Complete Online System For Job Safety Analysis Creation & Management

  • Create JSAs 5x Faster
  • Professional & Consistent PDFs
  • Stay Compliant w/ Automated Reminders
  • 100's Of Predefined Hazards & Controls
  • Centralized Storage & Management
  • Review & Approval Process
  • Image Uploads & Hazard Scoring
  • Unlimited Worksheet Creation & Storage
  • Job & Activity Hazard Analysis Templates
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job safety analysis examples on multiple systems

Replace Your JSA Spreadsheets With a Purpose-Built System

Most safety teams still build Job Safety Analysis worksheets in Excel or Word. Also referred to as a Job Hazard Analysis (JHA), the JSA process breaks a job into steps, identifies hazards at each step, and defines controls. The results of doing this in spreadsheets are inconsistent formatting, scattered files, and worksheets that sit untouched for years.

JSABuilder was built specifically to solve this. Since 2008, safety professionals in construction, energy, manufacturing, and government have used it to create, store, and manage their JSA libraries in one place. Every worksheet comes out with the same clean, professional format — ready for the field or an audit.

Pick from hundreds of predefined hazards and controls to build worksheets faster, or add your own. Duplicate existing JSAs for similar jobs. Set up review reminders so nothing goes stale. It does the one thing it's supposed to do, and does it well.

Why JSABuilder?

Create JSAs Faster & More Efficiently

Leverage the JSAs you've already created to make new JSAs up to 5x faster. Just duplicate an existing JSA and make the required changes. Duplicate, update & get to work.

Predefined Hazards, Controls & Consequences

Comprehensive predefined lists of hazards, controls & consequences make it easy to define your job and remind the creator of things that might have otherwise been overlooked.

Clean & Consistent Output

Every JSA your team produces comes out with the same professional formatting. No more inconsistent spreadsheets or mismatched templates across departments.
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Stay Compliant

Automated reminders to JSA creators to annually review created worksheets helps keep your organizations worksheets up-to-date and compliant.
Affordable Pricing for Teams of All Sizes
Full Year Subscription
Single User
$67
Price per user decreases
as you add more users

$67 per user per year gets you unlimited worksheet creation, predefined hazard and control libraries, PDF generation, review workflows, and automated compliance reminders. Volume discounts kick in as you add users. No per-worksheet fees, no surprise charges.

Frequently Asked Questions About Job Safety Analysis

What is a Job Safety Analysis (JSA)?
A Job Safety Analysis is a safety procedure that breaks a job into individual steps, identifies the hazards associated with each step, and defines controls to mitigate those hazards. It's one of the most widely used tools in workplace safety programs across construction, manufacturing, energy, and government.
What are the steps of a Job Safety Analysis?
A JSA follows four main steps: (1) Select the job to analyze, (2) Break the job into a sequence of steps, (3) Identify the hazards associated with each step, and (4) Define preventive measures or controls for each hazard. The completed JSA is then reviewed, approved, and shared with the workers performing the job.
Is a JSA the same as a JHA?
Yes. A Job Safety Analysis (JSA) and a Job Hazard Analysis (JHA) are the same process. The terminology varies by company and industry, but the method is identical: break the job into steps, identify hazards, and define controls. Some organizations use other names like Task Hazard Analysis (THA) or Task Safety Analysis (TSA). JSABuilder supports all of these and lets you customize the document title to match your company's terminology.
Does OSHA require a Job Safety Analysis?
OSHA does not have a specific standard that mandates JSAs, but they strongly recommend them as a best practice for workplace safety. OSHA's own publication (OSHA 3071) provides detailed guidance on conducting JSAs. Many employers are required to perform hazard assessments under the General Duty Clause, and a JSA is one of the most effective ways to meet that obligation.
Who should complete a JSA?
JSAs should be completed by someone who knows the job well, typically a supervisor or experienced worker, often with input from the crew that will perform the work. Involving frontline workers leads to better hazard identification because they know the practical realities of the task. Safety managers usually oversee the process and handle final review and approval.
How often should a JSA be reviewed?
JSAs should be reviewed at least annually, and any time conditions change: new equipment, different work environment, an incident or near-miss, or changes in personnel. Stale JSAs are a common audit finding. JSABuilder includes automated review reminders so worksheets don't sit untouched.
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Create your account in under a minute. No credit card, no sales call, no obligation. Build a few worksheets, generate PDFs, and see if it fits your workflow.

If it works for your team, subscriptions start at $67/user/year. If not, your trial simply expires — no follow-up hassle.

Helping safety teams stay organized since 2008.

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