State profile · OSHA ITA

Ohio workplace safety

How 22,650 OSHA-reporting employers across Ohio compare on workplace injuries, 2016–2024.

22,650
Employers
4.4
Avg TCR
387,843
Injuries
248
Fatalities

The state picture

Ohio's reporting employers average 4.4 recordable injuries per 100 workers, 1.6 times the ~2.7 all-industry private-sector norm.

4.4
avg TCR · per 100 workers
22,650
employers reporting
387,843
recordable injuries
248
worker fatalities

State average reflects each state's industry mix. Sort the table below by each employer's own grade against its industry benchmark.

Ohio grade distribution 22,646 graded establishments · width = share

16% of Ohio's reporting establishments earn an F and 20% an A, each measured against its own industry benchmark, not the state line. These grades are a transparent derived index, not an official OSHA rating; see the Methodology for the exact formula.

Where Ohio ranks among states

54 states & territories by avg TCR

Ohio's average TCR of 4.4 is lower than 89% of states, a state average reflects industry mix as much as workplace safety.

Higher avg TCRLower avg TCR

How Ohio Workplaces Compare

Ohio hosts 22,650 employer establishments currently reporting to OSHA's Injury Tracking Application. These are not small shops: federal rules require ITA submission from workplaces with 250+ employees in any industry, plus workplaces with 20+ employees in the roughly 60 NAICS codes classified as high-hazard (construction, manufacturing, healthcare, warehousing, agriculture, and others). Across this Ohio cohort, workers have logged 387,843 recordable injuries, producing a state average Total Case Rate (TCR) of 4.4 injuries per 100 full-time workers per year during 2016–2024.

The state has recorded 248 workplace fatalities in the reporting window, which is tracked separately from non-fatal injury counts because fatal events have their own investigation trail under 29 CFR 1904.39. Reading state-level TCR requires context: the headline figure is driven by a state's industry mix. A state with a heavy construction, logging, or meatpacking footprint will mechanically post higher TCR than a state dominated by finance or professional services, even when individual employers are equally well-managed. That is why the employer table below sorts each establishment by its own TCR and letter grade, against the BLS benchmark for its specific industry, not against the state average.

For jobseekers, relocators, investors, and local safety professionals, state-level pages function as an entry point: use the grade-sorted list to spot the safest and highest-risk employers in Ohio, then click through to an individual establishment for its year-by-year injury, illness, DART, and fatality trajectory. Compare multiple years before drawing conclusions, a single outlier year can reflect a specific event, whereas a sustained pattern across reporting cycles is a more reliable risk signal. All data comes directly from employer-submitted OSHA Form 300A summaries. State OSHA plans in 22 states operate their own enforcement programs in parallel, but the injury data above is harmonized through the federal ITA system.

Employers in Ohio, by injury rate

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Employer CityIndustryGradeAvg TCR
EMCOR Facilities Services (dba) - Viox Cincinnati Commercial building construc B 1.8
Thompson Concrete Foundations Ltd - Kentucky Division Carroll Footing and foundation concr B 1.8
Andersons Maumee Plant Nutrient Maumee Phosphatic fertilizer materi B 1.8
Pepco - Akron Akron Construction materials, elec C 1.8
EMCOR Facilities Services DBA Viox Services Cincinnati Addition, alteration and ren B 1.8
Slagle Mechanical Contractors Sidney Mechanical contractors B 1.8
Vcf 123 North Olmstead Furniture stores (e.g., hous B 1.8
Goodwill Canton Office & Mission Services Canton Vocational rehabilitation ag A 1.8
Barnes Aerospace West Chester Division West Chester Aircraft engine and engine p B 1.8
Giant Eagle #6539 Columbus Grocery stores B 1.8
Centerra Co-op, Sterling Sterling Livestock feeds merchant who C 1.8
AC Cleveland Beachwood Orange Hotels (except casino hotels B 1.8
230026 - Miller Lane Store Dayton Thrift Store B 1.8
Akron Polymer Products Akron Motor vehicle moldings and e B 1.8
Great Day Improvements Macedonia Manufacturing building const B 1.8
WSEL - Walbridge Walbridge Bond paper made from purchas B 1.8
Genesis Childrens Center Zanesville Child day care centers A 1.8
Dave Sand & Stone Inc. d/b/a Grieser Transportation Wauseon Trucking, general freight, l A 1.8
Whitehall-Main, OH - Biomat Whitehall Blood and Organ Banks A 1.8
Nitrogen Gas Products Brecksville Division Brecksville Dies, metalworking (except t B 1.8
Youngston Hospice Youngstown Health Care Hospice A 1.8
FLAVORS Cincinnati Natural nonfood coloring B 1.8
ZF Findlay Findlay Assembly line rebuilding of A 1.8
Corporate Wooster Warehousing and storage, gen A 1.8
Rudolph Foods Whitefeather Plant Wapakoneta Pork rinds manufacturing A 1.8
Shiloh Wegman Valley City Metal Stamping, Welded Blank A 1.8
TRC Landscape Services, Inc. Newbury Applicators, wood, manufactu B 1.8
Dynegy Miami Fort LLC North Bend Electric Power Generation D 1.8
Coleman Stark BH Canton Outpatient mental health cen A 1.8
Meijer Stores Great Lakes Springfield Commissaries, primarily groc B 1.8
Lehner Screw Machine Munroe Falls Automatic screw machines, me B 1.8
GreenView Senior Assisted Living Uniontown Assisted-living facilities w A 1.8
Main Office Bellefontaine Medical and surgical equipme C 1.8
Industrial Solutions : IS - FS - Transformer Field Services Stow - C 1.8
Reading, OH Patheon Pharmaceuticals. Inc. Cincinnati Pharmaceutical preparations B 1.8
Giorgi Commercial Contracting Chardon Addition, alteration and ren B 1.8
Bell Vault and Monument Miamisburg Burial vaults, concrete and B 1.8
American Bronze Corporation Cleveland Foundries (except die-castin B 1.8
The Pipe Line Developement Company Strongsville Bends, pipe, made from purch B 1.8
Jerpbak Bayless Company Solon Precision turned product man B 1.8
Residential Home Association of Marion Marion Group homes, intellectual an A 1.8
Western Reserve Healthcare Mentor Skilled nursing facilities A 1.8
Lakepark Industries, Inc. Greenwich Job stampings, automotive, m A 1.8
Sexton Industrial Cincinnati Mechanical Contractor B 1.8
Uniloy Century, LLC Fremont Molds (except steel ingot), B 1.8
Columbus DC Columbus Druggists' sundries merchant C 1.8
Western Reserve Hospital Physicians, Inc Cuyahoga Falls Physicians' (except mental h A 1.8
VacuForm Inc./Unifrax Sebring Castable refractories, noncl B 1.8
Carter Lumber 140 Port Clinton BUILDING MATERIALS DEALER B 1.8
BOARDMAN_1436919 Youngstown Mail and Parcel Delivery A 1.8
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Data sourced from official public datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainSafetyScore Editorial

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What Ohio's safety record means for you

Ohio averages a TCR of 4.4 - about 1.6× the ~2.7 national private-sector norm. A state average hides wide employer-by-employer variation.

State averages use the credible-subset mean across reporting establishments; they are statistical summaries, not regulatory assessments.

Every figure and grade on PlainSafetyScore is computed directly from OSHA's published Injury Tracking Application data and BLS industry benchmarks, no number is typed in by an editor. See our editorial standards & corrections policy, the methodology behind these safety grades, or report a data error. Data current as of 2016-2024 OSHA ITA release.