has been adopted as model law by every state and territory except Victoria (which has its own OHS Act) and Western Australia (which adopted it in 2022).
What should I do if my workplace in Australia has unsafe conditions my employer won't fix?
Report any hazard to your supervisor or Health and Safety Representative immediately.If there is a serious risk, you may cease work — tell your employer straight away and stay at the workplace.Report serious incidents (death, serious injury, dangerous incidents) to Safe Work Australia or your state/territory regulator immediately.If your employer retaliates, lodge a general protections claim with the Fair Work Commission.
What mistakes should I avoid with workplace health and safety?
Don't ignore safety concerns — even small hazards can lead to serious injuries.Don't assume raising safety issues will get you fired. The law protects you from retaliation under the adverse action provisions of the Fair Work Act (s 340-352).Don't tamper with or remove safety equipment — workers have a duty to comply with reasonable safety instructions.
Workplace Health and Safety in other states
Same topic, different jurisdiction. Pick the one that applies to you.