
AHS Compliance Checklist
AHS Compliance Checklist — Assess Your Building's Height Safety in 10 Minutes
Who this is for: Building owners, property managers, and facility managers responsible for commercial buildings in Melbourne and Victoria.
Work through each section and tick the items that are in place. Any unticked item represents a potential compliance gap. This checklist covers the key requirements under AS/NZS 1891.4, AS1657, AS1851, AS1892, and Safe Work Australia's Working at Heights guidelines. A fail on any single item means your building requires urgent attention before your next contractor accesses the roof.
What you'll get: A clear picture of where your building stands on height safety compliance — and a prioritised list of what needs fixing before your next inspection.

AHS 2026 Audit Guide
AHS 2026 Audit Guide — Prepare Your Site Before the Auditor Arrives
Who this is for: Building managers and facility teams preparing for an upcoming height safety inspection or recertification visit.
A height safety audit is one of the most important things you can do to protect your workers, contractors, and organisation. This guide walks you through exactly what to prepare, what auditors look for, and how to get your site ready before they arrive. Covers anchor points, static lines, documentation, access systems, and the AS/NZS 1891.4 recertification requirements that apply to every permanently installed system.
What you'll get: A step-by-step preparation checklist so your audit runs smoothly — and your certification is issued without defects.

AHS Industry Guide
AHS Industry Guide — Height Safety Compliance for Your Specific Industry
Who this is for: Operations managers, compliance officers, and safety teams across construction, retail, manufacturing, aged care, hospitals, strata, councils, and facility management.
Height safety obligations vary significantly across industries — the risks, access requirements, and compliance priorities for a shopping centre are fundamentally different from those facing a manufacturing facility or aged care provider. This guide is tailored to four key industries and uses it as a practical starting point for compliance planning. Find your sector and understand the specific standards, common hazards, and required controls that apply to your operations.
What you'll get: Industry-specific compliance guidance you can act on immediately — without needing to interpret the full Australian Standards yourself.

AHS Tenant Checklist
AHS Tenant Checklist — Know Your Obligations as a Commercial Tenant
Who this is for: Commercial tenants, occupiers, and office managers in leased premises where contractors access the roof or elevated areas.
You don't have to own the building to have legal obligations when work is carried out on its roof. As an occupier of commercial premises, you are a duty holder under Victorian OHS law. This checklist gives you the practical steps to protect yourself, your staff, and the contractors working on your site. Covers your legal position as a tenant, what to require from contractors before roof access is granted, and how to document compliance when your landlord is responsible for the height safety system.
What you'll get: A clear understanding of your tenant obligations and a practical checklist to use every time a contractor needs roof access.


