LOTO Auditing
Verification of LOTO programs under OSHA 1910.147 and 1910.333 to ensure all steps are followed and documented.
23+ Years in Safety
Experience across wind, solar, BESS, data centers, heavy civil, utilities, and industrial projects.
Aligned with OSHA / NFPA / EM 385 / ISO
Work built to OSHA 1910/1926, NFPA 70E, EM 385-1-1, and ISO 14001/45001/9001 frameworks.
Nationwide Coverage
United States projects with mobilization to Canada (Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan), Puerto Rico, and Mexico.
Ensure Procedures Match Field Practice
This service provides a detailed audit of every phase of the lockout/tagout process — from reviewing and verifying energy-control documentation to inspecting the proper application of lockout/tagout devices, confirming adherence to procedures, testing verification steps, and ensuring all aspects of energy isolation and control meet OSHA and client safety standards.
Auditors review procedures, observe lockout activities, check tag usage, and verify compliance with OSHA and owner standards.
Lockout/Tagout (LOTO)
Training on controlling hazardous energy during maintenance and service tasks to prevent accidental equipment startup and ensure OSHA compliance.
Why LOTO Audits Really Matter for Safety and Compliance
Even strong programs fail when daily practice drifts from written control procedures. Regular audits detect and correct these gaps before incidents occur.
Risks Without Periodic Audits
LOTO Auditing
Fill out the form below, and our team will respond promptly with complete training details and next-step guidance.
OSHA 1910.147/1910.333 Audits with Corrective Actions
We help companies verify their lockout/tagout systems through structured audits that assess both paperwork and worker application.
Partner with Renew Safety
Get answers to common questions about LOTO Auditing.
At least annually, or whenever equipment or procedures change, as required by OSHA 1910.147(c)(6).
Written procedures, lockout devices, training records, employee performance, and verification of energy isolation steps.
A competent person familiar with the equipment and not directly involved in the operation being audited.
Most site audits take one to three days depending on the number of systems and employees involved.
Yes. Findings include corrective actions, retraining needs, and documentation updates required for OSHA compliance.