Lockout Tagout Compliance Calculator

Measure lockout tagout compliance quickly with weighted checks. Identify gaps, set priorities, and generate shareable reports for supervisors and crews.

Enter site details

Fill the checklist, then calculate your compliance score.

Identified
Total
Count energy sources identified vs. total sources on site equipment.
Written, machine-specific LOTO procedures accessible to crews.
Current
Total
Workers trained and refreshed per policy.
Up-to-date list of authorized LOTO personnel.
Enough locks/hasps/blocks for tasks and shifts.
Tags legible, standardized, and used with locks.
Verification step documented (try-start/test).
Periodic inspection done and records retained.
Group lockbox, primary authorized person, clear roles.
Host/contractor LOTO rules coordinated and documented.
Transfer locks, briefings, and re-verification where required.
Closed
Total
Closed corrective actions vs. total LOTO findings.
Task checklists and permits completed per policy.
Longer durations generally indicate better control.

Advanced weights

Adjust weights if your program prioritizes certain controls more strongly.

Reset

Tip: keep weights consistent across projects to compare trends.

Example data table

Project Identified/Total Sources Training Current Verification Inspection Compliance Category
Plant Expansion Bay 2 18 / 20 44 / 48 Yes Yes 88.6% Good
Crusher Maintenance Shutdown 12 / 15 21 / 27 No No 61.4% Fair
Electrical Panel Upgrade 9 / 9 17 / 17 Yes Yes 96.2% Excellent

These examples show how stronger verification and inspections improve overall scores.

Formula used

Each checklist item becomes a normalized score between 0 and 1:

  • Yes/No items map to 1 or 0.
  • Ratios use achieved / total, capped from 0 to 1.
  • Days since incident maps to min(days/180, 1).

Weighted compliance percentage:

Compliance % = ( Σ( weightᵢ × scoreᵢ ) ÷ Σ(weightᵢ) ) × 100

How to use this calculator

  1. Walk the job and list all energy sources for relevant equipment.
  2. Confirm written procedures, devices, tags, and the authorized list.
  3. Check training records, inspections, and verification documentation.
  4. Enter counts for ratio fields and select Yes/No where appropriate.
  5. Adjust weights only if your program requires a different emphasis.
  6. Click Calculate Compliance and review the priority gaps.
  7. Download CSV or PDF to share with supervisors and keep records.

Program insights for lockout tagout compliance

1. Why a weighted score helps supervisors

Construction sites manage multiple crews, tools, and temporary power systems, so a single checklist total can hide critical weaknesses. A weighted compliance score elevates controls that most strongly prevent unexpected energization, such as verification, training, and inspections. When your result trends over weeks, it becomes an operational metric, not a one‑time audit number.

2. Energy source identification as the baseline

Many failures begin with missed sources: electrical, hydraulic, pneumatic, gravity, stored mechanical energy, or residual pressure. Recording identified versus total sources converts field observations into a ratio that highlights documentation quality. Raising this ratio typically improves procedure accuracy, device selection, and the reliability of the isolation boundary.

3. Procedures and verification drive the highest risk reduction

Written procedures define the isolation sequence and the exact points to secure. Verification confirms the machine is at a zero‑energy state through try‑start or test methods. These two inputs are heavily weighted because they directly interrupt the error chain that leads to exposure during maintenance, jam clearing, and troubleshooting activities.

4. Training coverage converts policy into behavior

Training is captured as current workers divided by total workers affected by energy control. This ratio supports planning: if 28 of 32 workers are current, the 12.5% gap is actionable. Refresher cycles, onboarding controls, and contractor briefings can be scheduled around the highest‑risk tasks and equipment types.

5. Inspections and corrective actions protect long projects

Annual inspections verify that procedures match the equipment and that authorized employees follow them. The corrective action closure ratio measures how quickly findings are resolved. Combining both reduces recurrence: an inspection identifies a gap, and timely closure ensures the fix reaches the field before the next outage or turnover.

6. Group work, shift changes, and contractor interfaces

Group lockout, shift transfers, and contractor coordination are common on shutdowns and multi‑trade scopes. Controls like lock boxes, a primary authorized lead, documented handoffs, and aligned rules prevent misunderstandings. These items may be smaller weights, but they often drive practical failures when schedules compress.

7. Using the risk index to set priorities

The calculator reports a risk index as 100 minus compliance. This makes “higher is worse” intuitive for dashboards. If compliance is 61%, the risk index is 39, suggesting moderate exposure. Use the priority gaps list to target the lowest scores first, then re‑run after corrective actions.

8. Turning results into a field improvement plan

Export the CSV for weekly tracking and the PDF for briefings. Set a practical target, such as improving verification documentation to 100% and closing corrective actions within a defined timeframe. Over time, align weights across projects so comparisons remain fair, and document lessons learned for repeatable energy control performance.

FAQs

1) What does the compliance percentage represent?

It is a weighted average of your inputs, converted to a 0–100% score. Higher values mean more consistent procedures, training, verification, inspections, and corrective action control across your work scope.

2) Why are some items weighted more than others?

Higher weights are assigned to controls that most directly prevent unexpected energization, such as verification, training coverage, and inspections. You can adjust weights to match your company’s risk profile.

3) How should I estimate the “total energy sources” value?

Count every isolatable source that could create motion, pressure, heat, or electrical energy for the equipment involved. Include stored energy, residual pressure points, and secondary feeds where applicable.

4) What if my site does not use permits or checklists?

Select “No” for that item and focus on strengthening procedures and verification first. If permits are required by your policy or client, implement a simple checklist and track completion.

5) Does more incident‑free days always mean better compliance?

Not always. It is a supportive indicator, not proof of control quality. Use it alongside verification, inspection, and corrective action closure data for a balanced picture.

6) How often should we run this assessment?

Run it weekly during shutdowns or high‑risk phases, and monthly for steady operations. Re‑run after training updates, procedure changes, or when audit findings are closed.

7) Can I use the results for regulatory reporting?

Use it for internal tracking and prioritization. Regulatory compliance requires program documentation, competent evaluation, and adherence to applicable standards. Keep your audit records and procedures as primary evidence.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.