OSHA Trivia Quiz

Looking for a quick, fun, and effective way to energize your next safety meeting?
Try the OSHA Trivia Quiz — a free, interactive tool that helps teams refresh their knowledge of essential safety principles while identifying training gaps requiring corrective action.

✅ Why it works:

  • Makes safety meetings engaging and memorable
  • Provides detailed feedback and explanations for every answer via email
  • Issues a Certificate of Completion for scores of 80% and above
  • Documents continuous learning and a proactive safety culture
  • Highlights areas needing refresher training or improvement

Whether you’re leading a construction crew, plant operations, or corporate safety program, this quiz reinforces your team’s awareness and commitment to safety — at no cost and with immediate results.

Bring energy, insight, and accountability to your safety meetings.
👉 Take the OSHA Trivia Quiz at e-SafetyPro.com

OSHA Trivia Quiz

Think you know your OSHA standards? Test your knowledge with our OSHA Trivia Quiz — a fun and interactive way to challenge yourself on key workplace safety regulations. From hazard communication and PPE to recordkeeping and emergency procedures, this quiz covers essential topics every safety professional should master.

Earn a certificate of completion for scores of 80% and above, and receive an email with your results highlighting areas for improvement.

We would be happy to customize this quiz for your company or industry to identify strengths, gaps, and training needs. e-SafetyPro.com will be glad to help you design and deliver tailored safety knowledge checks across your organization.

Vlad Ivensky, CIH, CSP

[email protected]

e-SafetyPro.com

Please provide your information below so we can email your quiz results and certificate of completion.
You may skip this section, but in that case, you will not receive documentation or a record of your achievement.

1 / 11

An operator has a 3-minute task to clear a jam under a running conveyor belt. Guards were removed for maintenance and not yet reinstalled. The operator decides to reach in briefly to remove the obstruction instead of stopping the system.

2 / 11

An employee uses an extension ladder with a bent side rail during inspection work.

3 / 11

A worker must enter a 10-foot-deep tank where atmospheric testing shows oxygen at 23% and LEL at 15%.

4 / 11

A maintenance electrician is troubleshooting a conveyor motor. The main disconnect is turned off, but a separate control circuit remains energized. When power is restored for testing, the drive belt starts moving because not all electrical sources were isolated.

5 / 11

A new cleaning solvent arrives at the plant. The secondary containers are unlabeled, and employees using it were never trained on its hazards.

6 / 11

A maintenance technician is replacing a light fixture on a mezzanine platform 5 feet above the floor in a manufacturing plant with no guardrails or personal fall protection.

7 / 11

An experienced warehouse employee is assigned to operate a forklift temporarily under direct supervision but has not yet completed OSHA-required training or evaluation.

8 / 11

A crew assembled a mobile scaffold without a designated competent person. Experienced workers inspected it themselves and started working.

9 / 11

A worker is grinding metal and wearing only safety glasses. Sparks and debris are produced during grinding.

10 / 11

Employees handle chemicals transferred to secondary containers that lack proper labels or Safety Data Sheets.

11 / 11

A maintenance worker must enter a large mixing tank to remove residue. The tank has limited entry, poor ventilation, and contains residual vapors.

Your score is

The average score is 87%

0%

#SafetyCulture #OSHA #EHS #ContinuousImprovement #Training #WorkplaceSafety #Leadership #SafetyFirst

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