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COIDA 2026 — The New Financial Stakes of Workplace Safety

COIDA 2026 — The New Financial Stakes of Workplace Safety
From 1 April 2026, a system of administrative sanctions is set to replace criminal prosecution for certain non-compliance issues (based on staggered commencement dates under the proclamation process).

COIDA is no longer just an “admin headache” for HR. It’s moving toward a model where compliance failures can trigger serious financial consequences — and where proactive rehabilitation support can become a measurable advantage.

What changes in 2026?

From 1 April 2026, a system of administrative sanctions is set to replace criminal prosecution for certain non-compliance issues (based on staggered commencement dates under the proclamation process).

In practice, this shifts the risk from “maybe a case one day” to “a compliance consequence that lands fast.”

Accident reporting: the penalty exposure is real

Under the Amendment Act’s changes to accident reporting consequences, employers can face:

  • A 10% penalty linked to non-compliance with the reporting duty; and
  • Additional financial exposure where accidents are not reported within the required timeframes (including provisions dealing with compensation payable and interest).

Translation for employers: your internal reporting pipeline (supervisor → HR → submission) must be tight, time-bound, and tracked.

Rehabilitation & reintegration: the “return-to-work” era

A key theme of the reforms is a stronger focus on rehabilitation, including psychosocial support as part of rehabilitation services.

And importantly: employers who actively support rehabilitation of temporarily disabled employees may qualify for an assessment rebate (a direct financial incentive tied to behaviour).

Mental health: PTSD is explicitly brought into scope

The Amendment Act updates the definition of “occupational disease” to include post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

This matters because PTSD claims tend to arise in:

  • Security and armed response
  • Healthcare and emergency response
  • Education and care environments
  • Violent incidents in retail / hospitality
  • Workplaces where trauma exposure is part of the job reality

What employers should implement now (before April 2026)

1) A 7-day reporting rule that actually works

  • Incident form must be completed immediately
  • HR must submit within deadline
  • A backup person must exist when HR is absent

2) Record-keeping discipline
Keep earnings and employment records in a system that can be produced quickly when requested.

3) A return-to-work process
Even a basic framework helps:

  • Medical updates
  • Temporary accommodation duties
  • Gradual reintegration plans
  • Documented check-ins

The bottom line Safety compliance is becoming financially “loud.”
Businesses that treat COIDA as part of operational risk management (not just HR paperwork) will be better positioned for 2026.

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