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OROSHARecord

Updated April 2026 · OSHA Enforcement Data

Montana, Workplace Violations

3,005 violations · 2,908 inspections

See full Montana workplace safety rankings →

OSHA's enforcement file lists 3,005 workplace safety citations across 2,908 inspections in Montana, distributed across the state's industrial base of transportation and warehousing and other sectors.

Montana has lower federal OSHA inspection activity: 2,908 inspections and 3,005 documented violations. Lower inspection volumes typically reflect smaller industrial bases or states where state-OSHA plans (not in the federal dataset) handle most enforcement.

28 U.S. states operate their own state-OSHA plans rather than relying on federal OSHA — these plans must meet or exceed federal standards but are administered separately. The federal data captured here does not include state-OSHA inspections, so a comprehensive workplace-safety view for any specific state needs both sources. The largest single employer by violation count in Montana is U.s. Postal Service. Top-of-list employers usually reflect a combination of operational scale, industry hazard profile, and inspection-frequency targeting under OSHA enforcement programs.

Reading the Montana Enforcement Footprint

Montana is one of the highest-volume OSHA enforcement states in the federal record, with 3,005 citations across 2,908 inspections. States at this scale typically host multiple distinct industrial bases — often warehousing and logistics corridors, large-scale construction, manufacturing clusters, and significant healthcare employment — each producing its own citation pattern.

The most-cited industries in Montana are Transportation and Warehousing (1,424), Retail Trade (736), Manufacturing (199). That mix usually maps directly to the state's underlying labor market — citation volume tracks workforce size combined with hazard exposure, so heavy presence of construction, manufacturing, or transportation/warehousing in a state's economy generally translates into elevated OSHA citation counts in those sectors.

For broader workplace-injury context, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses publishes annual incidence rates by NAICS code. Construction, agriculture, and transportation/warehousing carry structurally higher injury rates than retail or professional services, and OSHA inspector activity tracks that hazard distribution.

Montana Enforcement Regime

Montana is a federal OSHA state, meaning inspections are conducted by federal compliance officers from the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Federal OSHA enforcement priorities — currently emphasizing fall protection, heat illness, warehousing hazards, and the construction-fatality reduction initiative — apply directly to Montana workplaces.

The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) enforces more than 200 specific standards covering fall protection, hazard communication, machine guarding, lockout/tagout, respiratory protection, and dozens of other risk areas. State-plan states adopt those standards or equivalent state versions, and the Enforcement Results Data files consolidate inspection results into a single public dataset.

Top Cited Employers in Montana

U.s. Postal Service leads the Montana citation list with 764 violations on file, followed by Walmart, INC. and Walmart. The top employers usually share a common profile: large multi-site footprints in inherently hazardous sectors, where any sufficiently large workforce will accumulate citations over time. The willful and repeat counts on the underlying company pages are the cleanest way to distinguish scale-driven citation volume from genuine systemic safety problems.

OSHARecord assigns each employer a Workplace Safety Score (0-100, A-F) that benchmarks the company against its industry rather than against companies in unrelated sectors. The score weights violation rate (40%), severity ratio (25%), repeat ratio (20%), and average penalty per inspection (15%) so that high-volume employers in inherently risky industries are not penalized for citation counts that match the underlying hazard exposure of their work.

What Workers in Montana Should Know

Workers in Montana retain the full set of federal protections under the Occupational Safety and Health Act, including the right to a safe workplace, the right to know about hazards, the right to training in a language they understand, the right to copies of medical records and exposure monitoring results, and the right to refuse imminent-danger work without retaliation. Confidential complaints can be filed at osha.gov/workers/file-complaint or by calling 1-800-321-OSHA. The OSHA Workers' Rights page spells out the full set of protections under Section 11(c) of the OSH Act.

Methodology and Data Sources

Counts on this page come from OSHA's public Integrated Management Information System (IMIS) enforcement file, refreshed from the Department of Labor's Enforcement Results Data files. We aggregate citations at the establishment level using the recorded site-state field, then roll those records up to a parent company. Industry classification follows the NAICS code recorded by OSHA at the time of inspection.

The Workplace Safety Score shown on linked company pages applies four weighted factors: violation rate versus industry, share of serious-or-willful citations, repeat-citation ratio, and average penalty per inspection. Read the full methodology for the exact formula and edge cases.

OSHA's enforcement file lists 3,005 workplace safety citations across 2,908 inspections in Montana, distributed across the state's industrial base of transportation and warehousing and other sectors.