NASC Membership Requirements: What Scaffolding Contractors Need for SG4, SG6 and Audit Compliance

Quick Answer: NASC (National Access and Scaffolding Confederation) membership requires contractors to pass a NASC Safety Audit demonstrating compliance with SG4:22 (preventing falls) and SG6:17 (loading) guidance notes, hold adequate insurance (minimum £5m public liability), employ CISRS-carded operatives, and maintain documented safety management systems. Audits are conducted annually by NASC-approved auditors.

Summary

The NASC is the UK's principal trade body for scaffolding and access contractors, with around 300 contractor members responsible for the majority of scaffolding erected in the UK. NASC membership carries significant commercial weight — many principal contractors and large clients specify NASC membership as a minimum supply chain requirement, particularly on construction, maintenance, and petrochemical projects.

Becoming and remaining an NASC member is not a simple registration exercise. It involves demonstrating genuine operational competence across health and safety, workforce qualifications, insurance, financial standing, and management systems. The annual audit process is rigorous and a meaningful proportion of applicants and renewal candidates fail or require corrective action before gaining or retaining membership.

Understanding NASC membership requirements is important not just for scaffolding firms seeking membership, but for any principal contractor or site manager evaluating a scaffolding subcontractor. NASC membership is one of the most reliable proxies for a scaffolding firm's compliance standards.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Requirement Minimum Standard
Public liability insurance £5,000,000 per occurrence
Employer's liability insurance £10,000,000
Operative CISRS cards Valid cards for all scaffolders on site
Supervision CISRS Scaffolding Supervisor on every contract
Safety audit frequency Annual
Audit body NASC-approved auditors only
SG4 compliance Documented fall prevention measures
SG6 compliance Loading documented and signed off
Financial requirement Auditors assess stability; no minimum turnover
Membership review cycle Annual renewal

Detailed Guidance

The NASC Safety Audit Process

The NASC safety audit is the centrepiece of membership. It is conducted by an NASC-approved auditor visiting the contractor's premises and reviewing documentation, then typically conducting a site visit to verify on-site practice matches policy.

The audit covers five main areas:

  1. Health and safety policy and management systems — written H&S policy, risk assessment procedures, method statement library, incident investigation records, RIDDOR reporting compliance
  2. Workforce competence — CISRS card records for all operatives, evidence of induction and toolbox talks, training records, subcontractor management
  3. Plant and equipment — inspection records for tubes, fittings, boards, and ancillary equipment; quarantine and rejection procedures; calibration of inspection equipment
  4. Financial and legal standing — insurance certificates, Companies House status, VAT registration where applicable
  5. Technical compliance — use of TG20 eSP for compliance sheets, scaffold inspection forms (TG20:21 Appendix A format or equivalent), handover certificate records

Auditors score each section. A minimum score is required in each section; a high score in one area cannot compensate for a fail in another. Common audit failures include:

SG4:22 — Preventing Falls from Scaffolding

SG4:22 is the 2022 edition of the NASC guidance note on preventing falls. It is the primary reference document for fall prevention in scaffolding operations. NASC members are required to operate in accordance with SG4.

Key SG4:22 requirements:

SG4:22 replaces SG4:15 and introduces updated guidance on advance guardrail installation and working at height hierarchy.

SG6:17 — Loading of Scaffolds

SG6:17 covers scaffold loading, defining the four duty classes (as per BS EN 12811-1:2003):

Duty Class Loading (kN/m²) Typical Use
Class 1 0.75 Inspection and light cleaning
Class 2 1.50 Plastering, light painting
Class 3 2.00 Bricklaying, masonry
Class 4 3.00 Heavy construction
Class 5 4.50 Very heavy construction
Class 6 6.00 Special heavy duty

NASC members must document the agreed duty class for each scaffold contract, usually on the handover certificate. Overloading a scaffold above its design class is a serious compliance breach.

CISRS Card Requirements for NASC Membership

All operatives working for an NASC member must hold valid CISRS cards. The CISRS scheme (run by CITB) has several card levels:

CISRS Card Meaning Requirements
Trainee In supervised training Enrolled on CISRS training course
Scaffolder Qualified operative NVQ Level 2 + CISRS Part 1 & 2
Advanced Scaffolder Senior operative NVQ Level 3 + CISRS Advanced modules
Scaffolding Supervisor On-site supervision Advanced + Supervisor course + SMSTS
Scaffolding Manager/Contracts Manager Management Further qualification requirements

NASC auditors check that operatives' card levels match their site roles. A Trainee card holder cannot supervise; an Advanced Scaffolder card holder cannot sign off as Supervisor without the Supervisor card.

Insurance Requirements in Detail

NASC membership requires:

Insurance certificates must be current at the time of audit. Auditors check expiry dates and confirm the scope of cover is appropriate for scaffolding operations.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is NASC membership legally required to operate as a scaffolding contractor?

No. NASC membership is not a legal requirement. Any company can legally erect scaffolding provided it complies with the Work at Height Regulations 2005, CDM Regulations 2015, and all relevant health and safety legislation. However, many principal contractors and clients specify NASC membership in their tender conditions, effectively making it a commercial requirement for those supply chains.

What happens if an NASC member fails their annual audit?

The member is notified of the specific failures and given a corrective action period, typically 3 months. They must address the identified deficiencies and submit evidence to the NASC. A re-audit may be required. If corrective action is not completed satisfactorily, membership is suspended. Persistent non-compliance results in expulsion. The NASC publishes a members directory, and suspension or expulsion is visible to clients.

Can a small one-person scaffolding firm join NASC?

Yes, but the same membership requirements apply regardless of company size. The audit will still require documented H&S policy, CISRS-carded operatives, compliant insurance, and inspection records. In practice, sole traders or micro-firms may find membership costly relative to their turnover, and CISRS card requirements mean even a one-person operation must hold an appropriate card level.

What is the difference between NASC Full Member and Affiliate Member?

Full Members have passed the NASC Safety Audit and met all membership criteria. They can use the NASC member logo in full. Affiliate Members are typically in a transitional phase — perhaps recently formed companies working towards full audit compliance — and are subject to different (usually less demanding) criteria. Affiliate membership does not carry the same weight as Full Membership in tender evaluation.

How does NASC membership interact with SSIP schemes like CHAS or Constructionline?

NASC membership and SSIP schemes (Safety Schemes in Procurement) are separate assessments. Some clients require both. NASC membership is specific to scaffolding and much deeper than a general SSIP audit. SSIP schemes like CHAS Gold assess general H&S management but do not evaluate scaffolding-specific technical compliance. NASC membership is considered more rigorous for scaffolding-specific procurement.

Regulations & Standards