This disclosure asks an organisation to report on work-related injuries in a way that shows the real scale of the issue across its operations. In practice, that means looking beyond a single site or headline figure and considering where injuries happen, who is affected, and whether the reporting covers the organisation’s full operational footprint or only selected locations.
The practical focus is on completeness and comparability: the information should help readers understand the extent of injuries across the business, not just at flagship sites or the best-performing parts of the organisation. A useful report will make clear the scope covered and present the injury information consistently so trends and hotspots can be understood.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI source.
A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.
Key datapoints to prepare
How to prepare it
Request the incident and exposure data from EHS
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own incident, injury, case, and hours-worked terms first, then map them to the reporting fields. Keep the ask in the language your EHS, site, or operations teams already use, and check the source material before sign-off.
Please provide the GRI 403-9 data for the year, including all required injury metrics and narrative disclosures.
Why it fails: It uses framework language only, gives no boundary, no source system, no internal case terms, and no guidance on how the rates were built. That makes it hard for the owner to pull the right data or explain exclusions and assumptions.
Please send the site incident and case data for [period] from [system], covering [boundary]. Include our internal case counts for fatal, severe, and recordable injuries, the hours worked used for the rates, the main injury types, the hazards linked to severe cases, the control actions in place or underway, any excluded worker groups, and a short note on how the figures were compiled.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
State how the organisation defines the people covered, how it counts each injury category, how it calculates the rates, and what it includes in the hours-worked figure used as the exposure basis.
Explain what the figures indicate about safety performance, including whether the organisation had any deaths, serious injuries, or other reportable injuries, which injury types were most common, and which hazards needed the most attention.
If the numbers changed materially, note whether the movement was driven by changes in headcount, hours worked, incident patterns, hazard exposure, reporting practices, or the effect of new or strengthened controls.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for GRI 403-9 — free with an LRA Community membership. Register once (it's free) and every download unlocks, together with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
For each claim, check the evidence
Evidence pack to prepare
Common reporting gaps
Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data
Where judgement is often needed
Illustrative examples
Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.
We report injury outcomes for our own workforce and other people working under our control, using hours worked as the exposure base. During the period, we recorded no work-related deaths, one severe injury, and four other recordable injuries; the main injury patterns were cuts, strains and slips. The main severe-risk areas were moving machinery, vehicle movements, and manual handling; we identified them through task risk reviews, incident investigations, and site inspections, and we are acting through elimination, guarding, traffic separation, redesign of tasks, training, and other controls.
Synthetic illustration only. It shows how to present injury counts and rates, the main harm patterns, the exposure base, the severe-risk hazards, how those hazards were identified, which ones contributed to severe harm in the period, and the controls used to remove or reduce risk.
We summarise safety performance for our employees and agency workers using total hours worked as the basis for the rates. There were no deaths, two severe injuries, and six recordable injuries; the main injury types were sprains, crush injuries and falls. The severe-risk issues were forklift interaction, loading dock falls, and lifting tasks, identified through near-miss trends, supervisor checks, and formal risk assessments; we are addressing them with removal, engineering changes, segregation, work redesign, maintenance, and targeted training.
Synthetic illustration only. It demonstrates a concise disclosure covering the people included, the exposure measure, injury counts and rates, the main injury patterns, the severe-risk hazards, how those hazards were determined, which ones led to severe harm in the period, and the hierarchy-based actions taken or underway.
How companies report GRI 403-9
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A site team logs one fatal incident, two serious injuries that led to long absences, and six other reportable injuries during the year. The reporting pack also shows 120,000 hours worked across employees and agency staff.
A contractor injury review finds that a machine-guarding failure caused a severe hand injury, while repeated slips on a wet loading bay caused several less serious cases. The draft narrative only says “safety incidents were reduced” and does not separate the causes.
The health and safety team calculated injury rates using only permanent staff hours, even though temporary agency workers were included in the injury log. They also excluded one overseas depot because its records were incomplete, but this is not mentioned in the draft.
A draft disclosure lists the injury numbers and rates, but the safety manager says the team used internal incident logs, a 12-month reporting window, and a local severity classification that differs from the insurer’s wording. None of that is currently explained.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Start with the plain-language explainer and the step-by-step ‘how to prepare’ section, then work through the datapoints to prepare and the draft-output section. The page is designed to help you move from scope and data collection to a draft disclosure, not to replace your own internal process.
The page lists the datapoints to prepare, including worker population covered, injury counts and rates, hours worked, hazard information, exclusion details and compilation notes. Use that list as your collection checklist so you can build the disclosure and the evidence pack in a structured way.
The page tells you to capture the worker population covered, a worker exclusions flag and exclusion details, so scope needs to be set before you finalise the numbers. Keep the scope decision and any exclusions clear in your working papers and compilation notes.
The page includes a rate calculation basis datapoint, so you should document the basis you used and keep it consistent across the injury metrics you report. The workbook and compilation notes are there to help you show how the figures were built.
The page says there is an evidence pack with five items for assurance readiness, and it also lists six assurance claims to verify with claim, risk and evidence. Use those materials to assemble support for the figures, the scope decisions and the hazard information before review.
The page includes a section on common reporting gaps and mistakes, so it is worth checking your draft against that before sign-off. In practice, the main risk is leaving scope, exclusions, calculation basis or supporting notes too vague for review.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format, which is meant to support preparation and assurance readiness. Use it to organise the datapoints, track evidence and capture the notes you will need for the draft.
The Download Centre also includes a printable Library Card in .pdf format, which is useful as a quick reference while you are preparing the disclosure. It can help you keep the key datapoints and process steps in view without working from the full page.
Yes — the page includes synthetic illustrative example disclosures, including a quantitative data table. They are there to show how the information can be presented, so treat them as examples only and keep your own figures internally consistent.
The page says the closest ESRS correspondence is ESRS S1 (Own Workforce), so the same underlying data may be reusable across both reporting exercises. That does not mean the requirements are identical, so you still need to check the specific disclosure needs for each framework.
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