If you work in Singapore’s cleaning, facilities management, food and beverage, security, or any other service industry environment, workplace safety is not just a matter of good practice — it is a legal obligation. Every worker in Singapore operates within the framework of the Workplace Safety and Health (WSH) Act, and every employer has a duty to ensure that their staff understand and can apply safe work practices in their specific work environment.
The WSQ Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 course is the formally assessed, nationally recognised WSQ qualification that develops this competency for workers in Singapore’s service and built environment sectors.
WSQ stands for Workforce Skills Qualifications — Singapore’s national credentialling framework for working adults, administered by SkillsFuture Singapore (SSG). WSQ qualifications are developed to nationally recognised competency standards, assessed by accredited assessors, recorded on your SkillsFuture Skills Passport, eligible for SkillsFuture Credit and subsidies, and recognised by employers across Singapore as evidence of formally assessed competency.
The Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 course is a WSQ-aligned programme that develops foundational workplace safety and health competency for workers in Singapore’s service industries — cleaning, facilities management, food service, security, and related built environment sectors.
The course is structured around the core competency areas that service sector workers in Singapore need to understand and apply. Content is developed to be directly relevant to real workplace situations.
A foundational understanding of Singapore’s WSH legal framework is essential for every worker and employer. This section covers:
Workers need to understand their own specific responsibilities — and the responsibilities of those around them. This section covers:
Identifying workplace hazards is the first step in the risk management process. This section covers:
Risk assessment is the practical application of Singapore’s risk-based WSH framework. This section covers:
Safe work procedures translate risk assessment outcomes into practical, step-by-step guidance. This section covers:
PPE is the last line of defence in the hierarchy of controls. This section covers:
Chemical safety is particularly critical for cleaning, FM, and food service workers. This section covers:
Prompt and accurate incident reporting is both a legal obligation and a safety improvement tool. This section covers:
Every worker should know what to do when a workplace emergency occurs. This section covers:
A theory-based assessment covering the knowledge content of the course — Singapore’s WSH legal framework, duty-holder obligations, hazard identification, risk assessment, safe work procedures, PPE, chemical safety, incident reporting, and emergency response. Questions are structured around realistic workplace scenarios relevant to service sector environments.
Candidates are assessed on their ability to apply WSH knowledge and skills in realistic workplace scenarios — including demonstrating correct PPE selection and use, applying chemical safety procedures, following safe work procedures, or responding to simulated workplace incidents.
Candidates who meet the required standard receive a WSQ Certificate of Competency recorded on their SkillsFuture Skills Passport. This provides employers with verified evidence that the worker has demonstrated WSH competency, and demonstrates to MOM inspectors that the employer has satisfied their duty to provide adequate training.
Cleaning and FM workers are exposed to a range of workplace hazards daily. Combining WSH training with WSQ cleaning modules — Washroom Maintenance Level 1, Horizontal Surface Maintenance Level 1, and Furniture and Furnishing Maintenance Level 1 — creates a comprehensive professional profile covering technical competency and the safety framework within which it must be conducted.
F&B and institutional food service environments combine WSH hazards from heat, sharp implements, wet floors, and chemical cleaning agents. WSH training complements WSQ Food Safety Level 1 certification to create a complete compliance profile for food service roles.
WSH training complements security licensing — such as the Security Officer BLU Course — to develop a complete safety and compliance profile for security roles.
For workers entering any of Singapore’s service sector industries for the first time, completing the WSQ Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 course as early as possible establishes the safety knowledge foundation that protects them — and their colleagues — throughout their working life.
For supervisors and team leaders responsible for the safety of their teams, WSH training develops the knowledge to identify hazards, apply the risk assessment process, supervise safe work procedures, manage PPE compliance, and respond to incidents.
For employers, building a team where all workers hold WSQ Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 certification provides documented evidence that the employer has fulfilled their legal duty to provide adequate WSH training.
For individual workers, completing the WSQ Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 course provides a nationally recognised qualification on their SkillsFuture Skills Passport, a foundational WSH competency credential that supports progression into supervisory and management roles, enhanced employability as WSH certification becomes increasingly listed as a preferred credential, and practical knowledge that directly improves day-to-day safety on the job.
Yes. The WSQ Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 course is an approved SSG programme. Eligible Singapore Citizens aged 25 and above may be able to use their SkillsFuture Credit to offset the cost of training. Additional subsidies — including employer co-funding — may also be available. Check with your training provider for the most current funding options.
Acuity’s Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 course is delivered by experienced trainers with real-world WSH, cleaning, FM, and service industry backgrounds.
The WSH Act requires employers to provide adequate training to all employees. While no single programme is universally mandatory, completing the WSQ Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 is the most defensible way for employers to demonstrate that adequate formal WSH training has been provided.
Course duration varies by training provider and delivery format. The programme is designed to be completed efficiently by working adults. Check with your training provider for specific scheduling and duration details.
No. The Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 is a foundational programme for workers at any career stage — from new entrants to experienced professionals seeking to formalise their WSH knowledge. No prior formal WSH training is required to enrol.
Under the WSH Act, employers have a legal duty to provide adequate training to employees. Completing the WSQ Workplace Safety and Health Practices Level 1 provides documented, formally assessed evidence that this training duty has been fulfilled — valuable during MOM workplace inspections and following workplace incidents.
Yes. Many cleaning, FM, food service, and security professionals complete this course alongside their technical WSQ qualifications. There is no restriction on combining WSH training with other WSQ programmes — and for most service sector roles, combining WSH with relevant technical qualifications creates the most complete compliance profile.
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