105,313Records 71,083Employers 85,290Hospitalizations 27,770Amputations 2015-01-01 2025-10-31
Safety Incidents OSHA Severe Injury Reports · 2015–2025

OSHA Accident Reports

Search federal OSHA accident, incident, and investigation reports by company — 105,313 severe-injury reports, 2,042,423 Form 300/301 injury filings, and 942,588 OSHA inspections, free and in one place.

105,313Severe injury reports
2,042,423Injury filings (300/301)
942,588OSHA inspections
71,083Employers on file

An OSHA accident report is any of several distinct federal records generated when a worker is hurt or killed on the job. They are public records, and this site indexes them so you can look up an employer's safety history without filing a records request. There are four kinds, and the difference between them matters when you are researching a company:

OSHA Severe Injury Reports

Since January 2015, employers under federal OSHA jurisdiction must report every work-related in-patient hospitalization, amputation, or loss of an eye within 24 hours. Each report carries the employer name, full site address, date, the nature and source of the injury, the body part affected, and a plain-English narrative of what happened. These are the closest thing to a real-time OSHA incident report feed. Browse the most recent severe injury reports, or search the severe injury reports by keyword.

Form 300/301 injury reports

Larger establishments submit their annual injury-and-illness logs to OSHA electronically through the Injury Tracking Application. This stream is broader in what counts as an injury than the severe-injury reports, but narrower in which establishments must file. Browse the recent Form 300/301 injury reports.

OSHA inspection and citation records

When OSHA inspects a workplace — on a schedule, after a complaint, or after an accident — the inspection, any citations issued, the standards cited, and the penalties become part of the enforcement record. Browse the recent OSHA inspections; each links to the citations issued under it.

OSHA accident investigation reports

After a fatality or catastrophe, OSHA opens an investigation and publishes a summary — the FAT/CAT accident-investigation report — usually with the inspection and citations that followed. These are the true OSHA investigation reports. Browse accident investigations or the recent workplace fatalities feed.

Search OSHA accident reports by company

To pull a single company's record, search its name on the search page or open the A–Z employer directory. Each employer profile merges that company's severe injuries, Form 300/301 filings, inspections, and citations into one view — the fastest way to look up OSHA accident reports by company. You can also drill in by geography on the OSHA records by state pages, or by sector on the most dangerous industries by OSHA severe injuries ranking.

Coverage note: the severe-injury and Form 300/301 data cover establishments under federal OSHA jurisdiction. About 22 states run their own OSHA-approved State Plans (including California, Washington, Oregon, Michigan, and North Carolina) and collect severe-injury reports separately, so those records are not in OSHA's federal file. Inspection records have broader coverage, because state-plan inspections flow into the federal enforcement system. Always verify a specific company against the official OSHA source linked from every record.

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Frequently asked

What are OSHA accident reports?

"OSHA accident reports" is an umbrella term for several distinct federal records: employer-filed Severe Injury Reports (hospitalizations, amputations, and eye losses reported within 24 hours), Form 300/301 injury filings (the annual injury-and-illness logs establishments submit electronically), OSHA inspection and citation records, and accident investigation reports (the fatality and catastrophe summaries in OSHA's FAT/CAT file). This site indexes all of them and combines them on each employer's profile.

How do I search OSHA accident reports by company?

Type the company name into the search page or open the A–Z employer directory. Every employer has a profile that merges its severe injuries, Form 300/301 filings, inspections, and citations in one place. The archive currently indexes 105,313 severe-injury reports across 71,083 employers. It is free and needs no account.

Are OSHA incident reports and investigation reports the same thing?

No. An incident report (an OSHA Severe Injury Report or a Form 300/301 filing) is the record an employer files describing an injury. An investigation report is what OSHA produces after investigating a fatality or catastrophe — the FAT/CAT accident-investigation summary, often with the inspection and citations that followed. Browse the latter on the accident investigations and recent workplace fatalities pages.

Are OSHA accident reports free to search?

Yes. These are records of a US federal agency and are in the public domain. Searching, browsing, and citing them here is free and requires no account. Every page links back to the official OSHA source so you can verify each record.

Source: federal OSHA Severe Injury Reports, Form 300/301 injury filings, inspections, and FAT/CAT accident investigations — public-domain records reproduced as OSHA released them. Free to search, no account required. Not legal or safety-compliance advice.