🏭Warehouse-Specific OSHA Evacuation Maps

Create a Warehouse Evacuation Map from a Floor Plan

Quick answer: Create professional OSHA-aligned warehouse evacuation maps that handle forklift zones, loading docks, pallet racking, chemical storage, and multi-level mezzanines — designed to support OSHA 29 CFR 1910.38 emergency planning for logistics environments. Final review by a qualified safety professional, fire marshal, or AHJ is recommended before posting.

Related guides: free evacuation map generator, fire evacuation map requirements, where to post evacuation maps, what to include on a map.

Every zoneZone maps from one floor plan
MinutesDraft map generation
1910.38OSHA EAP-aligned draft

No credit card required. Includes forklift zones & dock exits.

3 Simple Steps:
1Upload Floor Plan
2Select State & Industry
3Get Your Map
Trusted by businesses of all sizes
🇺🇸Used in all 50 States
🗺️Over 15,000 evacuation maps generated
🔒Built on secure, encrypted infrastructure256-bit SSL
OSHA-aligned US standards29 CFR 1910.38

Warehouse-Specific Hazards Your Evacuation Map Must Address

Warehouses present unique evacuation challenges not found in standard commercial buildings

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Forklift Traffic Zones

Powered industrial trucks create deadly crossing hazards during evacuations. Your map must show pedestrian-safe routes that avoid or minimize forklift lane crossings. Per OSHA 29 CFR 1910.178, designated pedestrian walkways must be separate from forklift traffic.

  • Pedestrian walkway markings
  • Forklift shutdown procedures
  • Traffic lane crossing points
  • Equipment parking zones
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High-Bay Pallet Racking

Tall racking systems create falling object hazards and limited visibility during emergencies. Evacuation routes must account for potential rack collapse, falling inventory, and restricted aisle widths that may become impassable.

  • Rack collapse danger zones
  • Clear aisle requirements (min 28")
  • Overhead clearance warnings
  • Emergency lighting placement
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Chemical Storage & Hazmat

Chemical storage areas require specialized evacuation procedures including shelter-in-place options for toxic releases. Maps must show eyewash stations, emergency showers, spill kit locations, and routes that bypass contamination zones. See our manufacturing evacuation guide for similar hazmat considerations.

  • Hazmat diamond symbols
  • Spill containment zones
  • SDS station locations
  • Shelter-in-place areas
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Loading Dock Exits

Dock doors provide critical egress points but present fall hazards when trailers are absent. Maps must indicate which docks have pedestrian doors, dock leveler positions, and safe exit points away from backing trucks.

  • Pedestrian door locations
  • Dock edge fall protection
  • Trailer presence indicators
  • Emergency stop buttons
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Cold Storage & Freezer Zones

Refrigerated and frozen storage areas present hypothermia risks during extended evacuations and may have limited exits. Insulated doors can become stuck, and frost buildup affects visibility of exit signage.

  • Thermal curtain locations
  • Emergency release mechanisms
  • Warm-up station zones
  • Time-limited exposure warnings
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Combustible Dust Hazards

Per OSHA combustible dust standards, facilities handling grain, wood, plastic, or other combustible materials must address dust explosion risks. Review NFPA 652 for comprehensive guidance.

  • Dust collection systems
  • Explosion vent zones
  • Housekeeping inspection points
  • Spark source elimination areas

Create Your Warehouse Evacuation Map Now

Upload your warehouse floor plan and get an OSHA-aligned evacuation map in seconds

📊 5 Free Maps Left

Create Your Evacuation Map

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High ContrastUse dark ink on white paper. Bold lines help our AI detect walls accurately
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Top-Down AnglePhotograph from directly above — tilted angles distort the geometry
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Label RoomsWrite "Exit", "Storage", "Breakroom" etc. — our AI reads your labels for compliance
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Full Floor PlanCapture the entire layout including all walls, doors, and exits — no cropping
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Mark ExitsCircle or label exit doors with a red dot or "EXIT" text for best detection
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Good LightingAvoid shadows and glare — even lighting produces the sharpest results
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Drag & drop your floor plan here

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PNG, JPG, HEIC, TIFF, BMP, PDF - Hand-drawn sketches work too!

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No floor plan handy? Generate an instant demo map — no upload needed.

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Move, resize, and recolor every exit sign, route, and icon.
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Compliance Options

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Customize Your Map

Add special requests for your safety map - tell our AI exactly what you need!

  • 🎯Add specific details like "Mark fire extinguisher near kitchen"
  • 📍Request specific zones: "Highlight assembly point in parking lot"
  • 🏥Add safety equipment: "Include AED location near reception"
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Frequently Asked Questions

Is this evacuation map generator really free?

Yes — you can generate your first OSHA-aligned evacuation map draft completely free. Just upload a floor plan and our AI drafts a professional map in about 30 seconds. No credit card required.

Are the generated maps aligned with OSHA?

Our AI drafts maps that follow OSHA 29 CFR 1910.36–37 and NFPA 101 Life Safety Code standards. Every map includes clearly marked exits, fire extinguisher locations, assembly points, and directional evacuation arrows. Supervisor review is required before posting to your facility.

What file formats can I upload?

We accept JPG, PNG, and PDF floor plans. For best results, use a clear, high-resolution image of your floor plan with visible walls, doors, and rooms.

How long does map generation take?

Most maps are generated in 20–40 seconds. Complex multi-floor plans may take slightly longer. You can download your map immediately after generation.

Can I edit the map after generation?

The generated map is a high-resolution image you can download and print. For custom edits or enterprise features like multi-floor support and branded maps, check our pricing plans.

Is my floor plan data secure?

Yes. All uploads are encrypted in transit (TLS 1.3) and processed in secure cloud environments. We do not share your floor plans with third parties.

✓ Forklift zone detection✓ Dock door mapping✓ Chemical hazard marking✓ Print-ready PDF output

OSHA 1910.272 & Warehouse Evacuation Requirements

Understanding federal requirements for warehouse and distribution center emergency action plans. Review the full OSHA Emergency Preparedness guidelines for comprehensive requirements.

29 CFR 1910.38 - Emergency Action Plans

All warehouses with more than 10 employees must have a written Emergency Action Plan. Learn more about OSHA evacuation requirements for your facility:

  • Evacuation Procedures

    Step-by-step procedures for emergency evacuation including forklift shutdown protocols and dock door procedures.

  • Escape Route Assignments

    Primary and secondary routes from each work area, including high-bay zones, mezzanines, and loading docks.

  • Floor Plan Diagrams

    Visual maps showing exit routes, fire equipment, assembly points, and hazard zones posted in conspicuous locations.

  • Employee Alarm System

    Audible and visible alarms that can be heard/seen throughout the facility including high-noise areas and cold storage.

Additional Warehouse-Specific Standards

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    29 CFR 1910.178 - Powered Industrial Trucks

    Forklift operators must be trained on emergency procedures. Evacuation plans must account for safe equipment shutdown.

  • 📦
    29 CFR 1910.176 - Materials Handling

    Storage areas must maintain clear aisles and passageways. Evacuation routes through racking areas must be unobstructed.

  • 🌾
    29 CFR 1910.272 - Grain Handling

    Grain storage facilities require additional dust explosion prevention measures and specialized evacuation procedures.

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    29 CFR 1910.157 - Portable Fire Extinguishers

    Extinguishers must be within 75 feet travel distance. High-bay areas require accessible placement without ladder access. See our fire evacuation map template for proper extinguisher placement.

Loading Dock Evacuation: Critical Exit Points

Dock doors are often overlooked as emergency exits—here's what your map must show

Loading docks present both opportunities and hazards during evacuations. While dock doors provide additional egress points, they also create fall hazards, exposure to truck traffic, and potential bottlenecks. Your warehouse evacuation map must address these unique considerations:

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Pedestrian Door Identification

Clearly mark which dock positions have walk-through doors versus overhead-only doors. Pedestrian doors should be primary egress points to avoid dock edge falls.

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Dock Edge Fall Protection

When trailers are absent, open dock doors create 4-foot fall hazards. Maps should indicate dock lock status and alternative routes when docks are open.

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Emergency Stop Locations

Mark all E-stop buttons for conveyors, dock levelers, and automated systems. Employees must know how to halt equipment before evacuating.

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Assembly Points Away from Traffic

Dock-side assembly points must be positioned away from trailer backing zones and yard truck routes. Consider wind direction for hazmat scenarios.

Warehouse-Specific Features Our Generator Includes

Every map is customized for distribution center and warehouse environments

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Forklift Traffic Lanes

Automatically identifies and marks powered industrial truck traffic zones with safe pedestrian crossing points.

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Dock Door Numbering

All dock doors labeled with their numbers, pedestrian door locations highlighted, and dock edge hazards marked.

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Zone-Specific Maps

Create multiple "YOU ARE HERE" versions for posting throughout large facilities with different starting points.

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Hazmat Zone Marking

Chemical storage areas marked with NFPA diamonds, eyewash stations, and shelter-in-place zones.

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Fire Equipment Placement

Extinguisher locations with 75ft coverage circles, pull stations, and sprinkler riser rooms identified.

ADA Accessible Routes

Wheelchair-accessible paths marked, areas of rescue assistance identified, and evacuation chair locations shown. Review ADA design standards for accessibility requirements.

Warehouse Map Elements You Can Include

Pick the symbols and zones that match your operation — every element is editable before you post the final draft.

Loading docksPedestrian doorsRoll-up / overhead doorsPallet rackingForklift / PIT areasBattery-charging stationsFlammable storageCompressed-gas storageElectrical roomsMezzaninesProduction zonesOffice areasFirst-aid kitsSpill kitsFire extinguishersManual pull stationsOutdoor assembly pointsEmergency vehicle access

Every output is an OSHA-aligned map draft based on customer-provided facility information; final review by the employer and the local authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) or a qualified professional may be required before posting. Standards referenced include 29 CFR 1910.38 (Emergency Action Plans), 29 CFR 1910.36/1910.37 (exit routes), NFPA 101, the IFC, and the ADA — local adoption and your AHJ control enforcement.

Which Type of Warehouse Do You Operate?

Jump to the considerations that match your facility — each one changes which hazards and symbols belong on your map.

Roofing supply

Torch-down rolls, propane cylinders, and flammable adhesives push the fire load high. Map flammable storage, compressed-gas storage, outdoor yard staging, and emergency vehicle access to the loading apron.

Construction-material distributor

Lumber, rebar, and heavy cantilever racking with mixed indoor/outdoor storage call for wide forklift lanes, drive-through bays, and clearly placed outdoor assembly points. Running several branches? Standardize them with multi-location evacuation map software.

Food distributor

A dry-plus-refrigerated mix — sometimes with ammonia refrigeration — needs cold rooms, machinery/compressor rooms, and wash-down sanitation routes mapped, plus shelter and route options if a refrigerant release blocks an exit.

Auto-parts

Battery and oil storage, small-parts mezzanines, and a will-call counter mean mapping mezzanine stairs (never ladders as primary egress), flammable storage, and a clean customer egress path separate from forklift areas.

HVAC / plumbing supply

Refrigerant and other compressed-gas cylinders, long pipe-rack aisles, and a will-call area make compressed-gas storage, pipe-rack route widths, and counter exits the priorities on your map.

E-commerce fulfillment

Conveyor and sortation lines, pick mezzanines, and seasonal temporary staffing make E-stop locations, mezzanine egress, and multiple multilingual posting points essential — many sites post a zone map at every pick station.

Furniture

Bulky high-bay racking with foam and fabric fire load, plus a combined showroom and warehouse, means mapping showroom-to-yard routes, sprinkler riser rooms, and assembly points well clear of the building.

Cold storage

Freezer and cooler rooms create hypothermia exposure and insulated doors that can stick. Map emergency door-release mechanisms, warm-up zones, and time-limited routes so no one is trapped in sub-freezing space.

Packaging

Corrugated stock and combustible-dust risk alongside balers and large machinery mean mapping dust-collection zones, machine E-stops, and baler-area exits in line with combustible-dust housekeeping.

Light-manufacturing

Production zones with guarded machinery, a combined office and floor, and raw-plus-finished storage call for production-cell exits, office egress, and clearly marked first-aid and spill kits on the posted map.

Evacuation Map vs. Written Emergency Action Plan

Your posted map and your written EAP do different jobs — you generally need both.

Posted evacuation map — shows WHEREWritten EAP — explains DUTIES
Primary and secondary exit routes from each zoneProcedures for reporting a fire or other emergency
Exit doors, dock egress, and pedestrian pathsEvacuation procedures and route assignments
Outdoor assembly points and "You Are Here" markersHeadcount and accountability procedures after evacuation
Fire extinguishers, pull stations, first-aid and spill kitsCritical-operation shutdown duties (forklifts, conveyors, gas)
Hazard zones (flammable, compressed-gas, electrical)Rescue and medical duties for assigned employees
Forklift / PIT areas to avoid during egressNames or job titles to contact for plan details

Accurate note: a map does not replace the written-plan elements required under 29 CFR 1910.38. Pair this map with your written plan — build it with the Emergency Action Plan map and the OSHA EAP template.

Update an Existing Warehouse Map

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Regenerate and repost your map whenever your layout changes. An outdated posted map can misdirect employees during an evacuation and draw inspector or fire-marshal findings.

  • Racking moved, added, or reconfigured (aisles and routes shift)
  • A new dock door, pedestrian door, or exit is opened or sealed
  • Occupancy or headcount changes (added shift, seasonal temps, new mezzanine)
  • New flammable, compressed-gas, or battery-charging area introduced
  • Assembly point relocated or the yard traffic pattern changed

Already have a posted map with a problem? Re-upload your current floor plan to generate a corrected draft. If a fire marshal flagged your existing map, our fire-marshal map-correction guide walks through fixing and re-posting it, and you can keep maps consistent across sites with multi-location evacuation map software.

Warehouse Map Planner

Enter your own facility details for a quick map-count and turnaround estimate. Nothing is sent anywhere — this calculates from your inputs right in your browser.

Enter your posting points (or floors) above to see an estimated map count and turnaround.

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Need the Written Emergency Action Plan Too?

Your posted map shows the routes — your written EAP documents the duties OSHA requires under 29 CFR 1910.38. Build both so your warehouse is covered end to end.

Warehouse Evacuation Map FAQs

Common questions about creating evacuation maps for warehouses and distribution centers

What makes warehouse evacuation maps different from standard evacuation maps?

Warehouse evacuation maps must account for unique hazards including forklift traffic zones, high-bay pallet racking areas, loading dock exits, chemical storage sections, and variable aisle configurations. They require clearly marked routes that avoid powered industrial truck paths, identify shelter-in-place locations for hazmat incidents, and show dock door evacuation points. OSHA 29 CFR 1910.272 also requires specific considerations for combustible dust hazards in grain and storage facilities.

What OSHA standards apply to warehouse evacuation plans?

Warehouses must comply with OSHA 29 CFR 1910.38 (Emergency Action Plans), 29 CFR 1910.178 (Powered Industrial Trucks/Forklifts), 29 CFR 1910.176 (Materials Handling and Storage), and potentially 29 CFR 1910.272 (Grain Handling) for certain facilities. These standards require designated evacuation routes, assembly points away from dock traffic, and procedures for shutting down forklifts and other equipment during emergencies.

How do I create evacuation routes around forklift traffic zones?

Evacuation routes should be separated from forklift traffic lanes using physical barriers, floor markings, or designated pedestrian walkways. Our AI-powered generator automatically identifies forklift zones based on your floor plan and creates evacuation paths that minimize crossing points. Routes are marked with bright colors distinguishable from standard warehouse floor markings.

What should be included in a loading dock evacuation procedure?

Loading dock evacuation maps should show: all dock door exits with their door numbers, trailer presence indicators (whether docks are occupied), pedestrian door locations separate from overhead doors, emergency stop locations for conveyor systems, and designated assembly points away from truck traffic areas. Maps should also indicate fall hazards at open dock edges.

How do I handle chemical storage areas in my warehouse evacuation map?

Chemical storage areas require special marking including hazmat diamond symbols, spill containment zones, emergency shower and eyewash station locations, and shelter-in-place areas for chemical release scenarios. Your evacuation map should show both evacuation routes that bypass chemical storage AND alternate routes for when chemical spills block primary exits. SDS station locations should also be marked.

What fire extinguisher types are required in warehouses?

Warehouses typically require ABC dry chemical extinguishers for general areas, Class D extinguishers near flammable metals, and Class K extinguishers near break room kitchens. OSHA requires extinguishers within 75 feet travel distance (29 CFR 1910.157). For high-bay storage, extinguishers must be accessible without requiring ladders. Our generator helps position extinguisher symbols and shows approximate coverage you can verify.

How often should warehouse evacuation maps be updated?

Warehouse evacuation maps should be updated whenever the layout changes, including new racking installations, relocated equipment, modified traffic patterns, or changes to chemical storage locations. OSHA recommends reviewing emergency action plans annually at minimum. Our platform allows unlimited revisions so you can update your maps whenever your warehouse configuration changes.

Do I need separate evacuation maps for different warehouse zones?

Yes, large warehouses benefit from zone-specific evacuation maps with 'YOU ARE HERE' markers for each posting location. Each map should show the full facility layout but highlight the evacuation route from that specific zone. This is especially important for high-bay areas, cold storage zones, hazmat sections, and office areas within the warehouse. Our generator creates location-specific maps from a single floor plan upload.

What assembly point considerations are unique to warehouses?

Warehouse assembly points must be located away from dock truck traffic, forklift routes, and potential falling cargo zones. They should be on paved surfaces (not in trailer parking areas), visible from facility entrances for emergency responders, and large enough to accommodate all shifts. Consider designating separate assembly points for different zones to avoid overcrowding and enable faster headcounts.

How do I address multi-level mezzanine evacuation?

Mezzanine evacuation requires clearly marked stairway locations (never ladders as primary egress), maximum occupancy postings per OSHA requirements, and alternative exit routes if primary stairs are blocked. Maps should show stairway load capacities, handrail locations, and any areas of rescue assistance for employees with mobility limitations. Floor weight limits should also be posted.

Protect Your Warehouse Team Today

Don't wait for an OSHA inspection or, worse, an actual emergency to discover gaps in your evacuation plan. Our AI-powered generator creates professional warehouse evacuation maps in minutes—complete with forklift zones, dock exits, chemical storage routing, and all OSHA-required elements.

$165,514Statutory maximum OSHA willful/repeat penalty per violation (2025)
75 ftMax extinguisher travel distance (29 CFR 1910.157)
1910.178Powered industrial truck (forklift) standard

Free registration. Unlimited revisions. Print-ready in 30 seconds.

Disclaimer: OSHAMap produces an OSHA-aligned professional draft designed to support emergency planning. Final review should be confirmed by a qualified safety professional, fire marshal, or authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) before posting or using the map for emergency planning.