Portable Step Ladder Safety: DO's and DON'Ts Every Worker Must Know

Falls from portable step ladders are one of the most common causes of workplace injuries and fatalities, and most of them are preventable. This free portable step ladder toolbox talk covers the essential DO’s and DON’Ts of safe step ladder use, how to inspect a ladder before each use, OSHA ladder safety requirements, and the habits that separate a safe climb from a preventable accident.

 
Portable Ladder Inspection Before Use

Portable Step Ladders: Safety DO's and DON'Ts

Many of the accidents involving portable step ladders that happen on worksites every year share something in common: they could have been prevented. A worker overreaches instead of moving the ladder. Someone climbs with both hands full. A ladder is set up on soft, uneven ground and nobody checks the spreaders before stepping on. Small oversights, not freak accidents, and account for the majority of ladder-related injuries and fatalities.

This toolbox talk focuses on the simple, practical habits that reduce that risk. Keep the following DO's and DON'Ts in mind every time you reach for a portable step ladder.

By the numbers: The Bureau of Labor Statistics consistently ranks falls from ladders among the leading causes of fatal occupational injuries in the United States. OSHA estimates that ladder-related injuries cost employers over $24 billion annually in lost workdays, medical costs, and liability. Step ladder safety is not a minor housekeeping issue, as it is a life-safety priority.

Before You Climb: Step Ladder Inspection Checklist

A portable step ladder should be inspected before every single use. This takes less than a minute and it is the first line of defense against a fall. The goal is simple: find any condition that could affect safe use before it finds you mid-climb.

Step Ladder Inspection: Pass vs. Remove from Service

Safe to Use

  • Steps are clean, dry, and fully intact
  • No visible cracks, bends, or corrosion
  • All four feet present with non-slip pads
  • Both spreader braces open and locked
  • Labels and load rating markings readable
  • Once it is clear to climb, you can proceed safely

Remove from Service

  • Cracked, splintered, or bent side rails
  • Loose, broken, or missing steps/rungs
  • Missing or worn-down feet
  • Spreaders bent, broken, or won’t lock
  • Hardware loose, corroded, or missing
  • Tag it out or do not use

If a ladder fails any part of this check, remove it from service immediately. Tag it clearly so no one else picks it up. Never attempt to repair a damaged ladder in the field. A ladder that fails inspection should be taken out of service until it can be properly repaired by a qualified person or replaced entirely.

Portable Step Ladder Safe Practices: What Every Worker Must DO

Safe Practices: What Every Worker Must DO

These are the foundational step ladder safety rules. Follow all of them  not just the ones that seem convenient at the time.

  • Inspect the ladder before each use. Check for cracks, loose parts, damaged steps, slippery surfaces, missing non-slip feet, and other signs of damage before climbing. Remove the ladder from service immediately if any condition could affect safe use.
  • Set the ladder on a stable and level surface. Make sure all four feet are firmly placed on solid ground before use. Fully open and lock both spreaders before putting weight on the ladder.
  • Stay away from electrical hazards. Keep the ladder, tools, materials, and your body at least 10 feet away from energized power lines or electrical equipment. Greater distances may be required for higher voltages.
  • Maintain a secure grip while climbing. Always keep at least one hand firmly holding the ladder side rail or rung when climbing up or down. A secure grip helps maintain balance and reduces fall risks.
  • Keep your body centered on the ladder at all times. Maintain balance by keeping your body between the ladder side rails. If you cannot comfortably reach the work area, climb down and reposition the ladder instead of overreaching.
Electrician Using Fiberglass Step Ladder Safely

Unsafe Practices: What You Must Never DO

These are the behaviors responsible for the majority of preventable ladder accidents. None of them are worth the seconds they save.

  • Do not use a step ladder for tasks it was not designed for. Never lean a folded step ladder against a wall to use it like a straight ladder, and never place it horizontally to use as a scaffold, platform, or bridge.
  • Do not use metal or conductive ladders near electrical hazards. Aluminum ladders and other conductive materials can carry electricity and increase the risk of electrocution. Use extra caution around power lines, electrical panels, and energized equipment.
  • Do not carry items that interfere with safe climbing. Avoid climbing ladders while carrying tools or materials in both hands. Always maintain at least one secure grip on the ladder and use tool belts, buckets, or hoist lines when needed.
  • Do not leave tools or materials resting on the ladder. Tools and supplies placed on ladder steps or the top cap can easily fall if the ladder shifts or gets bumped, creating struck-by hazards for workers below.
  • Do not stand on the top cap or top step of a step ladder. These areas are not designed as standing surfaces and can increase the risk of falls and serious injuries. Follow the manufacturer’s warning labels and only stand on approved ladder steps.
Worker Safely Climbing Portable Step Ladder

Closing reminder: Although these are not the only ladder safety requirements, following these basic DO's and DON'Ts significantly reduces the risk of accidents, injuries, and fatalities when working with portable step ladders. Does anyone have questions, comments, or additional safety tips to share? Thank you for participating. Please sign the training certification form before you leave so you receive credit for attending today's session.

Common Portable Step Ladder Hazards on the Jobsite

These scenarios represent the types of incidents that actually happen when workers skip the basics. Recognizing them in advance is part of effective ladder accident prevention. .

⚠️Important: In many ladder incidents, the worker knew the correct procedure. The accident happened anyway because they made a quick judgment call. "it'll be fine just this once." It usually is fine. Until it isn't. These are not worst-case scenarios; they are typical ones.

A worker near the top of a step ladder stretches sideways to reach a fastener that’s just a little too far. The belt buckle passes outside the side rail. The ladder tips. This is the single most common mechanism behind step ladder falls. The fix takes thirty seconds: climb down, move the ladder, climb back up. Every experienced worker who has been through a fall says the same thing afterward — it was not worth the time it saved.
 
A ladder placed on soft soil, a freshly mopped floor, a sloped driveway, or loose gravel can shift under load — especially when the worker shifts weight or reaches sideways. Foot slippage accounts for a significant share of ladder-base failures. Before climbing, confirm all four feet are planted on firm, level ground. On soft surfaces, use a board or base plate to distribute the load. Never rely on a single good-looking setup without confirming all four contact points.
 
An aluminum step ladder being carried horizontally swings into a power line. The worker carrying it becomes the ground path. This type of incident can be instantly fatal. The 10-foot clearance rule exists because it accounts for both the reach of a person on the ladder and the dynamic movement involved in carrying one. In areas with overhead electrical hazards, use a fiberglass ladder and confirm clearance before you begin work — not after you’ve already set up.
 
A worker climbs a step ladder carrying a drill in one hand and a box of fasteners in the other. One foot slips on a greasy step. With no free hand to grip the rail, there is nothing to arrest the fall. Tools and materials must be raised and lowered using a bucket, rope, or tool belt — never carried in both hands. The three-point contact rule (two hands and one foot, or two feet and one hand, on the ladder at all times) exists precisely for moments when footing is uncertain.
 
A worker needs just a few more inches of height to reach a ceiling fixture. The top cap is right there. This is one of the most frequently cited OSHA ladder violations — and one of the most dangerous positions a person can be in on a step ladder. At the top cap, there is nothing above to hold onto, the platform is narrow, and the center of gravity is well above the ladder’s support structure. Manufacturers label these surfaces clearly. Those labels are not suggestions.
 

Before you leave today's safety meeting: Please sign the attendance and certification form on the back of the printed handout. Your signature confirms that you participated in this portable step ladder safety training session and understand the practices and hazards discussed. This record supports your employer's OSHA compliance documentation.

Toolbox Talk Workplace Ladder Safety Requirements for Portable Step Ladders

This Portable Step Ladder Safety Toolbox Talk helps support workplace safety training by teaching workers proper ladder inspection procedures, safe climbing techniques, ladder positioning, and fall prevention practices before working at height. The printable PDF version can be used during safety meetings, employee training sessions, and daily toolbox talks to help reinforce safer ladder use across the workplace.

Keep Exploring Related Electrical Safety Toolbox Talks

Download Free Portable Step Ladder Safety PDF

Print-ready safety training PDF with employee sign-off sheet included. Use it during your next ladder safety meeting to review safe setup practices, climbing techniques, and common ladder hazards with your crew. No registration required and always free to download. Continue improving workplace ladder safety awareness with additional ladder safety meeting topics and printable toolbox talks from the Basic Ladder Safety series.

FAQs About Portable Step Ladder Prevention Safety Tips

Get quick answers to real workplace questions raised by workers and supervisors after this electrical safety meeting, and strengthen everyday electrical hazard prevention.
The portable ladders be inspected before each use. This applies every time a ladder is picked up and put into service   not just once at the start of a job or shift. In practical terms, a pre-use inspection takes under a minute and covers the steps or rungs, side rails, feet, hardware, spreaders, and any labels or load rating markings. If any defect is found that could affect the safe use of the ladder, it must be removed from service immediately and tagged so no other worker inadvertently uses it. A ladder can develop a crack or lose a foot pad between uses, so every climb begins with a fresh check.
 
 
 
 
 
For a standard portable step ladder, Toolbox Talk prohibits standing on the top cap or the step immediately below it. The top two surfaces of a typical step ladder are not intended or approved as standing levels;  they provide no stable gripping surface above you, and standing there places your center of gravity dangerously high relative to the ladder’s support base. The highest approved standing level is marked on the ladder by the manufacturer, typically as a warning label with a figure indicating the safe working height. Always follow those markings. If you need more height, the correct solution is a taller ladder and not a higher step.
 
 
 
 
A portable step ladder used in its folded position against a wall is not a safe substitute for a straight or extension ladder. When folded, the step ladder’s spreaders are closed and the structure is not designed to bear load in that configuration. The feet are positioned for use on an open, self-supporting ladder — not for bracing against a surface at an angle. More importantly, the rungs and steps may not be oriented in a way that provides secure footing when the ladder is leaned rather than standing open. If you need a ladder to reach something against a wall, use a straight ladder or extension ladder that is designed and rated for that type of use.
 
 
 
Toolbox Talk  requires a minimum 10-foot clearance between a portable ladder  and the worker on it — and any energized electrical lines or equipment. This 10-foot distance applies to standard distribution voltage lines up to approximately 50kV. For higher-voltage transmission lines, the required clearance increases. The key point for most jobsite work is that 10 feet is the floor, not a guideline — and it accounts for the reach of a person on the ladder and the natural sway that comes with dynamic movement. Always use a fiberglass or other non-conductive ladder when working anywhere near electrical hazards. A metal or aluminum ladder must never be used near live electrical equipment under any circumstances.
 
 
Three-point contact means keeping three of your four limbs in contact with the ladder at all times while climbing — either two hands and one foot, or two feet and one hand. This rule is designed to ensure that you always have a stable, secure connection to the ladder as you move. If one contact point slips, the remaining two can prevent a fall. The most common way workers violate this rule is by climbing with both hands carrying tools or materials, leaving no hand free to grip the rail. To maintain three-point contact while using tools, carry them in a tool belt, tool pouch, or bucket hoisted separately — never in your hands while ascending or descending.
 
Yes! This toolbox talk and every document on ToolboxTalk.com is completely free. The downloadable PDF is formatted to print on a single page. The reverse side includes a sign-off sheet with space for worker names, signatures, and the training date — so supervisors can maintain a documented record of safety meeting attendance. No registration or subscription is required to download or use it.