← Back to Safety News OSHA Compliance

OSHA Recordkeeping Requirements Every Contractor Must Know in 2025

May 1, 2025·8 min read·FidelisGo Safety Team

Every year, OSHA issues thousands of citations to contractors who had perfectly safe job sites — but couldn't prove it. The most common reason? Missing training documentation. OSHA doesn't just care that your workers got trained. They care that you can prove it happened, when it happened, and that workers understood it.

What OSHA Requires You to Document

OSHA's recordkeeping falls under 29 CFR Part 1904 for injury/illness records, and individual standards for training records. For most construction standards, a written record must include:

Key insight: A paper sign-in sheet barely meets the minimum. OSHA inspectors increasingly ask for proof workers understood the training — quiz scores and timestamps are your best defense.

How Long Must You Keep Records?

Record TypeRetention PeriodStandard
Training records (most)3 years minimumVaries
OSHA 300 Log5 years29 CFR 1904.33
HazCom trainingDuration of employment1910.1200
Respiratory protectionEmployment + 1 yr1910.134

What Happens When OSHA Shows Up

OSHA will request your training records immediately. If you can't find them, they treat it as if training never happened.

⚠️ Important: "We trained them but lost the records" is not a defense OSHA accepts. Current penalty amounts: Serious violations up to $16,131, Willful/Repeat up to $161,323, and Failure to Abate up to $16,131 per day — all per violation.

The Problem With Paper Sign-In Sheets

  1. Physical loss — papers get wet, lost, or thrown away
  2. No proof of comprehension — a signature ≠ understanding
  3. Slow retrieval — OSHA won't wait while you search filing cabinets
  4. Language gaps — English sheets don't prove Spanish-speaking workers understood

Replace paper records with digital proof

FidelisGo gives you OSHA-ready records automatically — quiz scores, drawn signatures, 3-year retention.

Get a Free Demo →