
What's your exposure?
Get your compliance score calculated against real OSHA enforcement data across every state and territory — and see exactly what an inspector would cite you for. Whether you're in a federal OSHA state or a state-plan state.
Federal OSHA or state plan — the core safety standards are the same. Your score is calculated against real enforcement data from your state, your industry, and the exact standards an inspector checks.
Federal OSHA state or state-plan state — the calculator knows the difference. Industry-specific questions adapt to your vertical’s hazard profile.
Yes/no questions mapped to the exact standards OSHA inspectors check during a walkaround. HazCom. Emergency plans. Training records. Safety programs. OSHA 300.
Compliance score, gap analysis, and fine exposure — benchmarked against real OSHA enforcement data. Download your scorecard. Fix the gaps yourself or let PROTEKON close them in 48 hours.
22 federal OSHA states. 25 state-plan states with their own enforcement agencies. 4 hybrid states. Your score adjusts for jurisdiction — because a citation in California, Michigan, Oregon, or Washington carries different penalty structures than federal OSHA.

Weighted against real OSHA enforcement data for your industry in your state. Not a generic risk quiz — a score benchmarked against actual citations.
Each gap mapped to the federal or state-plan standard, the citation classification (serious, willful, repeat), and the penalty range your OSHA area office would assess.
A single number: what it costs if OSHA walks in today. Serious violations: $16,131. Willful: up to $161,323. Per violation. Most employers we assess carry $32K–$81K in exposure.
27 industries. Construction alone accounts for $469M in penalties. Manufacturing: $271M. Your score reflects your industry’s real enforcement profile — not a one-size-fits-all template.
California, Michigan, Oregon, Washington, and 21 other states run their own OSHA programs with stricter standards. The assessment knows which jurisdiction governs your workplace.
Full score, gap analysis, and fine exposure shown immediately. Your personalized gap analysis delivered to your inbox. The downloadable PDF scorecard is the only thing gated.

of all OSHA violations nationwide are classified as serious — meaning the hazard could cause death or serious physical harm. 243,000 serious citations. $1.04 billion in penalties. Most employers cited had no idea they were exposed.
We had a safety manual from our corporate office. The assessment found it wasn’t site-specific and our HazCom program was missing entirely. Two citations waiting to happen — $32K exposure we had no idea about.
I assumed our general contractor handled OSHA compliance for the whole site. The calculator showed that as the controlling employer, every sub’s violation is our citation. We were carrying $96K in downstream exposure.
Oregon runs its own OSHA program with stricter penalty structures. I didn’t know that until this assessment. Our emergency action plan was missing and our training records were two years out of date.
Ignore it, DIY it, hire a safety consultant, or let PROTEKON handle it across every state you operate in.
| Capability | Do nothing | DIY / Templates | Safety Consultant | PROTEKON |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Written safety program (IIPP/APP) | ||||
| HazCom + SDS management | ||||
| Emergency action plan | ||||
| Multi-state jurisdiction mapping | ||||
| Ongoing regulatory monitoring | ||||
| Automatic document updates | ||||
| Enforcement data benchmarking | ||||
| Audit-ready in 48 hours | ||||
| Annual cost | $0 until cited | $1K–$5K | $8K–$25K | $597/mo |
| Risk if inspected | $48K–$161K+ | $16K–$80K | $5K–$20K | Minimal |
Yes. The assessment covers all 50 states plus DC and US territories. It automatically adjusts for whether you’re in a federal OSHA state (22 states where federal OSHA enforces directly) or a state-plan state (25 states like California, Michigan, Oregon, and Washington that run their own programs with potentially stricter standards). 4 states are hybrid — federal for private sector, state plan for public sector.
Federal OSHA sets the floor. State-plan states must be “at least as effective” but can — and often do — impose stricter standards and higher penalties. California (Cal/OSHA), Michigan (MIOSHA), Oregon (OR-OSHA), and Washington (WISHA) are the most notable. Your score factors in the enforcement patterns for your specific jurisdiction.
We use actual OSHA penalty amounts per standard from real enforcement citations. Current federal penalty maximums: $16,131 per serious violation, $161,323 per willful or repeat violation, and $16,131 per day for failure to abate. State-plan states may exceed these. We show a range because final amounts depend on employer size, good faith, and violation history.
No. The full assessment — score, gap analysis, fine exposure — is shown immediately. The downloadable PDF scorecard is the only step that asks for your email.
The questions map directly to what an OSHA compliance officer checks during a programmed or complaint-driven inspection. If your score is green, you probably don’t need us. If it’s red, you need somebody — we happen to close every gap within 48 hours.
Yes. Take the assessment once per state where you operate. Each location may face different enforcement patterns, jurisdiction rules, and industry-specific requirements. PROTEKON’s multi-site plan manages all locations from one dashboard.
We cover 27 industry verticals mapped from NAICS codes. If yours isn’t in the dropdown, select the closest match — the core safety questions (HazCom, emergency action plan, OSHA 300, training records, written safety program) apply to every employer regardless of industry.
A few yes-or-no baseline questions plus industry-specific checks that adapt to your vertical.

Real results. Your compliance score and fine exposure — calculated against real OSHA enforcement data across every US state, territory, and industry.
This assessment is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Results are based on self-reported answers and real OSHA enforcement data from January 2020 through March 2026. Fine estimates reflect current federal OSHA penalty maximums; state-plan states may differ. PROTEKON is not a law firm.