Workplace Fatalities in the UK
124 workers were killed in work-related accidents in Great Britain in 2024/25 — 14 fewer than the previous year, and consistent with pre-pandemic levels. The long-term decline from 495 deaths in 1981 to 124 in 2024/25 represents one of the most significant achievements in UK health and safety regulation. But the rate of progress has plateaued over the past decade, and behind every number is a person, a family, and a story that did not need to end the way it did.
Falls from height remain the single most common cause — responsible for 28% of all workplace fatalities. Together with being struck by a moving object and being struck by a moving vehicle, these three hazard types account for 60% of all fatal injuries to workers.
For falls-specific detail see our Falls from Height Statistics UK: The Definitive Guide.
Key Facts & Figures (Overview)
- 124 workers killed in work-related accidents in Great Britain in 2024/25 — down from 138 the previous year
- The fatal injury rate in 2024/25: 0.37 per 100,000 workers — one of the lowest on record
- 495 workplace deaths in 1981 — the current rate represents a reduction of approximately 75% over 40 years
- 35 deaths from falls from height — the leading cause at 28% of all fatalities
- 18 deaths from being struck by a moving object
- 14 deaths from being struck by a moving vehicle
- Together, the top three causes account for 60% of all fatal injuries
- Construction: 35 fatalities — the highest of any industry, down from 51 in 2023/24
- Agriculture, forestry and fishing: 23 fatalities — the highest fatal injury rate per 100,000 workers
- Transportation and storage: 15 fatalities
- Administrative and support services: 13 fatalities
- 40% of fatalities involved workers aged 60 and over — who make up just 12% of the workforce
- 95% of fatalities were male workers
- 92 members of the public were also killed in work-related incidents in 2024/25 — up from 87 the previous year
- The fatal injury rate has been broadly flat for the past decade, excluding pandemic-affected years — suggesting the easy gains from basic safety improvements have largely been achieved
The Five Most Dangerous Hazards
HSE data consistently identifies the same five hazard types as responsible for the overwhelming majority of workplace deaths:
1. Falls from height: 35 fatalities — 28% of all deaths. The single leading cause in almost every year since 2001/02. For detailed analysis see our Falls from Height Statistics UK: The Definitive Guide.
2. Struck by a moving object: 18 fatalities — approximately 15% of all deaths. Includes being hit by falling objects, being struck by moving plant, and impacts from machinery.
3. Struck by a moving vehicle: 14 fatalities — approximately 11% of all deaths. Particularly prevalent in construction, agriculture, and transportation/logistics settings.
4. Trapped by something collapsing or overturning: A significant category in both construction and agriculture — building collapses, trench failures, and overturning plant.
5. Contact with moving machinery: Manufacturing and agriculture settings are the primary locations for machinery-related fatalities.
Together these five types account for approximately 80% of all worker fatalities — demonstrating that workplace death is highly concentrated in a small number of well-understood, largely preventable hazard scenarios.
Industries with the Highest Fatal Injury Rates
Construction recorded 35 worker fatalities in 2024/25 — the highest absolute number of any industry, though down sharply from 51 in 2023/24. The fatal injury rate in construction is approximately 4.8 times the all-industry average. Falls from height are responsible for over half of construction deaths over the five-year period. See our Construction Falls from Height Statistics UK guide.
Agriculture, forestry and fishing recorded 23 fatalities — and despite having a smaller workforce than construction, has the highest fatal injury rate per 100,000 workers of any industry sector. The combination of working at height (on farm buildings, grain stores, trees, and agricultural machinery), working with large animals, and the remote nature of much agricultural work all contribute to this elevated rate.
Waste and recycling has the second-highest fatal injury rate per 100,000 workers — a small workforce facing very high exposure to moving vehicles, plant, and height risks.
Transportation and storage — 15 fatalities in 2024/25, up from 11 the previous year. Falls from vehicles and loading facilities feature alongside struck-by incidents.
The Self-Employed: A Growing Concern
Self-employed workers represent one of the most concerning trends in workplace fatality data. They make up approximately 15% of the workforce but account for roughly 40% of all workplace fatalities. In construction alone, nearly 45% of fatal injuries over a five-year period involved self-employed workers.
For falls from height specifically, self-employed workers now account for approximately two-thirds of fatal fall incidents — up from one-third just four years ago. The drivers are clear: self-employed workers are less likely to receive formal safety training, less likely to be supervised, more likely to make cost-driven decisions about PPE, and more likely to work alone without anyone to respond quickly if something goes wrong.
Members of the Public
92 members of the public died in work-related incidents in 2024/25 — up from 87 the previous year. These are individuals who were not at work themselves but were in a workplace setting affected by work activities. The majority of public fatalities occur in service sectors — retail, transportation, hospitality, and healthcare — where the interface between work activities and members of the public is highest.
Employers have a legal duty not only to protect their workers but also to protect members of the public who may be affected by their work. The rising trend in public fatalities is a significant concern.
Long-Term Trends and the Plateau
The UK's workplace fatality record shows a clear long-term improvement — from 495 deaths in 1981 to 124 in 2024/25. This represents approximately a 75% reduction over 40 years. The HSE regularly notes that Great Britain is one of the safest countries in the world to work.
However, the rate of improvement has stalled. Excluding the pandemic-affected years of 2020/21 and 2021/22, the fatal injury rate has been broadly flat for approximately a decade — fluctuating between approximately 0.37 and 0.46 per 100,000 workers without the sustained downward trend seen in earlier decades.
This plateau reflects that the easiest safety gains — basic machinery guarding, obvious fall hazards, elementary traffic management — have largely been achieved. The remaining fatalities are concentrated in complex work environments, involving self-employed and older workers, in high-risk sectors where further progress requires more sophisticated and sustained intervention.
Written by Working at Height Experts
This guide was produced by the team at Working at Heights Course, a UK provider of RoSPA and CPD-accredited online working at height training. For falls-specific data see our Falls from Height Statistics UK: The Definitive Guide, and for the cost picture see our Cost of Falls from Height to UK Businesses guide.
Sources & References
- HSE – Work-Related Fatal Injuries in Great Britain 2024/25 – https://press.hse.gov.uk/2025/07/02/latest-annual-work-related-fatalities-published/
- HSE – Kind of Accident Statistics in Great Britain 2025 – https://www.hse.gov.uk/statistics/assets/docs/kinds-of-accident.pdf
- WorkNest – Key Takeaways from the HSE's 2024/25 Fatal Injury Statistics – https://worknest.com/blog/fewer-lives-lost-key-takeaways-from-the-hses-2024-25-fatal-injury-statistics/
- DWF Group – Workplace Fatalities in Great Britain – https://dwfgroup.com/en/news-and-insights/insights/2025/9/workplace-fatalities-in-great-britain

