OSHA Guardrail Height & Strength Requirements
straighten The 42-inch / 200-lb criteria
A guardrail only counts if it meets the numbers. OSHA §1910.29 requires a top rail 42 inches (plus or minus 3) above the walking surface, a midrail midway (about 21 in), and a top rail that withstands at least 200 pounds of downward or outward force — without deflecting below 39 inches under that load. A lot of older or improvised railings quietly fail these.
rule Why rails fail the test
The requirement is dimensional and continuous — there's no interval, the rail simply has to meet the criteria wherever fall protection is provided by guarding. Corrosion, impact damage and non-compliant retrofits are what turn a rail that looks fine into a citable one.
construction How we bring them to code
We measure existing rails against the §1910.29 criteria and fabricate or repair compliant guardrail, handrail and stair-rail systems — built to the height and strength the standard requires and documented for your compliance file.
Got this on a citation — or want to get ahead of it?
Our PE partner certifies it and our crews fix it, under one contract. Start with a free, no-obligation assessment, or build a custom compliance plan in two minutes.