The purpose of high-visibility safety apparel is obvious: protecting the people wearing it from injury by making it easier for others to see them.
Exactly who is required to wear it and when, however, isn’t as clearly defined—with the exception of workers handling construction, traffic management and other jobs on federally funded highways.
They’re covered by the Federal Highway Administration’s worker visibility rule, which took effect in 2009. The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration enforces that rule under the “general duty” clause of a federal law requiring employers to provide hazard-free work environments.
The workplace safety regulator uses the same provision—along with a general requirement that companies provide appropriate personal protective equipment in any hazardous conditions—to regulate high-visibility clothing in settings including manufacturing facilities, where visibility requirements aren’t spelled out.
Violations of the PPE rule alone led to $1.99 million in citations in the 12 months through September 2022, more than half of which OSHA imposed on manufacturers.
While visibility is often overshadowed in PPE selection by safety considerations from toxic fumes to flying debris, it’s a first line of defense for workers whose occupations involve moving equipment from machining devices to forklifts and even cars and trucks.
High-visibility garments have been proven to protect people close to moving machinery or doing their jobs “in low light, in inclement weather or at night,” PPE-maker 360 USA explains in Safety + Health magazine, a publication of the National Safety Council.
In the U.S., requirements for high-visibility safety apparel rely heavily on guidelines established by the industry-led American National Standards Institute, or ANSI.
High-Visibility PPE Requirements
The group merged two previous sets of specifications for high-visibility garments into ANSI/ISEA 107-2015—spelling out requirements such as types, amounts and colors of materials—in early 2016, then updated them again a few years later.
Generally, the current standard—ANSI 107-2020—requires that high-visibility garments include background fluorescent material, retroreflective material that returns light back toward the direction from which it originated or combined performance material that has the properties of both the other types.
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