Organisations rarely look for a WHS compliance review without a reason. In most cases, there is already pressure building. That pressure may come from upcoming inspections, internal concerns, leadership accountability, or early warning signs that existing systems are not working as expected.
A structured WHS compliance review helps identify gaps before they turn into regulatory issues. It provides a clear understanding of how your organisation manages psychosocial risk, how systems operate in practice, and where improvements are required to meet expectations.
If your organisation has not yet completed a formal psychosocial risk assessment, it is often the first step before a full compliance review.
PRS approaches compliance reviews from a regulator-informed perspective, focusing on what actually gets assessed during inspections and enforcement activity.
A compliance review is not just a document check. It is a detailed assessment of how your organisation manages safety across systems, leadership, and day to day operations.
Assessment of how psychosocial hazards are identified, assessed, and controlled across the organisation. Safe Work Australia provides national guidance on managing psychosocial hazards through Codes of Practice.
Review of safety management systems, responsibilities, reporting structures, and decision making processes.
Evaluation of whether documentation reflects actual work practices or exists only on paper.
Analysis of how risks are identified, recorded, and managed, including whether controls are practical and effective.
Review of how incidents are reported, investigated, and used to improve systems.
Most organisations do not seek external support without a trigger.
Organisations want to understand what an inspector will see before the inspection happens.
A compliance review helps identify underlying issues that led to enforcement action.
Following a workplace event, organisations need clarity on whether their systems were adequate.
Executives require assurance that systems are aligned with WHS obligations.
A structured breakdown of where systems meet expectations and where they fall short.
Identification of high-risk areas that require immediate attention.
Actions that can be implemented within your organisation, not generic advice.
Guidance on whether further work is needed.
Psychosocial risk is now a central part of WHS compliance.
A compliance review must consider how psychosocial hazards are managed alongside physical risks.
ISO 45003 provides structured guidance for managing psychosocial risks in workplaces.
PRS brings experience from regulatory environments, which shapes how reviews are conducted.
FAQ
A WHS compliance review is an independent assessment of how an organisation manages safety.
A compliance review focuses on regulatory expectations and real-world enforcement.
Before inspections, after incidents, or when concerns arise.
No. It identifies gaps and provides guidance.
Always align with guidance from
Safe Work Australia
If your organisation is preparing for inspection or responding to regulator contact, a compliance review provides clarity on where you stand.