A retail store risk assessment supports a safe and efficient working environment. Retail settings involve constant interaction between staff, customers, and stock, creating unique challenges that require a clear and practical approach to managing risk.
This guide explains how to carry out a structured, practical retail risk assessment that reflects how your store or warehouse operates.
What are the legal requirements for a retail risk assessment?
Employers must ensure a โsuitable and sufficientโ risk assessment is carried out under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, Regulation 3. This duty supports their broader obligation under the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, Section 2(1) to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety, and welfare of employees and others.
This means employers must make sure:
- Hazards are identified
Reviewing all areas of the retail environment to identify anything that could cause harm, such as spillages, manual handling, or unsafe storage. - Risks are assessed
Considering the likelihood and severity of harm, and who may be affected, including employees, customers, and contractors. - Controls are implemented
Putting measures in place to eliminate or reduce risks, such as safe systems of work, training, and physical safeguards. - Risk assessments are reviewed
Updating assessments where they are no longer valid or where there have been significant changes, such as new equipment, layout changes, or incidents.
Who is responsible for carrying out risk assessments in a retail store?
The employer is legally responsible for ensuring that a suitable and sufficient retail store risk assessment is carried out and kept up to date.
Under Regulation 7 of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, the employer may appoint a competent person to assist with meeting these duties. A competent person is someone with sufficient training, experience, knowledge, and other qualities to properly carry out the risk assessment.
Competent people may be:
- Store managers with appropriate training and experience
- Internal health and safety advisers
- External consultants providing a health and safety competent person service
The level of competence required will depend on the complexity of the risks.
Is a written risk assessment required for small shops?
A written risk assessment is only legally required where there are five or more employees, as set out in Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, Regulation 3.
However, all businesses regardless of size must assess and manage risks under the same regulation. The duty to carry out a โsuitable and sufficientโ risk assessment applies to all employers.
The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) makes clear that while small businesses may not need to record their findings, keeping a written risk assessment is still best practice.
A written risk assessment demonstrates compliance and helps identify hazards, prioritise actions, and ensure control measures are understood and followed.
Common risks in retail workplaces and warehouses
Retail environments present a wide range of hazards affecting staff and customers:
Slips, trips and falls
Wet floors, trailing cables, uneven surfaces, and poor housekeeping can lead to incidents, particularly in high-footfall areas. Slips, trips and falls on the same level account for around 30% of non-fatal workplace injuries.
Manual handling
Lifting, carrying, or moving stock, especially during deliveries or in stockrooms, can result in strains and other musculoskeletal injuries. Handling, lifting or carrying accounts for around 17% of workplace injuries.
Falling objects
Poorly stacked or overloaded shelving can cause items to fall, creating a risk of injury to staff and customers. Being struck by a moving or falling object accounts for around 10% of workplace injuries.
Workplace transport
The movement of goods using pallet trucks or deliveries in loading areas can create collision or crush risks if not properly controlled. Being struck by a moving vehicle causes 16% of workplace injuries and 21 deaths a year.
Violence and aggression
Staff may face verbal abuse or physical aggression, particularly when dealing with customers, complaints, or theft. Acts of violence account for around 10% of non-fatal workplace injuries.
Lone working
Employees working alone, such as during opening or closing shifts are vulnerable. Risks such as violence, accidents, or medical emergencies can have more serious consequences without immediate support.
The HSE identifies lone working as a higher-risk activity, particularly where there is public interaction.
Fire risks
Combustible stock, electrical faults, and poor storage can increase the risk of fire and affect safe evacuation, particularly in stockrooms and during peak trading periods. UK fire statistics show there are over 22,000 fires in non-residential buildings each year, including retail premises.
Changing and emerging risks in retail environments
Health and safety in retail workplaces must also account for risks that change throughout the day, across different trading conditions, and over the course of the year.
Dynamic risks
Some risks arise unexpectedly and require immediate action. For example, a spill on the shop floor during trading hours creates a slip hazard that must be dealt with straight away.
Staff should be trained to recognise and respond to these situations by isolating the area, using warning signage, and removing the hazard promptly. Supervisors should also monitor how effectively these risks are managed during busy periods.
Psychosocial risks
Retail work can involve high workloads, long or irregular shifts, and challenging interactions with customers. These factors can contribute to stress, fatigue, and reduced concentration, increasing the likelihood of errors or incidents.
Controls may include appropriate staffing levels, clear procedures for dealing with conflict, regular breaks, access to support where needed, and retail health and safety training.
Seasonal and peak trading risks
During busy periods such as sales events or holidays, retail environments often see increased footfall, higher stock volumes, and the use of temporary staff. This can lead to overcrowding, blocked walkways, rushed manual handling, and reduced supervision.
Risk assessments should be reviewed in advance, with additional controls such as clearer stock management, temporary signage, and targeted staff briefings to maintain safe working conditions.
Key risks to prioritise in retail and wholesale warehouse risk assessments
When assessing health and safety in retail and wholesale warehouses, focus on risks that are most likely to cause harm:
- High-traffic slip and trip hazards
Prioritise areas with frequent movement, such as entrances, aisles, and loading zones, where conditions can change quickly. - Repetitive and high-risk manual handling tasks
Focus on activities involving frequent lifting, awkward positions, or time pressure, particularly in stockrooms and deliveries. - Storage and stacking risks
Assess how goods are stored, including load stability, height, and access, to prevent collapse or falling items. - Vehicle and pedestrian interaction
Identify where staff and vehicles (e.g. pallet trucks or forklifts) share space, especially in warehouses and delivery areas. - Customer-facing risks
Consider how public access affects safety, including unpredictable behaviour, crowding, and interaction with displays or stock. - Lone and isolated working
Assess when staff may be working without immediate support, such as opening/closing or in back-of-house areas. - Fire load and evacuation challenges
Focus on stock levels, storage practices, and whether escape routes remain clear during busy or peak periods.
What are the 5 steps of a retail store risk assessment?
A structured retail risk assessment follows five key steps:
Step 1: Identify retail hazards
Walk through the workplace and observe how tasks are carried out. Speak to staff and review incident records to identify real risks.
Look across all areas, including shop floors, stockrooms, warehouses, delivery areas, and staff facilities.
Focus on:
- What could cause harm
- Where hazards are most likely to occur
- How customers and staff interact with the space
For example, identify issues such as spillages, overcrowded aisles, unsafe shelving, or manual handling tasks.
Step 2: Decide who may be harmed
For each hazard, identify who could be affected and how.
This normally includes:
- Employees (including temporary or young workers)
- Customers and visitors
- Contractors and delivery drivers
Be specific. For example:
- Customers may slip on a wet floor
- Staff may suffer injury from lifting stock
- Lone workers may be exposed to violence
This helps ensure controls are proportionate and targeted.
Step 3: Evaluate risks and implement controls
This is where you calculate risk and decide what action is needed.
A simple and widely used method is a risk matrix, which considers:
- Likelihood (how likely is it to happen?)
e.g. Rare (1) to Very likely (5) - Severity (how serious would the outcome be?)
e.g. Minor injury (1) to Fatality (5)
You then calculate:
Risk = Likelihood ร Severity
Example:
- Spill on shop floor
- Likelihood: 4 (likely during busy periods)
- Severity: 3 (moderate injury)
- Risk score: 12 (medium/high risk โ action required)
Once you have assessed the risk, implement controls using the hierarchy of control, where possible:
- Eliminate the hazard
Remove the hazard entirely so the risk no longer exists, such as redesigning a task to avoid manual handling or removing unsafe equipment. - Substitute or reduce the risk
Replace the hazard with something less dangerous or reduce the level of risk, for example using lighter materials or safer equipment. - Introduce engineering controls
Physically separate people from the hazard, such as installing barriers, guardrails, or using mechanical aids to reduce manual handling. - Implement administrative controls
Change the way work is carried out through procedures, training, supervision, signage, or safe systems of work to reduce exposure to risk. - Use PPE as a last resort
Provide personal protective equipment where risks cannot be adequately controlled by other means, ensuring it is suitable, maintained, and properly used.
Step 4: Record your findings
Record the significant findings of your assessment, including:
- The hazards identified
- Who may be harmed
- The level of risk
- The control measures in place
If you employ five or more people, this is a legal requirement.
Clear records also help communicate expectations and ensure consistency across sites.
Step 5: Review and update regularly
Risk assessments must be kept up to date to ensure they remain relevant and effective. Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, Regulation 3, employers are required to review risk assessments if they are no longer valid or there has been a significant change.
Review them:
- After accidents or near misses
Reassess the activity to identify what went wrong, whether controls were sufficient, and what additional measures are needed to prevent recurrence. This helps demonstrate that risks are being actively managed. - When layouts, equipment, or processes change
Changes such as store refits, new shelving, different stock types, or new equipment can introduce new hazards or alter existing risks, requiring the assessment to be updated. - During peak trading periods
Increased footfall, higher stock levels, and temporary staff during busy periods can affect how safely the environment operates and whether existing controls remain effective. - At regular intervals (e.g. annually)
Routine reviews help confirm that risk assessments remain accurate, reflect current practices, and remain aligned with legal requirements and current guidance.
Examples of control measures for retail hazards
| Hazard category | Common example | Recommended control measure |
| Slips & trips | Wet floors or spillages | Cleaning procedures, signage, non-slip flooring |
| Manual handling | Unloading deliveries | Training, lifting aids, safe load limits |
| Falling objects | Overstocked shelving | Secure racking, weight limits |
| Workplace transport | Pallet trucks in stockrooms | Defined routes, staff training |
| Violence & aggression | Customer incidents | CCTV, staff training, clear procedures |
| Fire safety | Electrical equipment, stock | Fire risk assessment, clear escape routes |
Manual handling in retail: are there weight limits?
There are no fixed legal weight limits in UK law. Instead, employers must assess and manage risks under the Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992, including avoiding hazardous lifting and reducing risk so far as reasonably practicable.
This is normally assessed using the TILE approach, which considers:
- The task โ how often and how lifting is carried out
- The load โ weight, size, and stability
- The individual โ capability, training, and experience
- The environment โ space, flooring, and obstacles
For more about the TILE approach, please read our article, TILE manual handling โ what are TILE and LITE?
The HSE provides guideline weights, which help indicate when risk is low. For example, 25 kg at waist height may be acceptable in ideal conditions, but this is not a legal limit, and less weight should be handled when reaching, twisting, or lifting above shoulder height.
In retail, manual handling risks are common in stockrooms, delivery areas, and warehouses, so they should be a key focus of any retail risk assessment.
Quick retail safety checklist
Please see our guide, How to create a retail health and safety checklist. The guide explains how to create a checklist to reflect your storeโs layout, activities, and specific risks.
Retail health and safety consultants
At Praxis42, we help businesses manage risks across shop floors and stockrooms to meet legal requirements and improve health and safety in the retail workplace.
Our experienced retail health and safety consultants provide practical, tailored support to protect staff, customers, and your business. Whether you operate a single store or a multi-site retail operation, we help ensure your retail store risk assessments are suitable, sufficient, and kept up to date.
To find out how we can support your business please speak to our experts today on 0203 011 4242 or info@praxis42.com

Adam Clarke
Managing Director (Consulting)
