A safety harness may look simple. Some straps, metal rings, and connection points.
But behind that equipment is something far more important: technical standards designed to save lives.
And that leads to a critical question every worker at height, supervisor, and company should understand:
What standard regulates safety harnesses?
Because a harness without proper certification or compliance is not protection.
It is only a false sense of safety.
In this article, I’ll explain which standards regulate safety harnesses, what those standards actually require, and why they are so important in work at heights, rescue operations, and industrial safety.
A safety harness is Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) designed to stop a fall and distribute impact forces across the worker’s body.
It is used in:
Its primary purpose is to prevent serious injury or death during a fall.
The regulations depend on the country, but internationally there are several widely recognized standards that establish requirements for:
The most important standards are the following:
This is one of the most recognized fall protection standards in the world.
Throughout the Americas, many companies use ANSI as their primary reference standard.
OSHA does not manufacture equipment, but it establishes legal workplace safety requirements.
OSHA requires the use of:
Full-body harnesses
Simple body belts are no longer accepted as fall arrest systems.
In Europe, harnesses are mainly regulated under the following standards:
Specific standard for fall arrest harnesses.
Regulates work positioning belts and positioning systems.
Regulates sit harnesses and rope access equipment.
ISO standards complement many international regulations.
While ISO standards do not replace ANSI or EN standards, they strengthen industrial safety systems worldwide.
A harness regulated under recognized standards must include:
If the harness cannot be clearly identified, it should not be used.
Because a fall generates massive forces in just seconds.
A certified harness is designed to:
A non-compliant harness may:
Safety standards also require regular inspections.
A damaged harness must be removed from service immediately.
In the field, these mistakes still happen regularly:
At height, confidence without inspection is dangerous.
Now you know that safety harnesses are regulated by standards such as:
And all of them share one common goal:
Making sure workers return home alive.
Because in work at heights, a harness is not just another piece of equipment.
It is the final barrier between a safe operation and a tragedy.
True experience is not demonstrated by ignoring standards.
It is demonstrated by respecting them, even when nobody is watching.