Fall Protection Remains a Top Priority for the Construction Industry: Nationwide

Falls, slips and trips account for nearly 40% of work-related injuries and causing over 300 deaths annually in the construction industry.
By: | April 30, 2025

Fall protection remains the construction industry’s most critical safety challenge, with falls, slips and trips accounting for nearly 40% of work-related injuries and causing more than 300 deaths annually, according to a recent panel of Nationwide’s commercial lines and construction risk management practice leaders.

The construction industry faces a significant workforce shortage, needing an estimated 439,000 new workers in 2025, Nationwide stated. This shortage magnifies the importance of protecting existing workers from preventable injuries, particularly falls from height, which continues to be the leading cause of serious injuries and fatalities on construction sites.

Recent research by the Center for Construction Research & Training reveals almost all falls are preventable, with clear patterns emerging in their causes. Poor planning and lack of proper fall protection equipment account for 27.4% of falls, while not using proper equipment (21.7%), improper use of equipment (17.1%), and lack of training (14.8%) make up the remainder of primary causes.

These incidents disproportionately affect certain segments of the construction workforce, according to Nationwide. Workers with less than two years of tenure account for half of all construction fall claims reported between 2020 and 2024, highlighting the vulnerability of less experienced employees.

The Hispanic community, which comprises 34.2% of the construction workforce—nearly double their representation across other industries—faces particularly stark risks.

The fatality rate for Hispanic construction workers was 41.6% higher than for non-Hispanic workers in 2020, and their injury rate 14.5% higher, according to the analysis. While the fatality rate for non-Hispanic workers decreased by 6.3% from 2018 to 2020, it increased by a 46.5% for Hispanic workers during the same period.

Challenges Across Specialty Trades and Small Businesses

Nationwide found clear patterns in the data indicating where fall protection challenges are most acute. Specialty trades—including roofing, electrical, plumbing, and painting—employ more than half of all construction workers but account for a disproportionate 70% of both fatal and nonfatal falls from 2011 to 2022, according to data cited in a Nationwide blog.

Business size also plays a significant role in fall protection outcomes. From 2011 to 2022, 70% of fatal falls occurred in businesses with fewer than 10 employees. These smaller operations often lack the formal fall protection programs and dedicated safety resources found in larger companies, creating a persistent vulnerability in the industry’s safety landscape.

Addressing fall protection requires solutions that account for these varied risk factors. For new and inexperienced workers, comprehensive training programs are essential before they begin working at heights, according to Nationwide.

For the Hispanic workforce, culturally and linguistically appropriate safety training is critical. The Nationwide blog suggested that companies provide bilingual training materials, ensure supervisors can communicate effectively with Spanish-speaking workers, and consider cultural factors that might influence safety behaviors or reporting.

Read the full blog from Nationwide here. &

The R&I Editorial Team can be reached at [email protected].

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