Preparing, Posting and Submitting OSHA Log Data
Author, Jadyn Brandt, Client Communications Coordinator, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.
Beginning February 1, 2025, U.S. employers are required to post last year’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) Form 300A Summary at their worksites. This form serves as a record of the company’s annual work-related injuries and illnesses. OSHA requires covered companies who have employed more than ten (10) employees during the previous calendar year—in this case 2024—to keep a record of work-related injuries and illnesses, and post the summary for employees to see. The form will need to remain posted through April 30, 2025.
There are some partially exempt industries that may not be required to comply with recordkeeping and posting regulations. A list of those industries can be found on the OSHA website.
Preparing OSHA Logs
OSHA logs encompass three forms most employers are responsible for maintaining throughout the year.
The 300 log lists basic details, including employee’s name, job title, date of injury or illness, location and a brief description for any recorded incident. It also includes severity of the injury or illness; number of days the employee was kept away from work or transferred as a result of the injury or illness.
Form 300A is a summary of the data recorded in the 300 log. It does not include any individual data like the employee’s name, but it does show incident totals including the total number of cases with days away from work. This is the form that must be posted at each worksite in an area where employee notices are usually displayed.
Form 301 is used to collect additional information specific to each individual injury or illness. This includes information about the worker who was injured and details about how the injury or illness occurred, and must be kept confidential.
Employers should be documenting incidents and maintaining OSHA Forms 300, 300A and 301 throughout the year.
Rancho Mesa’s SafetyOne™ mobile app and RM365 HRAdvantage™ portal (HR portal) can be used for incident data collection, and the tracking and generating of the forms 300 and 300A, respectively.
Posting OSHA Form 300A Summary
OSHA requires the Form 300A Summary is posted at the worksite in a prominent area and it must not be covered by other material, altered or defaced in any way. Employers must also send a copy of the summary to any remote employees, or those who do not report to the worksite on a regular weekly basis. If a company has no recorded injuries or illnesses in 2024, the OSHA Form 300A Summary reflecting zeros in the data fields must still be completed and posted.
Once all incident information has been recorded for the year in the HR portal, employers can download and print the Form 300A Summary from the portal’s Safety/OSHA Logs screen for each year and worksite. Then, post the summaries at the appropriate worksites.
Submitting Forms 300A, 300 and 301 Data
In addition to posting the Form 300A Summary at the worksite, covered organizations with 20 to 249 employees are also required to submit their 300A data to Federal OSHA’s Injury Tracking Application (ITA) by March 2, 2025. The data can be manually entered into the ITA or a .CSV file with this data can be generated through the HR portal, which can then be uploaded into the ITA website.
OSHA also requires, “Establishments with 100 or more employees in designated high-hazard industries [to] electronically submit to OSHA detailed information about each recordable injury and illness entered on their previous calendar year’s OSHA Form 300 Log and Form 301 Incident Report.” This information is manually entered into the ITA.
Individual state OSHA requirements may differ slightly from Federal OSHA requirements. Be sure to check with your state’s OSHA division to ensure compliance.
Rancho Mesa’s OSHA Recordkeeping and Annual Reporting webinar explains how to generate the Form 300A Summary PDF and .CSV file in the HR portal.
Visit the OSHA Injury & Illness Recordkeeping webpage for more information.