Type answers impact direction
Use Type I for top impact. Use Type II when side or lateral impact is a realistic jobsite hazard.
Head Protection Tool
Decode Type I vs Type II and Class G, Class E, and Class C before you specify construction hard hats in a bulk PPE order.
Quick decoder
Use this as a purchasing starting point. The final decision should match the hazard assessment, site rules, and the label on the product.
Use Type I for top impact. Use Type II when side or lateral impact is a realistic jobsite hazard.
Class E and G are electrical classes. Class C is conductive and should not be used around electrical hazards.
A supplier quote should specify type, class, shell style, venting, chin strap, accessories, and label proof.
| Type | Meaning | Use |
|---|---|---|
| Type I | Top impact protection | General construction sites where falling objects above the worker are the main head hazard. |
| Type II | Top and lateral impact protection | Scaffolding, steel work, climbing-style helmets, tight equipment zones, and tasks where side impact is realistic. |
| Class | Meaning | Use |
|---|---|---|
| Class G | General electrical protection | Common construction baseline where limited electrical exposure may exist. ANSI testing is commonly referenced at 2,200 volts. |
| Class E | Higher electrical protection | Electrical work or sites where stronger dielectric protection is required. ANSI testing is commonly referenced at 20,000 volts. |
| Class C | Conductive, no electrical protection | Ventilated comfort where electrical exposure is controlled out. Do not use around electrical hazards. |
| Task | Starting point | Buyer note |
|---|---|---|
| General building site | Type I Class G | Most useful baseline when overhead impact is the main concern. |
| Electrical installation | Type I or Type II Class E | Avoid vented shells unless the label still confirms the required class. |
| Scaffolding or elevated work | Type II Class G or E | Side impact and chin strap retention often matter more. |
| Roadwork or equipment zones | Type I or Type II Class G | Add hi-vis, eyewear, hearing, and visibility checks to the same RFQ. |
| Hot outdoor work with no electrical exposure | Class C only if allowed | Class C improves ventilation but removes electrical protection. |
Related buying guides
Use these pages when the decoder result needs to become a full construction PPE specification, kit, or RFQ.
Use this for Type I/II, Class G/E/C, helmet accessories, and head protection choices.
Read guideHelmet upgradeUse this when the buying question is whether to keep hard hats or upgrade to helmet-style protection.
Read guide417 impressionsUse this when users are turning tool output into RFQs, supplier checks, and repeat orders.
Read guideKit planningUse this when quote and quantity users need role-based kit structure.
Read guideFAQ
These answers target the short questions already appearing in Search Console.
A Class E hard hat is the higher electrical-insulation class used in many electrical construction specifications. Buyers should confirm the ANSI/ISEA Z89.1 marking on the shell or label and match the choice to the site hazard assessment.
A Class G hard hat is a general-use electrical class. It is often used as a construction baseline where impact protection is needed and limited electrical exposure may exist.
Class C hard hats do not provide electrical protection. They are conductive and usually chosen for ventilation or comfort only where electrical exposure has been controlled out.
Type I hard hats are intended for top impact protection. Type II hard hats add lateral impact protection, which can be useful for scaffolding, climbing-style helmets, steel work, and tight construction zones.
Sometimes, but it is safer to map head protection by task. Electrical crews, scaffold crews, equipment zones, visitors, and general labor may need different type, class, venting, chin strap, and accessory decisions.
Include Type I or Type II, Class G/E/C, shell style, venting, chin strap, accessory compatibility, label photos, and replacement suspension needs.