Protecting Children on Farms: Your Role in Safety and Legal Responsibilities

Understanding 'Children on Farms:

As a worker, recognizing and addressing the unique hazards faced by children on farms is crucial. This section focuses on those under 18 who are on a farm but not employed as workers, encompassing residents, visitors, and even those who may enter the premises without permission.



Identifying Risks Faced by Children:

Children's Vulnerability:

Understand that children are less likely than adults to identify and avoid hazards, placing them at increased risk on farms. Shockingly, an average of 15 children under 15 face fatal injuries on Australian farms annually, with many more sustaining serious injuries.


Specific Risks:

Children on farms encounter various risks, including drowning incidents, quad bike and motorcycle accidents, machinery and vehicle mishaps, and injuries from livestock, particularly horses.


Collaborative Risk Management:

Everyone's Responsibility:

Acknowledge that workers, managers, and all farm inhabitants play a role in minimizing risks to children. A collaborative effort is essential to uphold legal obligations and ensure the safety of young individuals on the farm.


The Four-Step Process:

Engage in the four-step risk management process designed to meet legal obligations and involve everyone in safeguarding children on the farm. This proactive approach ensures a collective commitment to safety.


Your Responsibilities as a Worker:

Taking Reasonable Care:

Recognize that, as a worker, you must prioritize not only your health and safety but also that of others. This includes taking reasonable precautions to protect children on the farm.


Cooperating with Management:

Collaborate with farm management to meet health and safety requirements, actively participating in efforts to reduce risks and create a secure environment for everyone.


Employer's Responsibilities:

Legal Obligations:

As an employer or business owner, understand your legal responsibilities outlined in the Work Health and Safety Act 2011. These obligations extend to ensuring the health and safety of everyone present at the workplace, including children.


The Four-Step Risk Management Process:

Embrace the four-step risk management process as a comprehensive guide to fulfilling legal responsibilities and maintaining a safe environment for children on the farm.


Four steps to managing risk

The first step is to identify hazards.

Think about:

  • why children could be on the farm—they may live on the farm, join their parents at work, visit the farm or wander over from neighbouring properties
  • where they might be able to go on the farm
  • what they might do on the farm—for example, follow pets around, climb on haystacks, or explore equipment
  • what other adults or older children on the farm could allow them to do—for example, ride on tractors or quad bikes.


Particular hazards for children on farms include:

  • farm structures, like dams, troughs, and silos—dams are the biggest single cause of child death on Australian farms
  • quad bikes, utes, and motorcycles
  • mobile farm machinery, like tractors
  • animals, like horses and cattle
  • firearms
  • chemicals, like pesticides
  • electricity and overhead powerlines.


Use the following steps to draw up a list of hazards.

Inspect your farm

Look at the environment. Ask yourself:

  • is the area around the house securely fenced?
  • are there any water sources that pose a risk?
  • are children allowed in workshops, or on tractors or equipment?
  • are children part of any work processes, for example, during mustering or agri-tourism activities?
Talk to your workers

Ask workers if they:

  • are aware of any potential hazards
  • know of reasons why children would be on the farm.


Think about ways to include workers who are less likely to speak up in a group, or who may have language barriers.

Identifying hazards should be an ongoing activity. Encourage workers to always report anything that could be unsafe to children. Organise an activity to identify hazards:


  • at least once a year
  • whenever there is a change in equipment, facilities, or work practices.


You could also talk to the children who come to your farm. Find out what they do on the farm and if they have had, or know of, any near misses.


Review available information

Look at a range of sources to help identify hazards, for example:

  • find out what hazards other farms have identified
  • look at your own records, including any recorded incidents, near-misses, or complaints.

You can also refer to the Children and young workers code of practice 2006 (PDF, 0.42 MB) and How to manage work health and safety risks code of practice 2021 (PDF, 0.65 MB) for more advice on identifying hazards.


Next, assess the level of risk posed by each hazard. The risk level is determined by:

  • how serious the potential harm is
  • how likely it is to happen. Generally, the risk is greater if children are frequently exposed to the hazard.

You can use this risk assessment template (DOCX, 0.02 MB) to guide you and record your assessments.


A risk assessment can help you figure out:

  • where, when and how children at your workplace might be at risk
  • the possible degree of harm for a child
  • whether any control measures are already in place and if they’re effective
  • what actions you can take to control the risks and keep children safe
  • how quickly you should act.


The child safety on farms checklist can also help you a get a clearer idea of the level of risk.


The law requires you to put controls in place that minimise the risk as far as reasonably practicable. This means doing what you’re reasonably able to do.

The hierarchy of controls, as discussed in How to manage work health and safety risks code of practice 2021 (PDF, 0.65 MB), ranks types of control methods from the highest protection to the lowest.


  1. Eliminate the hazard

  2. Eliminating, or removing the hazard completely, is the best way to reduce risk. By law, you must consider this option first.

    On a farm, this could mean:

    • not allowing children to ride on machinery or adult-sized quad bikes
    • filling in unused dips and ditches
    • dismantling or tearing down unused structures
    • removing unused equipment or chemicals that could pose a risk
    • only allowing children to play in a securely fenced area around the house.
  1. Substitute the hazard

  2. If you can’t eliminate a hazard altogether, consider if you can replace it with something that poses less of a risk. You could, for example:

    • find out if you can use chemicals that are still effective but less hazardous
    • only allow children to ride horses suited to their age, size, and skill level.
  1. Use engineering controls and physical barriers

  2. If the hazard cannot be eliminated or substituted, think of physical ways to isolate the hazard or lower the risk. Consider using:


    • physical barriers, for example:
      • create a secure, fenced area around the house where children can play safely. Find out how to create safe play areas on farms
      • lock power tools, dangerous chemicals, and firearms safely away
      • keep keys to vehicles or machinery locked away when not in use
      • fence off swimming pools, dams and other open water sources near the house
      • ensure children cannot access ladders to climb into silos
      • separate driveways and turning circles from home and play areas.
    • engineering controls, for example:
      • cover tanks, wells and troughs near the house
      • adjust the throttle to limit the maximum speed on a child’s motorcycle
      • use self-closing and self-latching gates.
  1. Administrative controls

  2. Administrative controls are not as effective as removing the risk, but they play an important role. This can include:

    • work processes, like always removing keys from vehicles
    • having clear rules, including that children should:
      • always be closely supervised by an adult
      • never ride in the back of utes or trailers
      • never be carried as passengers on quad bikes
    • making sure that everyone, including children, understands what the rules are, and that the rules are followed
    • establishing clear ‘no-go’ areas for children
    • organising training in resuscitation and emergency procedures
    • teaching children to respect animals and how to interact safely with them.
  1. Personal protective equipment

  2. Always ensure children wear suitable personal protective equipment, for example, helmets and boots, when riding horses or motorcycles.

You should regularly review your control measures. Don’t wait for something to go wrong. If necessary, change or adjust your approach.


Your commitment as a worker to safety measures not only protects yourself but also plays a crucial role in safeguarding children on the farm.


Recognizing the risks, actively engaging in risk management, and adhering to legal responsibilities contribute not only to immediate well-being but also position you for potential future compensation in case of a workplace accident or injury. Stay vigilant, collaborate, and prioritize safety for a secure farm environment.


Standards and compliance

Codes of practice

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