OSHA Injury Rate Calculator (TRIR)
Calculate your Total Recordable Incident Rate based on OSHA standards.
Your Incident Rate
Understanding the OSHA Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR)
The Total Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR) is a mathematical formula used by OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) and safety professionals to measure a company's safety performance. It allows companies of different sizes to compare their safety records against one another using a standardized metric.
The Formula for Injury Rate
To calculate the incident rate, use the following equation:
What are the Components?
- Number of Injuries: This includes all work-related illnesses or injuries that require medical treatment beyond first aid, involve loss of consciousness, restricted work activity, or days away from work.
- 200,000: This constant represents the equivalent of 100 employees working 40 hours per week for 50 weeks in a year. It provides the "per 100 employees" baseline.
- Total Hours Worked: This is the total number of actual hours worked by all employees during the same period. It should not include vacation time, sick leave, or paid holidays.
Step-by-Step Example
Imagine a manufacturing plant with the following data for the year:
- Total Injuries: 4
- Total Employee Hours: 160,000
The calculation would be:
- Multiply injuries by the base: 4 × 200,000 = 800,000
- Divide by total hours: 800,000 ÷ 160,000 = 5.0
In this example, the company's TRIR is 5.0, meaning for every 100 employees, 5 recordable incidents occurred.
Why Tracking Your Injury Rate Matters
Safety benchmarking is critical for several reasons:
- Insurance Premiums: Lower incident rates often lead to lower Workers' Compensation insurance costs.
- Contract Bidding: Many clients and general contractors require sub-contractors to have a TRIR below a certain threshold (usually 3.0 or lower) to bid on projects.
- OSHA Inspections: Companies with high incident rates are more likely to be targeted for OSHA programmed inspections.
- Safety Culture: Monitoring these rates helps management identify trends and implement corrective actions before serious accidents happen.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is TRIR the same as DART?
No. DART stands for "Days Away, Restricted, or Transferred." While TRIR measures all recordable injuries, DART specifically measures only the more severe injuries that resulted in time away from the job or job modification.
Does a 0.0 TRIR mean our workplace is safe?
While a zero rate is the goal, it doesn't always mean a workplace is safe; it simply means no recordable injuries occurred. It is important to also look at "Leading Indicators" like safety training completion and near-miss reporting.