Complete Guide to Obtaining an SIA Licence in the UK
If you want to work in the private security industry, obtaining an SIA Licence in the UK is a legal requirement. Whether you are aiming to become a...
7 min read
Circle Editor
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Updated on May 13, 2026
Every UK employer is legally required to provide specific workplace training. That is not opinion or best practice guidance - it is a statutory obligation backed by the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and a range of sector-specific legislation. Yet the five requirements listed below are the ones most consistently missing from business training records when the HSE or a regulator comes to inspect.
The consequences are not theoretical. The average court fine for a health and safety breach in the UK is £150,000. Work-related ill health and injuries resulted in an estimated 40.1 million working days lost in 2024/25, costing the UK economy £22.9 billion. These are not figures from major industrial disasters. They represent everyday workplace failures, most of which were preventable.
Here is what UK employers are legally required to provide, why each requirement exists, and how to fix any gaps quickly and affordably.
Mandatory training is any training that an employer is required to provide to ensure employees can work safely, legally and competently. There is no single rulebook, no centralised government checklist, and no universal renewal cycle. Instead, employers are expected to navigate a patchwork of legislation, regulatory guidance and best-practice standards.
The Health and Safety at Work Act 1974, Section 2, specifically requires employers to provide "such information, instruction, training and supervision as is necessary" to ensure health and safety. This broad duty underpins most workplace training requirements - if a risk exists, the Act typically requires training to control it.
The five requirements below apply across almost every UK workplace, regardless of size or sector.
Circle Academy offers all five legally required courses online, accredited by CPD, IOSH and IIRSM, with certificates issued the same day.
Fire safety awareness is the most commonly under-delivered mandatory training requirement in UK workplaces. Many employers assume that having a trained fire marshal satisfies the legal obligation. It does not.
The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 requires the responsible person, usually the employer, to provide all employees with adequate fire safety training, covering evacuation routes, alarm points, assembly areas, and the action to take on discovering a fire. This training typically occurs during induction and must be refreshed annually or whenever premises layouts change significantly.
Every member of staff needs fire safety awareness training, not just the designated fire marshal. A new starter who was never shown evacuation procedures is both a safety risk and a legal liability. Training records must be kept and made available to the Fire Authority during inspection.
Who it applies to: All employees in all sectors, from day one of employment.
How to fix this gap: An accredited fire safety awareness course completed online, with a same-day certificate, satisfies this requirement and creates a documented record that protects the business during inspection.
The law: Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992
The 2024/25 HSE figures show that around 680,000 working people sustained an injury at work, with handling, lifting and carrying confirmed as the second most common cause of workplace accidents, accounting for 17% of all injuries. The most commonly affected areas are the back at 43%, and the upper limbs and neck at 41%.
These injuries are not dramatic or headline-grabbing. They are the kind that accumulate slowly, lead to months of sick leave, and result in tribunal claims that could have been avoided with training that takes under 90 minutes to complete.
Manual handling instruction is a statutory requirement under the Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992, which makes training a legal obligation wherever manual handling cannot be avoided. This obligation is not a one-time induction requirement - the training must be repeated periodically where appropriate and adapted to account for new or changed risks.
This applies to care workers moving residents, warehouse staff loading deliveries, kitchen teams carrying stock, construction workers handling materials, and office workers rearranging furniture. The scope is far broader than most employers assume.
Who it applies to: Any employee whose role involves lifting, carrying, pushing, pulling, or supporting a load.
Food hygiene training is not optional for any business that handles, prepares, serves, or stores food. This includes restaurants, cafes, care homes, school canteens, hotel kitchens, workplace catering facilities, and any other environment where food is handled professionally.
The Food Safety Act 1990 and the Food Hygiene Regulations 2013 require food handlers to be trained or supervised appropriately to their role. The Food Standards Agency states clearly that food business operators must ensure food handlers are supervised, instructed and trained in food hygiene matters commensurate with their work activity.
Food hygiene breaches led to over £8 million in fines across UK businesses in 2024. Environmental Health Officers can demand training records during any scheduled or unscheduled visit. Inadequate records result in an immediate improvement notice, and the business's Food Hygiene Rating - displayed publicly on premises and on the FSA website - is affected.
The training obligation is not limited to chefs. It covers anyone who handles food, including kitchen porters, waiting staff, baristas, catering assistants, and delivery handlers.
Who it applies to: All staff in food businesses who handle, prepare, or serve food at any level.
COSHH is the area of compliance training that surprises employers most. It is widely assumed to apply only to factories, laboratories, or industrial settings. In reality, COSHH obligations apply across almost every workplace in the UK.
Under the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974, if a risk exists the law requires training to control it. The Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 reinforces this through risk assessments and training requirements, and the obligation is ongoing - training must be repeated periodically where appropriate and adapted to account for new or changed risks.
Substances covered by COSHH include commercial cleaning products used in offices, hotels, and care homes; chemicals used in construction and manufacturing; dust, fumes, and vapour in any trade environment; biological agents in healthcare settings; and chemical treatments used in salons and beauty settings. If a member of staff uses bleach, industrial descaler, paint, adhesive, or any commercially graded cleaning product as part of their role, COSHH awareness training is a legal requirement.
The most common employer error is assuming COSHH is someone else's problem. A hotel housekeeper working with industrial cleaning products, a care worker managing bodily fluids, a plumber using chemical treatments - all carry COSHH obligations for the employer.
Who it applies to: Any employee who uses, stores, or may be exposed to hazardous substances in the course of their work.
Mental health awareness training is the compliance gap UK employers are most likely to underestimate in 2026, and the one that carries the most significant emerging legal risk.
The HSE's 2024/25 annual statistics show that 964,000 workers reported stress, depression or anxiety caused or made worse by work, making mental health conditions the primary driver of work-related ill health in the UK. Work-related ill health and injuries resulted in an estimated 40.1 million working days lost in 2024/25.
Work-related stress, anxiety and depression affected 964,000 workers and led to 1 million lost working days in 2024/25 alone.
The Employment Rights Act 2025 received Royal Assent in December 2025 and introduces the most significant employment law changes in a generation, with key provisions coming into force from October 2026. The most consequential change for training is the shift from "reasonable steps" to "all reasonable steps" in the employer's duty to prevent harassment, which legal experts describe as requiring a fundamental redesign of compliance training, not just an annual eLearning module refresh.
Under the existing general duty of care in the Health and Safety at Work Act, employers are already required to protect the mental health of their workforce where reasonably practicable. Mental health first aid training, stress awareness, and manager training on identifying early warning signs are actively scrutinised during HSE investigations and tribunal proceedings.
Who it applies to: All managers and supervisors as a minimum. Mental health first aid training for a designated lead is strongly recommended in all workplaces.
Each of the five requirements above can be resolved with an accredited online course completed in under two hours, with a certificate issued the same day. At Circle Academy, all five are available as standalone courses or sector-specific bundles, each accredited by CPD, IOSH, or IIRSM, and recognised by UK regulators and employers.
A team of ten employees completing all five required courses costs less than £150 in total. The average HSE court fine for a single health and safety breach is £150,000. The decision is straightforward.
The average HSE fine for a training breach is £150,000. The cost to fix all five gaps starts at £30. Do not wait for an inspection to find out you are not compliant. Circle Academy has everything your team needs, online, accredited, and ready today. Thomas Babu, HSE and Compliance Officer at Circle UK Group
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UK employers are legally required to provide fire safety awareness training under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, manual handling training under the Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992, food hygiene training under the Food Safety Act 1990 where food is handled, COSHH awareness training under the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002 wherever hazardous substances are present, and mental health and stress awareness training under the general duty of care in the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974.
Failure to provide legally required training can result in enforcement notices from the HSE, unlimited fines following prosecution, personal liability for directors, business closure in serious cases, and civil claims from employees injured as a result of the training failure. The average court fine for a health and safety breach in the UK is £150,000.
Renewal frequencies vary by course. Fire safety awareness should be refreshed annually or when premises change. Manual handling is recommended every three years or when tasks change. Food hygiene training should be renewed every three years under FSA guidance. COSHH and mental health training should be refreshed whenever working practices or substances change, and at regular intervals defined by the employer's risk assessment.
Yes. Online mandatory training is fully acceptable to UK regulators including the HSE, FSA, and CQC, provided the course is delivered by an accredited provider and a certificate of completion is issued. Circle Academy courses are accredited by CPD, IOSH, and IIRSM, and certificates are issued the same day of completion.
In almost all circumstances, yes. If the training is mandatory and job-related, the time spent completing it counts as working time, and employers must pay at least the employee's normal rate.
Yes. While there is no single statutory renewal period, HSE guidance recommends refresher training every three years as a minimum, or sooner if the working environment, equipment, or tasks change.
Any substance, mixture, or material that can damage health through inhalation, ingestion, skin contact, or absorption. This includes many common cleaning and maintenance products found in everyday workplaces.
Every three years is considered best practice under current FSA guidance, though earlier refreshers are required following any food safety incident or significant process change.
It is not yet a statutory requirement in most sectors, though the Health and Safety (First Aid) Regulations 1981 require employers to provide "adequate and appropriate" first aid provision, and HSE guidance increasingly recognises mental health first aiders as part of that provision. Under the Employment Rights Act 2025 changes effective October 2026, the legal risk for employers without any mental health training in place increases substantially.
Sources: HSE Health and Safety Statistics 2024/25 (hse.gov.uk); Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005; Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992; Food Safety Act 1990; Food Hygiene Regulations 2013; Food Standards Agency 2024 guidance; COSHH Regulations 2002; Employment Rights Act 2025; Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974.
Published May 2026. Circle Academy is a trading name of Circle UK Group Ltd.
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