What Are the Requirements for OSHA Compliant Safety Banners? 
Safety banners are one of the simplest and most affordable tools for improving industrial safety in America, communicating hazards, and maintaining regulatory compliance. But not all safety banners are created equal. In fact, most general-purpose signs and banners on the market do not meet OSHA standards—even if they look like they do.
To be truly compliant, a safety banner in the United States must follow strict guidelines regarding design, layout, wording, color use, and durability. These requirements come from two major governing bodies:
• OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration), a federal agency responsible for workplace safety enforcement
• ANSI (American National Standards Institute) is a nonprofit that develops consensus standards, including visual safety communication.
Together, OSHA regulations and ANSI Z535 design standards define exactly how safety signage, including banners must look and perform.
• This article explains those standards in detail, including color rules, signal words, typography, placement, environmental resistance, and the difference between OSHA compliance and ANSI adherence.
IMPORTANT NOTE: It is rare that a “safety banner” is used as an OSHA “sign” to inform workers of a specific hazard. However, when they are used in such a manner, the banner must confirm to the design standards below. Safety Banners USA and SafetyBanners.Org do not offer standard banners for OSHA hazard identification. However, we can custom design such a banner for you, in which case it will meet all of the requirements.
The Role of OSHA vs. ANSI in Banner Design
Before discussing requirements, it’s important to clarify the purpose of each organization.
OSHA Requirements
OSHA regulations are federal law, meaning they are enforceable. OSHA defines when and where safety signage is required. Violations can lead to fines.
Typically, safety signage to meet OHSA requirements are not large safety banners, but smaller signs made from plastic or aluminum that are placed at or near the area where the hazard exists.
Examples of OSHA safety areas include:
• Hazard communication •
PPE requirements •
• Restricted areas
• Facility navigation
• Hazardous materials
• ANSI Requirements
ANSI standards are voluntary but widely adopted. OSHA frequently references ANSI design standards as the best-practice benchmark for compliant signage. Using ANSI layouts does not guarantee compliance, but NOT using them increases risk.
Key Standards That Apply to Safety Banners governing safety banner design are the following:
• OSHA 1910.145 - Specifications for accident prevention signs and tags
• ANSI Z535.1 - Color standards
• ANSI Z535.2 - Environmental and durability requirements for safety signs
• ANSI Z535.3 – Safety symbol and pictogram standards
• ANSI Z535.4 – Signal word panel formatting
• ANSI Z535.5 – Explanation requirements for hazard types Any safety banner used for hazard identification, required PPE, chemical communication, fall risk, electrical dangers, machine pinch points, or restricted areas must align with these frameworks.
CRITICAL NOTE: It is rare that any “safety banner” is used as an OSHA “sign” to inform workers of a specific hazard. However, when they are used in such a manner, the banner must confirm to the design standards below. Safety Banners USA and SafetyBanners.Org do not offer standard banners for OSHA hazard identification. However, we can custom design such a banner for you, in which case it will meet all of the requirements below.
• Design and Formatting Requirements for OSHA/ANSI Safety Banners
A banner must visually communicate risk in a universal, recognizable format. That means all safety banners should include:
1. Signal Word Panel
A compliant safety banner must include the correct signal word identifying the degree of hazard: Signal Word Hazard Level Meaning.
• DANGER Extreme Immediate risk of death or serious injury
• WARNING Serious Risk of severe injury
• CAUTION Moderate Risk of minor or moderate injury
• NOTICE Non-injury safety instructions General safety messages
• SAFETY INSTRUCTIONS / SAFETY FIRST Positive safety messages Tips and reminders
• Improper use of signal words is the #1 reason signage fails compliance testing.
2. Color Requirements
ANSI Z535.1 defines specific color standards that safety banners must follow. These are not approximate—the colors are defined by precise chromatically values.
Signal Word Background Color Text Color:
• DANGER Red with White test
• WARNING Orange with Black Text
• CAUTION Yellow with Black Text
• NOTICE Blue with White Text
• SAFETY Green White Text
A banner that uses the wrong colors, even if the message is correct—does not comply.
3. Safety Symbol Requirements
Symbols are highly encouraged, especially in multilingual workplaces. They must be:
• Graphically standardized
• Universally recognizable
• Proportional in size
• Positioned near the message • Not decorative, cartoonish, or ambiguous
ANSI Z535.3 defines symbol standards and sizing, including minimum height based on viewing distance.
4. Message Content Requirements 
The text of a safety banner must contain three core parts:
1. Hazard statement - what the risk is
2. Consequence statement - what will happen if ignored
3. Avoidance instructions - how to prevent the hazard
CRITICAL NOTE: ALL safety banners manufactured by Safety Banners USA and SafetyBanners.Org meet or exceed all of the requirements below.
Physical and Material Requirements
A banner cannot be considered safety-compliant if it cannot withstand the work environment. ANSI Z535.2 specifies that signage must be:
• Water resistant
• Fade resistant under UV exposure
• Chemical resistant • Tear and abrasion resistant
• Durable for long-term placement
Paper, fabric, chalkboard paint, and consumer-grade vinyl DO NOT meet compliance requirements. Industrial-grade materials such as 13 to18 oz nylon reinforced vinyl and HDPE are required for safety banners.
Letter Height and Visibility Requirements
ANSI requires minimum text sizes based on viewing distance. As a rule of thumb:
• 1 inch letter height = 25 feet of readability
• 2 inch letters = 50 feet
• 3 inch letters = 75 feet
• Signal word panels must be proportional and readable from the full expected distance.
If a banner is hung overhead, both letter height and symbol height must increase.
Contrast and Legibility Requirements
ANSI requires that text:
• Must be high contrast (light on dark or dark on light)
• Must be simple sans-serif font
• Must not be stylized, italic, or serif-based
• Must be full uppercase or uppercase/lowercase mix
• Must be clear from glare
Comic Sans, script fonts, cursive fonts, and distressed fonts are not compliant.
Placement Requirements
A banner must be:
• Located at the point of hazard
• Positioned at eye-level when possible ![]()
• Visible from all approach angles •
Free of obstruction
• Hung in a clean, stable environment
• Mounted securely (not loosely tied or taped)
Placing a compliant banner in an incorrect position results in a failed inspection.
Durability and Maintenance Requirements
CRITICAL NOTE: ALL safety banners manufactured by Safety Banners USA and SafetyBanners.Org meet or exceed all of the requirements below.
ANSI requires that signs and banners must remain readable and intact.
If a banner is:
• Torn
• Dirty
• Faded
• Wrinkled
• Partially obstructed
• Hanging crooked
• Weather-damaged …it must be replaced or restored immediately.
OSHA inspectors can fine companies for failed maintenance, even if the original banner was compliant.
• Language Requirements While OSHA does not mandate bilingual signage, ANSI standards strongly recommend multilingual banners in workplaces where workers may not read English fluently. The common second language in America is Spanish.
CRITICAL NOTE: Safety Banners USA and SafetyBanners.Org offer the largest selection of Spanish and bi-lingual safety banners in the world. PLUS, we will translate an existing English safety banner into Spanish at no charge.
For maximum compliance, bilingual banners must:
• Use ANSI-compliant English formatting
• Mirror the message exactly in second language • Maintain identical hierarchy and layout Customization Requirements some companies require banners that include:
• Company name
• Facility division
• Department number
• Lockout zone information
• Contact information
• QR codes or barcode labels
• Customization is allowed and widely used, but it must not violate core ANSI/OSHA formatting rules.
CRITICAL NOTE: Safety Banners USA and SafetyBanners.Org offers extensive customization options FREE on all safety banners 6’x3’ and larger.
Difference Between OSHA Compliance and ANSI Adherence Many buyers mistakenly believe OSHA and ANSI compliance mean the same thing. They do not.
OSHA compliance = Required by law •
ANSI adherence = Industry best practice standards
OSHA may not regulate how a banner looks, but it does regulate:
• Where banners are required •
When banners are required
• Training requirements
•ANSI dictates how banners must be designed to communicate the hazard clearly.
Therefore, TRUE safety compliance requires both OSHA and ANSI alignment.
What OSHA/ANSI Safety Banners Must Not Contain To protect clarity and authority, banners must never include:
• Humor • Cartoon imagery
• Distracting graphics
• Conflicting safety instructions
• Decorative typography
• Wrong color coding
• Incorrect signal words
Decorative safety banners improve safety awareness, but they are not legally defensible.
Examples of OSHA/ANSI-Compliant Safety Banner Messages Below are examples of message structures that meet formatting standards:
• WARNING – FALL HAZARD FAILURE TO FOLLOW FALL PROTECTION MAY RESULT IN SERIOUS INJURY WEAR HARNESS AND USE LIFELINE AT ALL TIMES
• DANGER – HIGH VOLTAGE CONTACT WILL CAUSE SEVERE INJURY OR DEATH LOCKOUT/TAGOUT BEFORE SERVICING
• CAUTION – FORKLIFT TRAFFIC COLLISION RISK MAY CAUSE INJURY STAY IN WALKING LANES AND WATCH FOR VEHICLES
Each message follows the structure: Signal Word.
• Why OSHA Compliance Matters
Compliant banners provide advantages beyond legal protection:
• Reduced accident frequency
• Protection against worker’s comp claims
• Improved employee confidence
• Increased insurance favorability
• Better workplace culture
• Consistency across facilities
In contrast, non-compliant banners can:
• Increase liability
• Cause miscommunication
• Lead to injury
• Create OSHA violations
• Encourage legal disputes
• How to Verify a Banner Supplier Is OSHA/ANSI Qualified 
• When sourcing banners, ask vendors these questions:
1. Are your banners produced to ANSI Z535 formatting standards?
2. Do you use OSHA-approved hazard signal words?
3. Do your products follow ANSI color standards?
4. Are your banners tested for UV, chemical, and abrasion resistance?
If the supplier cannot answer confidently, the product is not compliant.
CRITICAL NOTE: ALL safety banners manufactured by Safety Banners USA and SafetyBanners.Org meet or exceed all of the requirements above.
Final Answer To be OSHA/ANSI compliant, a safety banner must follow federal OSHA rules for when and where hazard signage is required AND ANSI Z535 design standards for signal words, layout, color usage, symbols, typography, viewing distance, and durability.
Compliance requires:
• Correct signal words (Danger, Warning, Caution, Notice, Safety)
• Correct ANSI colors and formatting
• Clear hazard, consequence, and avoidance messaging
• Standardized safety symbols
• Durable, industrial-grade materials
• Proper banner placement
• Clean, readable visibility
• Maintenance and replacement when worn
If a banner fails in any one of these categories, it is not legally defensible as OSHA/ANSI compliant.
In short: A compliant safety banner isn’t simply a warning,it is a precisely engineered safety communication tool designed to save lives, reduce risk, and improve workplace protection.
IMPORTANT NOTE: It is rare that any “safety banner” is used as an OSHA “sign” to inform workers of a specific hazard. However, when they are used in such a manner, the banner must confirm to the design standards below. Safety Banners USA and SafetyBanners.Org do not offer standard banners for OSHA hazard identification. However, we can custom design such a banner for you, in which case it will meet all of the requirements.
Compiled and Produced by Safety Banners USA & SafetyBanners.Org
for the benefit of the American Industrial safety manager/coordinator for the express purpose of helping keep our workers in America SAFE on the job.
Your Friends at Safety Banners USA and SafetyBanners.Org
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