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HSE Visit After a Workplace Accident – What Directors Need to Know

Competent person supporting an HSE inspection after a workplace accident using documented health and safety controls

A visit from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), Local Authority Environmental Health Officer (EHO), or Fire Safety Officer almost always follows a workplace accident, injury, or dangerous occurrence.

For directors, this is a critical moment.
The accident itself may already be under control, but what happens next can determine whether the situation escalates into enforcement action, Fee for Intervention (FFI), civil claims, or long-term reputational damage.

Handled well, post-accident engagement with enforcement authorities can remain proportionate and contained. Handled poorly, it can quickly spiral.

This article explains what directors should expect after an accident, what is expected of you, when insurers must be notified, and how TIPS Consultancy Ltd supports businesses through this high-risk period.

What Is Expected of You After an Accident?

When enforcement authorities attend following an accident, their focus is clear: what happened, how it happened, and why it happened.

 

Directors should expect the following standards to apply immediately:

Professional, Courteous Engagement

Everyone involved should be polite, cooperative and attentive.

Full Cooperation with the Enforcing Officer

Requested information should be provided accurately and without delay.

Meeting Deadlines

Any timescales imposed must be met.

Immediate Risk Control

Even if long-term fixes are still being planned, safe working must be achieved straight away.

Best Practice Following an Accident

Always respond to enforcement queries within 48 hours, even if only to confirm what information you have and when the remainder will follow.

Avoid the Post-Accident Overreaction

After an accident, many businesses panic and send large volumes of documentation “just in case”. 

 

This can be counterproductive.

 

Providing unnecessary or unrelated information can:

  • Trigger HSE Fee for Intervention (FFI) charges (currently £183 per hour)

  • Create new lines of enquiry unrelated to the accident

  • Increase scrutiny beyond the original incident

After an accident, focused, relevant and well-structured information is essential.

What Should You Expect During a Post-Accident Investigation?

Upon arrival, enforcement officers will identify themselves using a warrant or ID card. Their next steps will be aimed at understanding the accident and deciding whether further investigation or enforcement action is required.

 

Following an accident, they may request:

Information About the Injured Person(s)

  • Personal contact details

  • Recorded statements

  • Details of injuries (to assess RIDDOR thresholds)

  • Length of service and experience

A Clear Account of the Accident

Often in the form of an investigation report (started or completed):

  • What task was being undertaken?

  • Who was involved?

  • What equipment or machinery was being used?

  • What went wrong?

  • Were there contributing factors (guarding, distraction, environment, etc.)?

Evidence of Controls in Place Before the Accident

This may include:

  • Health & safety policy and arrangements

  • Risk assessments

  • Safe Systems of Work (SSoW)

  • Method statements

  • Training records

  • Evidence of PPE 

  • Audits or inspection to confirm effective monitoring arrangements 

Visual and Real-Time Evidence (If Available)

  • The condition of machinery at the time
  • The surrounding area

  • Identifiable hazards

  • Damage and how it occurred

Post-Accident Actions and Learning

Crucially, enforcement authorities want to see learning and control following the accident, such as:

  • Improved guarding or engineering controls

  • Training, retraining or refresher training

  • Revised risk assessments and SSoW

  • Increased supervision

  • Maintenance improvements

  • Temporary suspension of equipment

  • Safety briefings to employees and contractors

  • Disciplinary measures where appropriate

 

Key message for directors:
After an accident, enforcement authorities are not expecting perfection — they are assessing whether risks were managed so far as reasonably practicable and whether learning is taking place.

When Should Insurers Be Notified After an Accident?

Immediately.


Any significant accident with injury, potential injury, or enforcement involvement should be notified to insurers at the earliest opportunity.

Why Prompt Notification Matters After an Accident

  • Maintaining policy cover
    Most policies contain strict “notification of circumstances” clauses. Late notification is a common reason for refused or limited cover.

  • Preserving evidence
    Insurers may need to deploy investigators quickly before conditions change.

  • Protecting your legal position
    Early involvement allows insurers to manage liability and regulatory risk.

  • Support during HSE investigations
    Insurers can appoint solicitors and provide guidance throughout enforcement proceedings.

Notify Insurers Immediately After:

  • Any RIDDOR-reportable accident

  • Any dangerous occurrence or serious near miss

  • Significant property damage or equipment failure

  • Any incident involving vehicles, lifting equipment, fire or environmental release

  • Were there contributing factors (guarding, distraction, environment, etc.)?

If in Doubt — Notify

Never admit liability or make commitments without insurer advice, and forward all HSE correspondence to insurers without delay.

How TIPS Consultancy Ltd Supports You After an Accident

This is where TIPS Consultancy Ltd provides real value.

We support directors after accidents have occurred, when enforcement scrutiny is highest and decisions matter most.

Post-Accident Enforcement Support

  • Helping structure and review responses to HSE or Local Authority requests

  • Supporting incident investigations and factual reporting

Risk Control and Improvement

  • Reviewing risk assessments, SSoW and controls linked to the accident

  • Advising on immediate risk controls and longer-term improvements

Ongoing Competent Person Support

For small and medium-sized businesses, best practice as a minimum is to have access to competent health & safety support that provides:

  • Formal appointment of a competent person to meet legal duties under health & safety legislation

  • At least one site visit per year by a competent consultant to carry out a structured health & safety audit

  • Email and telephone support throughout the year to help maintain health & safety arrangements, respond to issues, and manage change

This approach helps directors demonstrate ongoing compliance, maintain suitable and sufficient arrangements, and clearly shows the HSE that the business is proactive in identifying issues, making real improvements, and preventing recurrence.

Final Thought for Directors

An accident at work is serious – but it does not automatically mean enforcement action, prosecution or long-term damage.

 

What matters is how you respond after the accident.

 

With the right advice, structure and professional support, most post-accident investigations can be stabilised, managed and closed without escalation.

 

If you’ve had an accident and a visit from the HSE, or want reassurance that your arrangements would stand up to scrutiny: TIPS Consultancy Ltd is here to help.