regulation

OSHA 29 CFR 1926 — Construction Industry Regulations

The federal construction safety standards, organized in lettered subparts. Recordkeeping and reporting rules live in the companion Part 1904; citation posting in Part 1903.

56 questions in our bank cite this reference.

The one thing to know

OSHA questions are number questions: heights, depths, distances, and hours. Tab the big subparts and trust the printed number over your memory.

Your tab set

Florida exams allow pre-tabbed, highlighted references. Build these tabs before exam day, in book order.

1
General provisions & definitions1926 Subpart C

Competent vs qualified person (1926.32), housekeeping (1926.25), emergency action plans (1926.35), general duty (heat illness)

2
PPE1926 Subpart E (.95–.106)

Hard hats (1926.100), eye and face protection (1926.102), when PPE is required

3
Fire protection & waste disposal1926.150–.152 / 1926.252

Extinguisher placement and travel distance, flammable storage, hot work, disposal chutes

4
Electrical / GFCI1926.404

Ground-fault protection, assured grounding programs

5
Scaffolds1926 Subpart L (.451)

10-ft fall protection, capacity (4×), platform rules, competent-person inspections

6
Fall protection1926.501–.502

6-ft rule, guardrails/nets/PFAS options, guardrail and cover criteria

7
Excavations1926.650–.652

5-ft protective systems, 25-ft egress, daily inspections, soil types (Subpart P App. A–B)

8
Stairways & ladders1926 Subpart X (.1053)

3-ft extension rule, 4:1 angle, ladder use rules

9
Cranes & derricks1926 Subpart CC

Power line clearances, operation rules (1926.1417)

10
Silica & health hazards1926.1153

Respirable crystalline silica — Table 1 controls, exposure limits

11
Recordkeeping, reporting & postings1904.32 / 1904.39 / 1903.16

300A posting Feb 1–Apr 30, fatality/hospitalization reporting, posting citations

Highlight the question, underline the answer

Don't just tab your books — mark them as you practice. Every time a question sends you into a reference, leave a two-part mark behind: highlight the passage the question is about, and underline the exact words that answer it. Do this through your whole question bank and the book turns into a map of the tested material — so on exam day you recognize the spot, not just the section.

  1. 1

    Highlight what the question asks about

    When you look up a practice question, highlight the sentence or table the question turns on. That block is now a visual landmark you'll spot on a fast flip.

  2. 2

    Underline the exact answer

    Inside the highlight, underline the specific number, deadline, or phrase that is the answer — with a fine-tip pen. Highlight = the topic; underline = the fact.

  3. 3

    Color-code by what trips you up

    Use one highlighter color for deadlines and numbers, another for definitions, a third for the answers you got wrong twice. Your weak spots become the brightest marks in the book.

  4. 4

    Let your tabs and marks compound

    A tab gets you to the chapter; the highlight gets you to the paragraph; the underline gets you to the answer. Built up across a full question bank, that three-layer trail is the open-book skill the exam actually tests.

All marking must be done before you walk in — the rules allow pre-marked books but bar making any new marks (or bringing notes) during the exam.

Navigating under time pressure

  • Subparts are thematic: E = PPE, F = fire protection, L = scaffolds, M = fall protection, P = excavations, X = stairways/ladders, CC = cranes.
  • Reporting deadlines (8-hour fatality, 24-hour hospitalization) and the 300A posting window are in Part 1904, not 1926.
  • 'Competent person' definitions appear in 1926.32 and within each subpart that requires one.