Does Work Health and Safety Amendment (Digital Work Systems) Act 2026 require Risk Assessment?

New South Wales • enforcing

Yes — 1 provision

Requirements at a glance

This regulation imposes 4 specific requirements for Risk Assessment across 1 provision:

Digital Work System Risk Assessment #

Obligation:
Risk Assessment
enforcing
Effective:
Feb 18, 2026
Risk tier:
all
Scope:
deployers
sleepercross-domainhigh-impact
NSW's Digital Work Systems Act catches every employer using algorithmic scheduling, AI-driven monitoring, automated performance management, or platform-based work allocation. The definition of "digital work system" explicitly includes algorithms, AI, automation, and online platforms — making this one of the broadest workplace AI laws globally. Any company operating in NSW with AI-assisted HR, logistics, or workforce management tools must assess and manage WHS risks from those systems.

Requirements

RequirementDetails
Risk identificationPCBUs must identify WHS risks arising from digital work systems (algorithms, AI, automation, online platforms)
Risk assessmentAssess specific risks including excessive/unreasonable workloads, performance metrics, monitoring/surveillance, and discriminatory practices
Risk managementEnsure, so far as reasonably practicable, that workers' health and safety is not put at risk by digital work systems
Scope of digital work systemsDefined as any algorithm, AI, automation, or online platform used for work allocation, monitoring, performance management, or similar workplace functions

Penalties

ViolationFine
Individual (failure to manage digital work system risks)Existing WHS Act penalty tiers apply
Corporation (failure to manage digital work system risks)Existing WHS Act penalty tiers apply
Failure to assist WHS entry permit holder (individual)121 penalty units (~AUD 13,310)
Failure to assist WHS entry permit holder (corporation)607 penalty units (~AUD 69,980)
View full regulation View obligation Obligation matrix