Comprehensive OSHA Compliance Training for Every Industry and Hazard
Workplace safety isn’t just about avoiding citations—it’s about protecting your most valuable asset: your people. From manufacturing floors to construction sites, warehouses to hospitality venues, every industry faces unique safety challenges that require targeted OSHA training solutions. Our comprehensive OSHA safety course library addresses critical compliance requirements across all major hazard categories, ensuring your team has the knowledge to identify risks, prevent incidents, and maintain a safe work environment.
Why OSHA Safety Training Matters
Reduce Workplace Incidents:
Proper OSHA training equips employees to recognize hazards before they become accidents. Organizations with comprehensive safety programs experience 52% fewer workplace injuries compared to those without structured training initiatives.
Ensure Regulatory Compliance:
OSHA standards mandate specific training for numerous workplace hazards. Our courses meet federal requirements for hazard communication, lockout/tagout, respiratory protection, and dozens of other safety topics, helping you avoid costly citations and penalties.
Lower Insurance Costs:
Many insurance providers offer premium reductions for organizations that demonstrate commitment to workplace safety through documented training programs. Our certificate tracking makes it easy to prove your compliance during audits.
Strengthen Safety Culture:
When employees understand safety protocols and see management’s investment in their well-being, engagement increases, and incident reporting improves. This proactive approach prevents small issues from becoming serious injuries.
View Featured OSHA Safety Training course descriptions below.

This lesson makes you aware of how aerosol transmissible disease exposures occur in work settings. It also presents information on what you and your employer can do to minimize the risk of exposures.
The purpose of the NFPA standard 70E (2021 edition) is to provide a standard for safety-related work practices for the construction, maintenance, operation and demolition of electrical systems in the workplace. Vivid’s lesson covers awareness-level information for workers who have jobs or assignments that bring them into contact with electrical hazards, such as arc flash and electric shock. Completing this lesson does not designate an employee as an electrically-qualified worker.
This lesson will help employees increase hazard awareness and assess the risk for operations where there is any potential for exposure to asbestos and the risk of acquiring an asbestos-related disease. However, completing this lesson alone does not meet the intent of applicable regulations nor qualify a worker to collect samples or perform abatement activities.
This lesson covers principles of back safety, including how to properly care for your back and perform work tasks safely.
The purpose of this lesson is to introduce behavior-based safety concepts to employees, with the intent of creating an understanding what influences employees to change unsafe behaviors before an accident or injury happens. Accidents and injuries have both a human and business cost, so it is advantageous for employees to practice safe behaviors and mitigate unsafe behaviors in the workplace.
You will learn to recognize how you can be exposed to benzene, the health effects related to benzene exposure, and how you and your employer can take steps to keep you safe in your workplace.
This lesson will familiarize you with the steps you can take to minimize your risk of exposure to bloodborne pathogens in the workplace.
This lesson provides instruction on how to respond confidently as a bystander to a suspected sudden cardiac arrest, perform compression-only adult CPR, and use an AED. This program does not qualify for first aid or CPR certification.
This lesson covers the required awareness training on the occupational hazards common to the handling and use of chemicals, measures you can take to protect yourself from chemical hazards, safe practices for chemical storage and waste disposal, and the correct response to emergency situations involving chemical spills. This lesson does not cover information related to radiological agents, explosives, and biohazardous/infectious agents.
This lesson teaches you how to recognize chlorine hazards in the workplace and limit your risk of a hazardous exposure using appropriate safety precautions and controls.
The goal of the course is to create awareness among employees of the hazards inherent to working in cold environments. Additionally the course identifies the nature, symptoms and treatment of cold stresses and the precautions employees should take to protect themselves. Although this lesson describes instances of immersion hypothermia (cold water exposure), it does not contain information on water rescue procedures.
The purpose of this lesson is to address the hazards inherent in compressed gas and provide best practices for using, moving, and storing compressed gas containers.
This lesson will present the hazards posed by confined spaces, the basic requirements for entry into a permit required confined space, and the safe practices for working in a permit required confined space.
This lesson will present the hazards posed by confined spaces and the difference between a permit required confined space and a non-permit required confined space.
This lesson will help you recognize the hazards associated with working with or near conveyor equipment, the safeguards in place to protect you and your responsibilities when working with conveyors, including those related to lock and tag requirements.
This lesson prepares workers to work safely with and around electricity. This lesson does not address arc-flash hazards and controls, lock-out/tag-out procedures, or high voltage (220V or 440V) electrical safety.
This lesson creates awareness about the dangers of fire and other emergencies, provides an overview of the requirements for emergency action and fire prevention plans, and touches on best practices for responding to alarms and practicing preparedness through drills. This lesson does not cover how to prepare for hazardous waste material emergencies or responses such as cleanup.
After completing this lesson, you will be able to recognize the characteristics of a properly-established excavation site, as well as the potential hazards you may encounter when working in and around excavations. You will also be able to identify the precautions you must follow in order to work safely in and around excavations.
This lesson covers eye safety, eye hazards in the workplace, and how to prevent and treat an eye injury.
This lesson addresses fire classes, fire extinguisher types, labels, and selection, as well as decisions you must consider and steps you must take if a fire occurs in your workplace.

After completing this lesson, learners will be able to explain a first aid provider’s responsibilities, identify the legal and ethical issues related to acting as a first aid provider, and explain when it is appropriate to move ill or injured patients and how it should be done.
This lesson covers how to correctly apply hazard recognition principles and safety practices when using flammable liquids in the workplace.
This lesson will teach you about the potential hazards associated with formaldehyde, where formaldehyde is likely to be encountered in the workplace, and how to protect yourself if you work with or around this hazardous chemical.
This lesson will introduce the hazards associated with hand and power tool use and the actions you can take to reduce your risk of hand and power tool-related accidents and injuries. Completing this lesson does not qualify or authorize you to operate a specific tool.
“This lesson will teach you about your hands’ vulnerability to injury and safe practices to reduce or prevent work-related hand injuries.
Note: This course does not address glove safety to comply with NFPA 70E and arc flash hazards.”
This lesson teaches you to recognize and understand the required elements of your company’s written hazard communication program, including how to: protect yourself from hazardous chemicals used or stored in your workplace using the Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labeling of Chemicals (GHS), recognize and respond to label elements, and understand the contents of Safety Data Sheets.
This lesson will help you recognize the impact of noise on your hearing, the warning signs of hearing loss, and the noise exposure limits that necessitate hearing protection. In addition, this lesson will introduce you to the types, benefits, and proper use of hearing protectors and address your responsibilities in supporting your employer’s hearing conservation program.
This lesson will help you become aware of the hazards inherent to working in hot environments. Additionally, you will learn the nature, symptoms, and treatment of heat stresses, as well as the precautions you should take to protect yourself against these stresses. You will hear some general first aid guidelines; however, any treatment-related information provided in this lesson does not constitute medical advice and is not a substitute for evaluation by a qualified healthcare professional.
In this lesson, you will learn the hazards of hot work and the actions you can take to either prevent them or protect yourself from them and the injuries associated with this type of work.
The purpose of this lesson is to familiarize employees with the common procedures of conducting an incident investigation, specifically an incident involving an injury. The crux of why incident investigation is critical is to implement corrective actions to prevent further incidents.
This lesson will familiarize you with the hazards you may encounter when working in a laboratory. You will learn about how to protect yourself from hazardous exposures and how to respond appropriately if an accident or emergency occurs.
The goal of this lesson is to provide awareness-level instruction on ladder hazards, safe use requirements, and best practices for all employees.
The goal of this lesson is to provide awareness level training for all employees about the existence of hazardous energy sources; the isolation of those energy sources during certain maintenance and repair activities; and the communication and control procedures that limit access to those energy sources through the use of tags and locks.
Lockout Tagout for Authorized Workers provides background on what lockout/tagout is teaches the steps to safely perform this procedure. It covers the types of hazardous energy contained in equipment and machinery, what a Hazardous Energy Control Program is, and how to perform special procedures such as a group lockout/tagout.
This lesson will help you recognize the hazards associated with machinery use, the methods of machine guarding, the different types of machine safeguards, and your responsibilities when working with guarded machinery.
This lesson will teach you fundamentals of overhead and gantry crane safety, including the characteristics of overhead and gantry cranes, the requirements and procedures for inspecting the equipment, proper pre-planning procedures, and how to safely lift and move a load.
8 courses covering eye, face, foot, hand, head, hearing, respiratory protection, and water safety.
This lesson will familiarize you with the purpose of respirators, the factors that influence respirator effectiveness and the limitations and capabilities of different types of respirators. You will learn the responsibilities both you and your employer have for ensuring safe respirator use in the workplace, as well as how to handle a respirator emergency or malfunction if one occurs.
This lesson will teach you how to safely rig loads that will be moved by cranes, hoists, or other equipment. This includes planning a lift, inspecting and selecting slings, determining a load’s weight, using a sling angle chart, and working with a crane operator.
This lesson will teach you to identify hazardous workplace conditions and unsafe practices that can lead to slips, trips, and falls and how to prevent incidents through good housekeeping practices, safe behavior, and identification of corrective actions required to eliminate hazardous walking and working surface conditions. You will also learn how to fall properly to avoid serious injury, and how to respond to a fall injury should one occur. This lesson will focus on same-level falls, as opposed to falls from heights.
Course Features and Benefits
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Crystal-clear learning objectives set expectations up front and guide learners through the course—so they stay focused, understand what matters most, and finish with confidence.
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Engaging Videos and Professional Narration bring content to life with dynamic visuals and natural-sounding audio—making training more interactive, modern, and easier to absorb.
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Guided, step-by-step navigation keeps learners on track and ensures every required section is completed—supporting consistency and better compliance outcomes.
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Smart bookmarking automatically saves progress so learners can pick up exactly where they left off—no rewatching or hunting for their last page.
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Built-in practice that sticks with non-graded knowledge checks, scenarios, and exercises that reinforce key concepts and strengthen retention without pressure.
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Randomized final assessments pulled from a question bank to keep testing fair, consistent, and resistant to answer-sharing—while still measuring the right learning outcomes.
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Flexible LMS Integration Options SCORM-compliant courses work seamlessly with your existing LMS. Alternatively, use our enterprise-level Workplace LMS designed specifically for healthcare compliance training.
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Unlimited retakes to mastery so learners can reattempt the assessment until they meet the passing score—supporting learning, confidence, and completion without unnecessary roadblocks.
Why is OSHA e-Learning important?
OSHA e-Learning is valuable for a number of reasons. The main benefit consists of a safer working environment for your staff. Learning the ins and outs from our OSHA safety training courses will help your team spot hazards, improve current safety levels and work more proactively to maintain a safe work premise.
What are some of the Most Common OSHA Cited Violations?
Some of the most common OSHA cited violations consist of:
- Fall Protection – General Requirements (1926.501)
- Respiratory Protection (1910.134)
- Control of Hazardous Energy – Lockout/Tagout (1910.147)
- Personal Protective and Lifesaving Equipment – Eye and Face Protection (1926.102)
OSHA Safety Training FAQs
Our OSHA Safety courses are designed for a wide range of industries including manufacturing, construction, warehousing, hospitality, retail, and general industry. The courses address common workplace hazards across sectors—from electrical safety and machine guarding to hazard communication and lockout/tagout. We can help you build a custom bundle tailored to your industry’s specific risks.
Yes. All courses are developed to meet OSHA standards and regulations. We partner with a leading safety training provider with nearly 30 years of experience creating OSHA-compliant content. However, note that completing awareness-level training does not qualify workers for specialized tasks requiring hands-on certification (such as operating forklifts or performing qualified electrical work).
Awareness training educates employees about hazards, safe practices, and regulatory requirements—what our online courses provide. Certification training typically involves hands-on skill demonstration and authorizes workers to perform specific tasks (like operating cranes or conducting confined space entry). Our courses provide the knowledge foundation; hands-on certification requires in-person evaluation by a qualified instructor.
You can purchase individual courses based on specific needs, or we can create a custom bundle that addresses all relevant hazards in your workplace. Custom bundles provide cost savings and ensure comprehensive coverage of your safety training requirements. Contact us to discuss your specific needs.
Course duration varies by topic complexity. Most courses range from 15 minutes to 90 minutes. Each course listing shows the estimated completion time. Learners can save progress and return later with our bookmarking feature.
Yes. Learners receive a printable certificate upon successfully completing each course and passing the final assessment. These certificates document training for your safety records and compliance audits.
Our courses are SCORM-compliant and integrate seamlessly with most learning management systems. If you don’t have an LMS, you can use Evolve’s Workplace LMS, which includes compliance tracking, automated certifications, and detailed reporting capabilities specifically designed for safety training management.
Administer Online OSHA Safety Training— Protect Your Workplace & Employees
At Evolve e-Learning, we recognize that every individual has the right to work in a safe environment. That’s why we combine essential knowledge with efficient strategies in these OSHA safety courses. Our goal is to equip your staff with the skills and insight to identify unsafe work practices and promote a safe workplace. To learn more about Evolve e-Learning’s OSHA Safety training courses and get a free trial, contact us today!
