One Employee, Full Obligations: German Law Imposes Workplace Safety Duties and Fines from Day One
06.07.2026 - 02:21:54 | boerse-global.de
Germany’s Arbeitssicherheitsgesetz (ASiG) leaves no room for size-based exemptions: the moment a company hires its first employee, it must build a structured occupational safety organisation. Employers are required to appoint company doctors and specialists for occupational safety (SiFa), and this responsibility sits squarely with the business owner—it cannot be delegated.
In earlier surveys, more than 900,000 work accidents were recorded annually, triggering production losses running into double-digit billions of euros. The law aims to prevent precisely that damage through systematic risk prevention. The core tool: a mandatory hazard assessment, required since 1996 for all employers. It follows the STOP principle. Substitution of hazards comes first, followed by technical and organisational measures. Personal protective equipment is the very last resort. Documentation is critical—if a serious accident occurs, fines can reach €30,000, and criminal consequences may follow.
The hazard assessment is the cornerstone of workplace safety, but creating thorough documentation from scratch takes time. A free Risk Assessment Toolkit provides 41 ready-to-use templates and checklists covering fire safety, manual handling, lone working and more — everything you need to keep your risk management compliant. Download the free Risk Assessment Toolkit
Two Models for Small Firms
Companies with up to 50 employees have two options. Under the Unternehmermodell, the employer gains the necessary expertise through training courses. Alternatively, the standard care model uses external service providers or in-house experts. Costs vary widely: the self-training path runs between €150 and €500 a year, while external care costs €600 to €2,500 annually.
Ignoring these obligations carries financial risk. Each violation can draw a fine of up to €5,000. For small businesses, that sum can sting as much as the yearly safety budget itself.
Safety Delegates from 20 Employees
Once a company regularly employs more than 20 people, an extra duty kicks in: safety delegates (SiBe) must be formally appointed. Unlike safety specialists, delegates work on a voluntary basis and carry no formal liability for occupational safety. Their job is to warn colleagues about hazards and support management. Training through the employer’s liability insurance association (Berufsgenossenschaft) takes two to three days.
Heat Protection and Seasonal Measures
Seasonal conditions also fall under workplace safety. When indoor temperatures hit 26°C, employers should take action—ventilating or providing drinking water, for example. Above 35°C, rooms without protective measures become unsuitable for work.
Seasonal hazards like heat are just one piece of the puzzle. A comprehensive Health & Safety Toolkit gives you risk assessments, checklists and toolbox talks aligned with UK regulations, helping you protect employees from every angle — all year round. Get the free Health & Safety Toolkit
Reforms on the Horizon and New Cyber Training Duties
The federal government is currently debating sweeping labour law reforms. Among the proposals: requiring a medical certificate from the first day of illness, a move that would effectively scrap the telephone sick note introduced in late 2023. Critics warn this could overload doctors’ surgeries and fuel presenteeism—employees showing up sick rather than staying home.
Meanwhile, cyber security training obligations are gaining prominence. The NIS2 directive compels companies to regularly train both staff and management on topics such as phishing and data classification. Here too, the buck stops with the leadership: the responsibility is personal and cannot be passed to others.
