OSHA Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR) Calculator
Your Calculated TRIR:
What is the OSHA Incident Rate (TRIR)?
The Total Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR) is a mathematical formula used by OSHA to evaluate a company's safety performance. It represents the number of work-related injuries and illnesses per 100 full-time employees over a one-year period. This allows companies of different sizes to be compared on a level playing field.
The TRIR Formula
The standard formula used by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration is:
(Number of Injuries x 200,000) / Total Hours Worked
The multiplier 200,000 represents the base for 100 full-time equivalent workers (100 employees working 40 hours per week, 50 weeks per year).
Why Does Your OSHA Rate Matter?
- Benchmarking: Compare your safety performance against industry averages (BLS data).
- Insurance Premiums: High rates often lead to higher Workers' Compensation costs.
- Contract Bidding: Many clients require contractors to have a TRIR below a certain threshold (often 3.0 or lower) to bid on projects.
- OSHA Inspections: Companies with significantly higher rates than their industry average are more likely to be targeted for programmed inspections.
Example Calculation
Imagine a manufacturing plant with 120 employees. In one year:
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total Recordable Cases | 4 |
| Total Employee Hours | 240,000 |
| Calculation | (4 x 200,000) / 240,000 |
| Resulting TRIR | 3.33 |
What counts as a "Recordable" Injury?
According to OSHA 29 CFR Part 1904, a recordable injury includes any work-related fatality, any work-related injury or illness that results in loss of consciousness, days away from work, restricted work or transfer to another job, or medical treatment beyond first aid.