Is your site shielded from certain OSHA inspections in FY 2026?
OSHA quietly updated a table that indicates which industries are barred from not all inspections but programmed safety inspections under certain conditions. The agency revised its roster of “low-hazard industries” that are off-limits if a site has up to 10 employees. The new list is driven by fresh 2024 data showing the nearly 500 industry sectors with estimated days away, restricted, or transferred (DART) work injury/illness incidence rates below the 1.4 national private-sector average.
Find the table in a February 2, 2026, memo, “Low-Hazard Industries Table of NAICS under the Appropriations Act.” It carries weight because OSHA directive CPL 02-00-170 uses this industry list to determine which subsectors are free from programmed safety inspections in a given fiscal year (FY) if an establishment meets the size criteria. The directive offers a mechanism for OSHA to apply enforcement carve outs required by Congress.
Background
The FY 2026 OSHA budget bill was signed into law on February 3, 2026. It covers funding through September 30, 2026. As has been the case for decades, lawmakers slipped in a rider with OSHA enforcement exemptions and limitations. One of those is for employers with no more than 10 employees in a “low-hazard industry.”
OSHA is not allowed to use federal dollars to “administer or enforce” any regulation under the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act) for qualifying employers, except for assistance, training, studies, and actions related to:
- Imminent dangers,
- Health hazards,
- Fatalities,
- Incidents with two or more hospitalizations, and
- Worker complaints.
Unless there’s a complaint, imminent danger, fatality, or two or more hospitalizations, it means OSHA cannot conduct programmed inspections for “safety hazards” at qualifying sites. Programmed inspections are sometimes called targeted or planned inspections. They include national, regional, and local emphasis programs; inspection scheduling for construction; the site-specific targeting program; and the severe violator enforcement program.
Rider applicability criteria
According to CPL 02-00-170, the small employer/low-hazard industry rider applies only if both of the following criteria are met:
- An employer has 10 or fewer employees currently and has not had more than 10 employees at any time during the previous 12 months; and
- The DART rate for the employer's industry is currently below the national DART average, per the most recently published labor statistics.
OSHA sources say the number of employees is not for a company but for a single location. Even large companies with 10 or fewer employees at a site will discover that the location comes under this loophole if its sector is exempt.
Qualified employer locations must still comply with applicable OSHA regulations, however. For example, under 29 CFR 1904.39(a)(3), employers covered by the OSH Act must report to OSHA any work-related incident that results in a/an:
- Fatality,
- In-patient hospitalization,
- Amputation, or
- Loss of an eye.
Once one of these reports is received, the agency determines if an “unprogrammed” inspection or investigation will be conducted.
Low-hazard industries and OSHA EEL webpage
The new table itemizes 489 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes for industries that qualify for limited OSHA enforcement activities opened on and after January 22, 2026. The 489 figure is a slight increase from 485 industry codes identified back in November 2024.
The industries on the latest list had a DART rate below the national average of 1.4 per 100 full-time equivalent workers in 2024. That average comes from 2024 incidence rate data recently published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Because injury and illness rates shift annually, OSHA’s lineup of low-hazard industries changes with them. In fact, OSHA made more than 100 additions and over 100 deletions with the February 2nd memo. Your industry may or may not be shown in any given year.
If your industry tends to jump on and off the listing, you may wish to monitor the OSHA Enforcement Exemptions and Limitations Under the Appropriations Act webpage — call it the OSHA EEL webpage for short. It provides links to the current and historical memos, as well as the CPL.
OSHA inspector instructions
Complete instructions for OSHA officers on how to handle the rider are found in CPL 02-00-170. Yet, a few practical instructions are shared in the memo, and these relate to:
- Construction inspections and exempted and non-exempted contractors,
- Not proposing citations for an inspection that was conducted when the employer is later found to be immune from that inspection, and
- Rescinding erroneously issued citations.
Note that the CPL features not only inspector procedures and clarifications but also 18 frequently asked questions and a link to the OSHA EEL webpage.
Key to remember
OSHA posted its FY 2026 low-hazard industries table based on the average DART rate for 2024. It helps agency inspectors sort out which establishments with a workforce of 10 or fewer employees qualify for certain enforcement exemptions and limitations.






















































