Reading the tea leaves in OSHA’s FY 2026 budget request
Where is OSHA headed next fiscal year (FY)? You “could” rely on the leaves swirling at the bottom of your teacup to make predictions. However, we have a better idea. Get a peek at the future by reviewing the agency’s budget request. It’s 74 pages, but we offer highlights.
Of course, the final budget bill for FY 2026 must be approved by Congress. Dollar figures will likely change in the final bill. While the latest budget request is not a surefire way to know what’s going to happen, it tells you where OSHA “wants” to go with rulemaking, guidance, enforcement, compliance assistance, and more. With that disclaimer, let’s dig in!
Budget request down nearly 8 percent
FY 2026 runs October 1, 2025, through September 30, 2026. OSHA requests about $582.4M. Compared to FY 2025, that’s a decrease of $49.9M or 7.9 percent from $632.3M. Cutbacks are projected in:
Area: | $ change: | % change: |
Personnel | −$17.2M* | -7.9% * |
Rulemaking/guidance | −$5M | −23.8% |
Federal enforcement | −$23.7M | −9.7% |
Compliance assistance | −$1.7M | −2.1% |
State programs | −$1.5M** | −1.3%** |
State consultation | −$800K | −1.3% |
Training grants | −$12.8M | −100% |
Whistleblower protection | −$1M | −3.8% |
Technical support | −$2.5M | −9.6% |
Safety/health statistics | −$1M | −2.8% |
* Removal of 223 full-time-equivalent (FTE) workers or 12.3% of workforce.
**Almost 6% fewer inspections projected in state-plan states.
Rulemaking/guidance
According to OSHA, the funding will allow it to:
- Move priority rulemakings through the process,
- Begin rulemakings to update older OSHA standards,
- Initiate new rulemakings for high-hazard industries/processes, and
- Address deregulatory activities related to new technology and regulatory burdens.
Unlike in prior budget requests, OSHA does not list the specific rulemakings anticipated. Instead, it says “regulatory activities are currently undergoing review.” Watch for the upcoming Spring 2025 Agenda (coming any day), which may announce the rulemakings now on the agency’s to-do list, as well as those the agency is no longer pursuing. Interestingly, two rulemakings already reached the review stage last week related to respiratory protection and the General Duty Clause.
OSHA expects to “produce 20 guidance products related to safety and health topics.” Those topics are not revealed. The agency will also update guidance on its topic pages “as needed.” What’s more, OSHA will continue to grow its “library of resources and tools for developing safety and health programs.”
Enforcement
OSHA requests a pullback in the number of inspections for FY 2026:
Inspection type: | FY 2024 target: | FY 2025 target: | FY 2026 request: | % change: |
Total safety/health | 34,346 34,625 actual | 34,914 | 24,929 | −29% |
Safety | 27,477 | 27,931 | 19,944 | −29% |
Health | 6,869 | 6,983 | 4,985 | −29% |
Construction | 17,516 | 17,806 | 12,714 | −29% |
Unprogrammed | 50% actual or 17,455 actual | 54% or 18,854 | 70 to 80% or 17,450 to 19,943 | −7% to +6% |
Programmed | 50% actual or 17,170 actual | 46% or 16,060 | 20 to 30% or 4,986 to 7,479 | −53% to −69% |
“Unprogrammed inspections” are reactionary and include investigating complaints, referrals, claims of imminent danger, fatalities, and severe injuries. Converting the percentages to the number of unprogrammed inspections, OSHA estimates the same number in FY 2026 as FY 2025, if not a small uptick.
“Programmed inspections” are planned inspections that strategically target specific hazards or high-hazard industries. They include emphasis programs, site-specific targeting, and construction targeting. Turning percentages into numbers, the agency predicts a huge 53 to 69 percent contraction in programmed inspections, shifting from 16,060 in FY 2025 to as few as 4,986 in FY 2026.
“Total inspection” counts are expected to go down 29 percent in FY 2026 for federal OSHA. However, the markdown appears to be tied directly to the slash in the number of programmed inspections. This means federal OSHA intends to take a more reactive than proactive enforcement stance.
FTE workers in the enforcement branch are “only” estimated to be 13 percent lower. The “extra” 16 percent bite out of the number of inspections compared to the FTE worker reduction may mean inspectors will perform fewer inspections than they’re used to. Perhaps inspections will be more complex.
Interestingly, the request does not discuss the Severe Violator Enforcement Program nor a goal for abating powered industrial truck hazards.
Compliance assistance
Under compliance assistance, federal OSHA plans to keep up priority outreach for “high-hazard and essential industries,” i.e., construction, manufacturing, grain handling, healthcare, oil/gas, warehousing, and others employing numbers of temporary workers.
The agency will also go on promoting safety and health programs and mentoring employers committed to improving their own programs. What’s new is OSHA will implement recognition program enhancements. Improving the resources available to support Voluntary Protection Programs (VPP) and other recognition programs is also included.
Key to remember
OSHA’s FY 2026 budget request shows significant cuts. Still, the agency plans to issue 20 guidance products and continue or begin work on regulatory and deregulatory rulemakings. The number of unprogrammed inspections is proposed to hold steady, while programmed inspection counts will fall as much as 69 percent. Safety and health programs and VPP will get more attention.