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Body-worn fall protection

Safety Harness

Body-worn fall protection harnesses for roofing, scaffolding, and elevated work

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Body-worn fall protection

How buyers compare safety harnesses for work at height

Teams looking here usually need a body-worn fall protection product for elevated work, shutdown access, scaffold movement, or roof-edge exposure.

The main questions are usually straightforward: how the harness adjusts, where it connects, how comfortable it stays during movement, and whether it works with the rest of the setup already used on site.

How to choose a safety harness

  1. 1

    Start with the task at height, worker movement pattern, and how often the harness will be worn during the shift.

  2. 2

    Check adjustment points, dorsal or chest connection layout, and overall fit so the harness can be worn correctly by the actual crew.

  3. 3

    Review compatibility with lanyards, anchor arrangements, helmets, and other PPE used in the same elevated-work system.

  4. 4

    Plan inspection, replacement, and training routines before standardizing one harness style across the team.

Typical safety harness applications

Roofing and edge workScaffolding accessSteel erectionTower and utility maintenancePlant shutdown work at height

What buyers compare in safety harnesses

  • Adjustment and body fit
  • Connection-point layout
  • Comfort during climbing and movement
  • Compatibility with the existing fall-arrest setup

Useful next paths

Use these links to move into the most relevant nearby categories, product pages, or the broader parent range when you need a wider comparison.

Safety harness FAQ

Why should safety harnesses have their own category page?

Because buyers searching for harnesses are usually solving an elevated-work control problem and want to compare body-worn fall protection directly.

What should buyers compare on a safety harness page?

Buyers usually compare fit, connection layout, movement comfort, and how the harness works with the wider fall-protection system.

Should a safety harness page mention inspection and training?

Yes. Harness decisions are closely tied to inspection routines, worker fit, and how consistently crews can use the equipment correctly on site.