OSHA Restaurant Inspection Checklist
Interactive OSHA compliance checklist for restaurants covering kitchen safety, fire suppression, emergency exits, electrical, chemical storage, and employee training. Get your real-time compliance score and identify critical violations before inspectors arrive.
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Restaurant OSHA Violation Statistics
Common violations restaurant owners must address
Interactive OSHA Restaurant Inspection Checklist
Check off each item your restaurant currently meets. Your compliance score updates in real-time.
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Top Restaurant-Specific OSHA Hazards
Areas that receive the most scrutiny during restaurant OSHA inspections
Grease Fires & Hood Systems
Kitchen hood suppression systems must be inspected semi-annually with current tags visible. Class K extinguishers are required within 30 feet of all cooking equipment using oils and fats.
Blocked Emergency Exits
The most dangerous violation: propping doors closed, storing boxes in exit paths, or chaining exits during business hours. This is often cited as a willful violation with fines up to $161,323.
Slip & Fall Hazards
Wet floors from dishwashing, spills, and mopping are the #1 cause of restaurant injuries. Non-slip mats, wet floor signs, and proper drainage are essential controls.
Chemical Mixing Hazards
Cleaning chemicals improperly stored near food, unlabeled spray bottles, and missing Safety Data Sheets are common HazCom violations in restaurants.
Electrical Near Water
GFCI protection is required near all sinks and wet areas. Frayed cords on kitchen equipment and overloaded circuits are frequently cited electrical violations.
Cut & Burn Injuries
Improper knife storage, lack of cut-resistant gloves, missing hot surface warnings, and absence of burn first aid procedures are common kitchen safety gaps.
OSHA Restaurant Inspection FAQ
Common questions about restaurant OSHA compliance
What does OSHA inspect in a restaurant?
OSHA inspectors evaluate restaurants for compliance across multiple areas: kitchen safety (slip/fall hazards, burns, cuts), fire suppression systems (hood systems, Class K extinguishers), emergency exits (unobstructed paths, illuminated signs, exit route width), electrical safety (GFCI outlets, proper wiring), chemical storage (HazCom compliance, SDS accessibility, proper labeling), and employee training documentation (Emergency Action Plans, fire extinguisher training, HazCom training). Restaurants are subject to both general industry standards under 29 CFR 1910 and any applicable state-specific regulations.
What are the most common OSHA violations in restaurants?
The most frequently cited OSHA violations in restaurants include: failure to maintain a written Emergency Action Plan (29 CFR 1910.38), inadequate Hazard Communication program for cleaning chemicals (29 CFR 1910.1200), blocked or locked emergency exits (29 CFR 1910.36-37), missing or expired fire extinguisher inspections (29 CFR 1910.157), lack of GFCI protection near water sources (29 CFR 1910.304), improper chemical storage near food items, and insufficient employee safety training documentation.
How often do OSHA inspections happen at restaurants?
OSHA does not have a fixed inspection schedule for restaurants. Inspections are typically triggered by: employee complaints or reports of unsafe conditions, serious workplace injuries or fatalities, referrals from other agencies (like health departments), targeted inspection programs for high-hazard industries, and follow-up inspections from previous violations. However, restaurants should always be inspection-ready as OSHA can arrive unannounced.
What OSHA fines can restaurants face?
As of 2025, OSHA penalties for restaurants include: Serious violations up to $16,131 per violation (common for blocked exits, missing fire extinguishers, no HazCom program), Willful violations up to $161,323 per violation (locked emergency exits, ignoring known hazards), Repeat violations up to $161,323 per violation, and Failure to Abate at $16,131 per day beyond the abatement date. Multiple violations can be cited simultaneously, making total fines substantial.
Do restaurants need a written Emergency Action Plan?
Yes. Under 29 CFR 1910.38, any employer with more than 10 employees must have a written Emergency Action Plan. Most restaurants exceed this threshold. The EAP must include evacuation procedures, exit route assignments, procedures for employees performing critical operations before evacuating (like shutting off gas), employee accountability methods after evacuation, and emergency contact information. The plan must be reviewed with each employee upon hiring and whenever it changes.
What fire safety equipment is required in restaurant kitchens?
Restaurant kitchens require: Class K fire extinguishers within 30 feet of all commercial cooking equipment (for grease/oil fires), ABC fire extinguishers in dining areas, storage rooms, and near electrical panels, a kitchen hood suppression system (Ansul/Amerex) with semi-annual inspections over all grease-producing cooking equipment, manual pull stations accessible near kitchen exits, and proper ventilation per NFPA 96. All equipment must have current inspection tags.
How do I prepare for an OSHA restaurant inspection?
To prepare for an OSHA restaurant inspection: 1) Complete a self-inspection using a comprehensive checklist covering all 6 key areas, 2) Ensure your written Emergency Action Plan is current and accessible, 3) Verify all fire extinguishers have current monthly inspection tags, 4) Confirm hood suppression system has semi-annual inspection tags, 5) Check all exits are unobstructed with working illuminated signs, 6) Organize Safety Data Sheets for all chemicals, 7) Gather employee training documentation, and 8) Post evacuation maps in visible locations.
What is the difference between OSHA and health department inspections?
OSHA inspections focus on employee workplace safety: slip/fall hazards, fire protection, chemical handling, electrical safety, exits, and training. Health department inspections focus on food safety and public health: food temperatures, cross-contamination, hygiene practices, pest control, and sanitation. However, there is overlap in areas like chemical storage (both agencies require proper separation from food), fire safety (health inspectors check for posted evacuation maps and suppression systems), and general cleanliness. Failing one inspection can trigger a referral to the other agency.
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