COSHH Assessment: Identifying Hazardous Substances & Writing Risk Assessments for Trade Use

Quick Answer: A COSHH assessment is required under the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002 (COSHH) for any work involving hazardous substances — including silica dust from cutting, wood dust from routing, solvent adhesives, cement, bitumen fumes, and lead paint. The assessment identifies the substance, the route of exposure, the health effects, and the controls (PPE, ventilation, substitution). It does not need to be complex — a one-page assessment per substance or group of substances is typically sufficient for most trade use.

Summary

COSHH is one of the most important but least understood health and safety obligations for UK tradespeople. Many sole traders believe COSHH only applies to chemical factories or laboratories — in fact, it applies to any workplace where hazardous substances are used or generated, including domestic refurbishment, roofing, painting, and groundworks.

The consequences of ignoring COSHH are long-term and serious: silicosis (from silica dust), occupational asthma (from wood dust, isocyanates in spray paints), hand-arm vibration syndrome (HAVS), and dermatitis from cement contact are all common among tradespeople. HSE data consistently shows that construction workers have significantly elevated rates of occupational lung disease compared to other industries.

COSHH assessment is not primarily a paper exercise — it is a process of understanding exposure risks and putting controls in place. The paperwork is evidence that the process has been carried out. For most trades, a generic COSHH assessment per activity type (e.g., 'cutting concrete' or 'applying solvent-based adhesive') is sufficient, reviewed annually or when working methods change.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Substance Common Sources Route WEL (mg/m³) Minimum PPE
Respirable crystalline silica Cutting/grinding concrete, stone, brick, fibre cement Inhalation 0.1 (TWA) FFP3 + on-tool extraction
Hardwood dust Routing, sawing, sanding hardwood Inhalation 1 (TWA) FFP2 + dust extraction
Cement/concrete dust Mixing, cutting, grinding Inhalation, skin 1 (resp.) FFP2, nitrile gloves
Bitumen fumes Hot bitumen roofing, torch-on felt Inhalation 1 (TWA) FFP3, eye protection
Solvent vapours Adhesives, paints, thinners Inhalation, skin Varies — see SDS Organic vapour mask (A1/A2), nitrile gloves
Isocyanates (spray polyurethane) Spray foam, two-pack coatings Inhalation 0.02 mg/m³ Full-face supplied-air respirator, skin protection
Lead (from old paint) Stripping, burning, grinding pre-1970s paintwork Inhalation 0.15 mg/m³ P3 respirator, disposable suit, decontamination
Asbestos Any pre-2000 materials — see specific guidance Inhalation 0.1 fibres/ml Licensed or notifiable work — specialist contractor
Wet cement (dermatitis) Laying concrete/mortar, plastering Skin contact N/A Waterproof nitrile gloves, long sleeves

Detailed Guidance

Writing a COSHH Assessment

A COSHH assessment does not need to be a lengthy document. For most trade activities, a single A4 sheet per activity or substance group is adequate. It must cover:

1. Substance or activity identified: Name the substance (or describe the activity that generates the hazard, e.g., 'cutting concrete blocks with angle grinder').

2. Who is exposed and how: List the workers involved, the duration of exposure (hours per day), and the route of exposure (inhalation, skin contact, ingestion).

3. What are the health effects: Refer to the SDS Section 2 (hazard identification) and Section 11 (toxicological information). State clearly what the health risk is: silicosis, occupational asthma, dermatitis, cancer.

4. Current controls: List the controls already in place: extraction, wet methods, PPE.

5. Residual risk: Is the residual risk acceptable? If controls are adequate, risk is low. If not, additional controls must be specified.

6. Actions required: Any additional controls, training, health surveillance, or equipment.

7. Review date: Typically annual, or when working methods change.

Template structure:

COSHH Assessment
Activity: [e.g., Cutting concrete blocks on site]
Substance/hazard: Respirable crystalline silica dust
Date: [date]  Assessed by: [name]

Exposure: Operatives cutting concrete blocks with angle grinder. 
Duration: up to 2 hours per day. Route: inhalation.

Health effects: Silicosis (irreversible lung scarring), lung cancer (Group 1 carcinogen). 
WEL: 0.1 mg/m³ (8-hour TWA).

Controls in place:
- Angle grinder fitted with shroud and dust extraction (H-class vacuum)
- Wet cutting where possible
- FFP3 disposable respirator worn at all times during cutting
- Work area cleared of non-essential personnel during cutting

Residual risk: LOW — controls meet COSHH regulation 7 requirements

Review date: [date + 12 months]
Signed: [signature]

Silica Dust — The Most Critical Trade COSHH Issue

Respirable crystalline silica (RCS) is present in most masonry, concrete, brick, natural stone, and fibre cement materials. When cut, drilled, or ground, RCS particles are generated that can reach the deepest parts of the lungs and cause silicosis — a progressive, irreversible, and potentially fatal lung disease with no cure.

The HSE's CONIAC (Construction Industry Advisory Committee) has designated silica dust as the highest priority dust hazard in construction. The WEL of 0.1 mg/m³ (8-hour TWA) is extremely low — uncontrolled cutting of concrete can generate levels 10–100× this WEL within seconds.

Required controls for silica-generating activities:

  1. On-tool extraction: Angle grinders, disc cutters, and chasing tools must be fitted with a dust shroud connected to an H-class (HEPA) vacuum. On-tool extraction is the most effective dust control for powered tools
  2. Wet cutting: Water suppression at the cutting point dramatically reduces airborne dust. Diamond blade cutters with water feed are standard for external stone/paving cutting
  3. Respiratory protection: FFP3 disposable respirator or a powered air-purifying respirator (PAPR) with P3 filter. FFP2 is NOT adequate for silica dust
  4. Exclusion zone: Keep non-essential workers at least 10m from the cutting area during dry operations

Activities that generate silica dust (non-exhaustive):

Wood Dust — A Significant but Underestimated Hazard

Hardwood dust is classified as a Group 1 human carcinogen (nasal cancer). Softwood dust causes occupational asthma. The WEL for hardwood is 1 mg/m³ (lower than most tradespeople realise).

Sources: Routing, sawing, and sanding hardwood and MDF (MDF dust is particularly fine); cutting sheet materials; using orbital sanders without extraction.

Controls:

Cement and Wet Concrete — Skin Hazard

Portland cement contains chromium VI compounds that cause allergic contact dermatitis (cement burn). This is a delayed hypersensitivity reaction that develops over weeks or months of repeated exposure — the worker may not notice the damage occurring.

Controls:

Note: Category I (general purpose) gloves provide no chemical protection. Disposable nitrile gloves (EN 374, Category III) are the minimum. Heavy-duty rubber gloves for prolonged contact.

Health Surveillance

COSHH requires health surveillance where:

For tradespeople regularly exposed to:

Health surveillance is typically contracted to an occupational health provider. Costs are modest (£30–£80 per worker per test). Records must be kept for 40 years for substances causing long-term disease (silica, hardwood dust).

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a COSHH assessment for every product I use?

No — you can group similar substances. A single assessment for 'solvent-based adhesives' covers all similar products in that category. A single assessment for 'cutting concrete or masonry' covers all silica-generating cutting activities. Review the SDS for each product to confirm the hazard classification — if the hazards are substantially similar, a group assessment is appropriate.

Are dust masks adequate for cutting stone?

No — not for silica dust. A dust mask (surgical mask or FFP1) does not achieve the protection required for respirable crystalline silica. The minimum is FFP3 (assigned protection factor 20, meaning it reduces inhaled concentration to 1/20th of ambient). For prolonged or high-concentration exposure, a powered air-purifying respirator (PAPR) with P3 filter is more reliable (better seal, lower breathing resistance for long periods).

My employee says dust doesn't affect them. How do I respond?

Silicosis and occupational asthma develop silently over years of exposure — by the time symptoms appear, significant and irreversible damage has often occurred. The damage is cumulative — there is no safe lower threshold for RCS. The worker's perceived tolerance is not a reliable indicator of safety. Controls are required regardless of how the worker feels.

I work alone — do I still need COSHH assessments?

Yes. Self-employed workers are duty holders under COSHH for their own exposure. The Regulations apply to 'employees' but self-employed workers are treated the same for personal protective purposes. The assessment can be simpler for a sole trader — a generic one-page assessment per activity type is sufficient.

Regulations & Standards