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Workplace Risk Assessments Identify Hazards. Protect Your People.

Comprehensive, legally compliant workplace risk assessments for every industry. We identify hazards, evaluate risks, assess existing controls and deliver practical, prioritised recommendations that protect your employees and satisfy HSE requirements.

135Workers killed at work (2023/24)
561KNon-fatal workplace injuries
£166HSE fee per hour of intervention
5+Employees = must record findings
Risk Assessments

What Is a Workplace Risk Assessment?

A workplace risk assessment is a systematic examination of your work activities, premises and processes to identify what could cause harm to people — and whether you're doing enough to prevent it. Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 (MHSWR), every employer must carry out a suitable and sufficient assessment of the risks to the health and safety of their employees and anyone else who may be affected by their work activities.

If you have five or more employees, the significant findings of your risk assessment must be recorded in writing. But regardless of your size, risk assessment is the foundation of every health and safety management system — without it, you're managing safety blind.

RADCaT's qualified health and safety consultants carry out thorough, practical workplace risk assessments for businesses of every size and sector across the UK. We don't produce generic templates — we visit your premises, walk your processes, talk to your team and produce site-specific, task-specific assessments that genuinely reflect your operations and give you a clear, prioritised action plan for improvement.

Whether you need a general workplace risk assessment for your office, a task-specific assessment for high-risk activities in a factory, a site-wide review for a multi-building campus, or a pre-project risk assessment for a construction site — RADCaT delivers expert, HSE-compliant assessments tailored to your industry and your operations.

HSE fees for intervention are £166/hour. If an inspector finds your risk assessments are missing, inadequate or out of date, you'll pay for every hour they spend investigating. A proper risk assessment from RADCaT is always cheaper than an HSE enforcement visit.

Workplace risk assessment from RADCaT
Types of Risk Assessment

Risk Assessments We Provide

Different hazards require different assessments. We cover them all.

General Workplace

Comprehensive assessment of your entire premises — office, warehouse, factory, shop or site. Covers slips and trips, workplace transport, electrical safety, housekeeping, lighting, temperature, ventilation and welfare facilities.

Task-Specific

Individual assessments for specific work activities — operating machinery, using power tools, working with chemicals, manual lifting, lone working, night work, driving for work and any other activity with identifiable hazards.

Fire Risk Assessment

Required under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 for every business premises. Covers fire hazards, ignition sources, escape routes, detection systems, extinguisher provision, emergency procedures and staff training. Learn more →

COSHH Assessment

Assessment of risks from hazardous substances — chemicals, dusts, fumes, biological agents. Identifies exposure routes, evaluates against Workplace Exposure Limits and recommends control measures. Learn more →

Manual Handling

Assessment of lifting, carrying, pushing and pulling tasks under the Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992. Evaluates load, individual capability, task and environment (LITE) factors. Learn more →

DSE Assessment

Display Screen Equipment assessments for office, hybrid and remote workers. Covers screen position, seating, desk height, lighting and posture to prevent eye strain, back pain and RSI. Learn more →

Working at Height

Assessment of any work where a person could fall a distance liable to cause injury — ladders, scaffolding, roofs, mezzanines, platforms and fragile surfaces. Learn more →

DSEAR Assessment

For workplaces with flammable liquids, gases, dusts or vapours. ATEX zone classification, ignition source mapping and explosion risk evaluation. Learn more →

Lone Worker Assessment

Assessing risks to staff who work alone — remote workers, security guards, community outreach, home visitors, night workers and on-call staff. Communication, monitoring and emergency procedures.

Our Process

How We Carry Out a Risk Assessment

1

Identify the Hazards

We walk your premises, observe your work activities, review your processes and talk to your staff to identify everything that could potentially cause harm — physical, chemical, biological, ergonomic and psychosocial hazards.

2

Decide Who Might Be Harmed

We identify who is at risk from each hazard — employees, contractors, visitors, members of the public, vulnerable persons, young workers, pregnant workers and people with disabilities.

3

Evaluate the Risks

We assess the likelihood of harm occurring and the potential severity, taking into account your existing control measures. Each risk is rated using a recognised risk matrix to prioritise actions.

4

Record & Recommend

We produce a comprehensive, documented risk assessment with clear findings and a prioritised action plan — immediate actions for high-risk items, scheduled improvements for medium risks and monitoring for low-risk items.

5

Review & Update

Risk assessments are living documents. We schedule reviews after significant changes, incidents or near-misses, and provide annual formal reviews as part of our retained packages to keep your assessments current and compliant.

Common Questions

Risk Assessment FAQ

Am I legally required to have a risk assessment?

Yes. Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 (Regulation 3), every employer must make a suitable and sufficient assessment of the risks to the health and safety of their employees and anyone else who may be affected by their undertaking. This applies to every business, regardless of size. If you have five or more employees, you must record the significant findings in writing. Self-employed persons must also assess risks to themselves and others affected by their work.

How often should risk assessments be reviewed?

Risk assessments should be reviewed whenever there are significant changes to your workplace, equipment, processes, substances or staffing. They must also be reviewed after any accident, incident or near-miss that suggests the current assessment may be inadequate. As best practice, RADCaT recommends a formal annual review of all risk assessments even if no changes have occurred — regulations evolve, and what was acceptable last year may not be this year. Our retained clients receive scheduled review visits.

Can I do my own risk assessments or do I need a professional?

The law requires risk assessments to be carried out by a "competent person" — someone with sufficient training, experience and knowledge to identify hazards and evaluate risks. For simple, low-risk workplaces you may be able to do basic assessments yourself using HSE templates. However, for any workplace with significant hazards — machinery, chemicals, heights, fire risks, manual handling — a qualified health and safety consultant will produce far more thorough, legally robust assessments that stand up to HSE scrutiny.

What happens during a risk assessment visit?

Our consultant visits your premises at an agreed time, walks every area and observes your work activities in progress. They examine equipment, processes, substances, workplace layout, housekeeping, welfare facilities and existing safety measures. They talk to staff about the hazards they encounter day-to-day. The visit typically takes 2–4 hours depending on the size and complexity of your workplace. You then receive a comprehensive written report with findings, risk ratings and a prioritised action plan.

What's the difference between a risk assessment and a method statement?

A risk assessment identifies what the hazards are and evaluates the level of risk. A method statement (or safe system of work) describes step-by-step how a task should be carried out safely, incorporating the control measures identified in the risk assessment. Together they form "RAMS" (Risk Assessment Method Statement) — commonly required in construction, maintenance and other high-risk activities. RADCaT produces both as part of our health and safety consultancy. Learn about method statements →

Do I need different risk assessments for different activities?

Yes. A general workplace risk assessment covers your premises and common hazards, but specific regulations require additional assessments for specific risks: COSHH assessments for hazardous substances, manual handling assessments for lifting tasks, DSE assessments for screen users, fire risk assessments for your premises, DSEAR assessments for flammable substances, and working at height assessments for elevated work. RADCaT carries out a comprehensive gap analysis to identify exactly which assessments your business needs.

How much does a workplace risk assessment cost?

Costs depend on the size of your premises, the complexity of your operations, the number of work activities requiring assessment and whether specialist assessments (COSHH, DSEAR, fire) are needed. We provide clear, fixed-price quotes after an initial discussion about your requirements — no hourly rates, no hidden extras. For businesses needing multiple assessments, our bundled packages offer significant savings. Contact us for a free initial consultation and no-obligation quote.

Do you carry out risk assessments across the whole UK?

Yes. While we're based in Wigan, Greater Manchester, we carry out risk assessments for businesses across the entire UK — from the North West across Yorkshire, the Midlands, London, the South, Scotland and Wales. We support single-site businesses and multi-site operations with consistent assessment standards across all your locations.

Need a Workplace Risk Assessment?

Get in touch for a free consultation. We'll discuss your requirements and provide a clear, no-obligation quote.