This article is for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Employers with specific concerns should consult a qualified safety professional or the Health and Safety Authority (HSA).
Not every workplace accident has to be reported to the HSA — a minor cut treated with a plaster and a return to work isn't reportable. But the threshold that actually triggers a legal reporting duty catches more incidents than most employers expect, and missing it is itself an offence, separate from whatever happened in the accident itself.
Which Workplace Accidents Must Be Reported?
Under the Safety, Health and Welfare at Work (General Application) Regulations 2016 (S.I. No. 370 of 2016, sometimes referred to by its earlier numbering as the General Application (Amendment) (No. 3) Regulations 2016), an employer or self-employed person must report to the HSA where an employee is injured in an accident at work and, as a result, cannot carry out their normal work for more than 3 consecutive days, excluding the day of the accident itself.
That three-day threshold catches more situations than it sounds like it should:
- an employee injured on a Wednesday who normally has the weekend off, and doesn't return until the following Monday — still reportable, because the days off work exceed three consecutive days regardless of which days were already non-working days
- an employee who returns to work but can only perform light duties for more than three days — still reportable, because they couldn't carry out their normal work, even though they weren't fully absent
The accident has to relate to a place of work or a work activity, and the person needs medical treatment. An incident triggered by a pre-existing medical condition, unrelated to the work itself, isn't reportable on that basis alone.
What About Non-Employees, Like Visitors or Members of the Public?
An employer must also report when someone who isn't their employee — a visitor, contractor, or member of the public — dies or needs hospital treatment because of a work activity at the workplace. The report in that case is made by the most senior person on duty, since there's no "employer" relationship to anchor it to in the usual sense.
What Counts as a Dangerous Occurrence?
A dangerous occurrence is a near-miss or equipment failure serious enough that it could have caused harm, even if nobody was actually hurt. These must be reported within the same 10-working-day window as non-fatal injuries, using the HSA's separate online dangerous occurrence reporting system rather than the standard accident form. In practice, the dangerous occurrence employers most commonly fail to report is mobile plant equipment overturning where no one happened to be injured — exactly the kind of incident that's easy to write off internally as "nothing happened" when the law treats it as reportable regardless.
How and When Do You Actually Report?
- Fatal accidents: report immediately (and notify An Garda Síochána immediately too), with a formal written IR1 report to follow within 5 working days.
- Non-fatal reportable injuries and dangerous occurrences: report within 10 working days, using the IR1 form online or by post to the HSA.
- Death following a previously unreported accident: if an injured person dies within a year of the original accident, the employer must notify the HSA in writing as soon as possible after being told of the death — even if the original accident was never reported at the time.
Reports can be filed through the HSA's online system or by completing the paper IR1 form and posting it to the HSA. Diseases and certain occupational illnesses are not reportable under these particular Regulations — some are covered separately under different legislation (for example, specific biological agent exposures), and shouldn't be submitted through the standard online accident reporting system.
What Should an Employer Do After an Accident, Beyond Reporting It?
Reporting to the HSA is the legal minimum, not the whole response. Good practice — and an expectation built into a properly maintained safety statement — includes investigating every accident and near-miss to identify the root cause, not just the immediate one, and feeding that back into the risk assessment if it reveals a control measure that wasn't actually working. An accident that gets reported to the HSA but never properly investigated internally tends to repeat itself.