Silica Awareness Training Online | OSHA 1926.1153 & 1910.1053 | HazMat Student
Silica Awareness Training Online — OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1153 & 1910.1053 | HazMat Student. Construction worker using concrete saw with respirator and silica dust hazard warning sign. Self-paced, instant certificate.

Silica Awareness Training Online

OSHA-aligned respirable crystalline silica training built around 29 CFR 1926.1153 (Construction) and 29 CFR 1910.1053 (General Industry). Covers the 50 μg/m³ PEL, Table 1 controls, and silicosis prevention. Self-paced, instant certificate.

Since 2007 Founded
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~2 Hrs Self-Paced
Instant Certificate
From $19.95  ·  100% Online  ·  Mobile Ready  ·  Wallet ID Card option
What it is

What Is Silica Awareness Training?

Silica awareness training teaches workers how to recognize respirable crystalline silica hazards — the dust generated by cutting, grinding, drilling, or sandblasting concrete, masonry, stone, brick, mortar, and other silica-containing materials. The training covers OSHA's 50 μg/m³ PEL, the Table 1 specified controls, the health effects (silicosis, lung cancer, COPD, kidney disease), and safe work practices. Required under 29 CFR 1926.1153 for construction and 29 CFR 1910.1053 for general industry. HazMat Student's awareness course is $19.95 with an optional Wallet ID Card for $24.95.

The Federal Regulatory Framework for Silica

OSHA enforces silica exposure under two parallel standards: 29 CFR 1926.1153 for construction and 29 CFR 1910.1053 for general industry and maritime. Both standards became effective June 23, 2016 under the OSHA Final Rule on Occupational Exposure to Respirable Crystalline Silica, which lowered the construction PEL by 80% from the previous standard. The PEL is 50 μg/m³ as an 8-hour TWA, with an action level of 25 μg/m³ that triggers exposure assessment, medical surveillance, and training requirements.

What This Course Covers

  • Respirable crystalline silica properties and sources
  • Tasks that generate silica dust exposure
  • OSHA PEL, action level, and Table 1 controls
  • Health effects: silicosis, lung cancer, COPD, kidney
  • Engineering controls and work practice methods
  • Respiratory protection and PPE selection

Who Needs This Training

  • Concrete cutters, grinders, and finishers
  • Masons, bricklayers, and stone workers
  • Demolition and renovation contractors
  • Sandblasters and abrasive blasters
  • Drillers, jackhammer operators, dust-generating tool users
  • Foundry and stone fabrication workers

What This Is NOT For

  • Competent Person designation under 1926.1153(g)(4)
  • Industrial hygienist certification
  • OSHA 10/30 construction safety training
  • HAZWOPER site work — see our 40-Hour HAZWOPER
Pricing & enrollment

Silica Awareness Training — Two Options

The base course includes the instant digital certificate. The Wallet ID Card option adds a physical PVC card with your name, photo, and certification details for $5 more — required by some employers for jobsite verification. Both options deliver identical course content.

Standard

Silica Awareness for Construction Online

$19.95
🕒 ~2 hours 📝 OSHA-aligned
  • OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1153 & 1910.1053 content
  • 50 μg/m³ PEL & 25 μg/m³ action level
  • Table 1 specified controls explained
  • Silicosis, lung cancer, COPD health effects
  • Engineering controls and work practices
  • Respiratory protection basics
  • Digital certificate (printable)
  • Mobile-ready on any device
  • Permanent record at OTS student portal
Enroll — $19.95
Industries served

Where Silica Awareness Training Is Required

Respirable crystalline silica exposure is regulated across every industry that cuts, grinds, drills, or fractures silica-containing materials. Construction is the largest sector, but general industry and maritime have parallel requirements under 1910.1053.

🏗 Concrete & Masonry

  • Concrete cutters and grinders
  • Brick and block masons
  • Tuckpointers and mortar workers
  • Concrete drilling and core sampling

🔨 Stone & Tile

  • Engineered stone fabricators (countertops)
  • Natural stone cutting and polishing
  • Tile setters and stone installers
  • Quarry operations and stone yards

🚧 Demolition & Renovation

  • Building demolition crews
  • Concrete chipping and scaling
  • Site cleanup and debris handling
  • Renovation prep workers

⚙ Foundry & Industrial

  • Foundry sand handling and casting
  • Refractory work and brick lining
  • Industrial sandblasting operations
  • Ceramic and glass manufacturing

🚝 Highway & Underground

  • Road and highway concrete work
  • Tunneling and underground mining
  • Hydraulic fracturing sand handling
  • Pipeline trenching in rocky soil

🛡 Specialty Trades

  • Drywall finishers and joint compound sanders
  • Painters using silica-containing primers
  • Roofers handling shingles and tiles
  • HVAC installers cutting concrete chases
Getting started

How to Enroll and Complete Silica Awareness Training

  1. Confirm awareness is the right level

    Verify with your employer that awareness training matches your role. Awareness covers workers exposed to silica dust. Workers serving as Competent Person under 1926.1153(g)(4) may need additional higher-tier training. When in doubt, call us at 1-888-342-9628.

  2. Decide on the Wallet ID Card

    Add the optional Wallet ID Card for $5 more ($24.95 total) if required by your general contractor or preferred for jobsite verification. The standard digital certificate is included free with the base course.

  3. Enroll online

    Click Enroll Now from the pricing section above. Create your student account at the OTS portal, then click Signup for Course and select the course you need. Corporate accounts available for crews.

  4. Complete the self-paced modules

    Log in from any device. The course is self-paced — log in and out as needed, progress saves automatically. Most workers complete the course in a single session of about 2 hours.

  5. Pass the exam and download your certificate

    Complete the final exam. When you pass, your digital certificate and printable transcript are immediately available in your student account. Wallet ID Cards (if ordered) ship separately by mail.

  6. Calendar your annual refresher

    While OSHA does not specify a fixed annual interval, most general contractors and pre-qualification systems (ISN, Avetta, PEC Premier) enforce annual silica refresher. Calendar the renewal date 60 days before expiration.

Field application

When Silica Training Pays Off — 4 Scenarios

Silica training is not paperwork. It governs whether a worker can step onto a concrete jobsite, operate a dust-generating tool, or pass an OSHA inspection without exposing themselves and their employer to citation. Four scenarios from the field.

🏗 Scenario 1 — The Concrete Cutting Citation

A general contractor on a residential demolition site has workers cutting concrete slabs with handheld saws. No water suppression, no shrouded saw, no respirators. An OSHA compliance officer responds to a neighbor's complaint about dust. The CO finds 5 workers with no documented silica awareness training and no exposure assessment on file.

Outcome: Serious citation under 29 CFR 1926.1153. Training violations stack with Table 1 control violations: 5 workers untrained at $16,550 each, plus separate citations for missing exposure plan, missing controls, and missing respiratory protection. The total exposure exceeded $130,000 — for a $19.95 silica awareness course the workers never took.

☠ Scenario 2 — The Stone Fabrication Diagnosis

A 38-year-old engineered stone (quartz countertop) fabricator develops shortness of breath and a chronic cough. His chest X-ray shows nodular opacities consistent with silicosis. His employer's records show no silica awareness training, no exposure monitoring, no respirator program. The worker had been cutting and polishing engineered stone for 11 years — material containing up to 90% crystalline silica.

Outcome: Silicosis diagnosis at 38 years old. Disease is progressive and incurable. OSHA investigation finds the shop in violation across the entire 1910.1053 standard. State workers' compensation case opens. Civil liability follows. Engineered stone fabrication is currently OSHA's #1 silica enforcement priority because cases like this are appearing across the country.

⚠ Scenario 3 — The Pre-Qualification Audit

A masonry subcontractor is bidding on a $4M hospital renovation. The general contractor uses ISN for pre-qualification and requires every field worker to show current silica awareness training before site mobilization. The subcontractor has 12 masons — only 4 have documented silica training. The bid is held pending compliance.

Outcome: All 8 remaining masons complete Silica Awareness online within 48 hours via corporate account. ISN profile updated, bid moves forward. Total training cost: $159.60. The alternative was losing a $4M project to a competitor with proper training records.

🛡 Scenario 4 — The Multi-Crew Onboarding

A regional concrete cutting company hires 15 new operators for the spring construction season. Every operator will work with concrete saws, core drills, and grinders across multiple GC jobsites. The safety manager needs every operator current on silica awareness before any tool deployment.

Outcome: Corporate account enrolls all 15 operators in Silica Awareness with consolidated invoicing and completion tracking dashboard. All 15 finish in 3 days at $19.95 each — $299.25 total. Training files documented across ISN, Avetta, and PEC Premier pre-qualification systems for multi-GC site access.
Avoid these

6 Common Silica Training Mistakes

After nearly two decades training silica workers and employers, these are the failure patterns we see most often — and the simple fix for each.

❌ Mistake 1 — Confusing Silica with HazCom

The mistake: Treating general HazCom training under 1910.1200 as a substitute for silica-specific training. The fix: Silica has its own dedicated standard (1926.1153 / 1910.1053) with specific PEL, action level, Table 1 controls, and training content. HazCom covers labels and SDS; silica training covers exposure limits, dust controls, and silicosis prevention. Workers need both.

❌ Mistake 2 — Skipping Training Because "We Use Water"

The mistake: Assuming water suppression eliminates the training requirement. The fix: Water and HEPA vacuum controls are Table 1 specified controls — they reduce exposure, but they do not eliminate the training requirement under 1926.1153(i). Workers must still know the hazard, the controls, and the limits.

❌ Mistake 3 — Ignoring the Action Level Trigger

The mistake: Assuming training is only required at the PEL of 50 μg/m³. The fix: The action level of 25 μg/m³ (half the PEL) triggers exposure assessment, medical surveillance, AND training requirements. Workers exposed above 25 μg/m³ — even if well below the PEL — still need full training and program inclusion.

❌ Mistake 4 — No Written Exposure Control Plan

The mistake: Having trained workers but no written exposure control plan under 1926.1153(g). The fix: Training alone is not compliance. The written plan must identify tasks, controls, housekeeping, and the designated Competent Person. Inspectors ask for the plan first. Awareness training is the worker-side requirement; the plan is the employer-side requirement.

❌ Mistake 5 — Engineered Stone Blind Spot

The mistake: Treating engineered stone (quartz countertops) like natural stone for silica risk assessment. The fix: Engineered stone contains up to 90% crystalline silica — far more than granite or marble. Fabricators face acute silicosis risk that OSHA is currently prioritizing for enforcement. Awareness training is the minimum starting point.

❌ Mistake 6 — No Record When a Worker Changes Sites

The mistake: Training records stuck in a former employer's system. The fix: HazMat Student stores every certificate in the student's permanent account at the OTS portal. Workers can re-download anytime across employers — and safety managers can verify training credentials before site assignment.

Why HazMat Student

Why Construction Safety Managers Choose HazMat Student for Silica

HazMat Student has delivered online silica training since the 2016 OSHA Final Rule first took effect — and continuously online safety training since July 2007. Construction safety managers, concrete contractors, and stone fabrication shops return year after year for the price, the speed, and the reliability of the certificate.

Built around the 2016 OSHA Final Rule

The course is structured around the specific provisions of 29 CFR 1926.1153 and 1910.1053 — not a generic dust-safety template. The content reflects what OSHA inspectors check: PEL recognition, action level triggers, Table 1 specified controls, exposure plan requirements, and worker rights.

One platform, every chemical

Construction workers exposed to silica are often exposed to asbestos, lead, and hexavalent chromium too. HazMat Student handles all of these on the same platform — one student account, one corporate dashboard, one training record per worker across every Subpart Z chemical and HAZWOPER tier.

Honest awareness-level scope

We say plainly that this is an awareness course — not Competent Person training, not industrial hygiene certification, not OSHA 30. Workers and employers know exactly what the certificate covers, and what it does not. That clarity protects everyone at audit time and during pre-qualification reviews.

Instant certificate, mobile-ready, since 2007

Pass the exam and your certificate is in your student account immediately — no processing queue, no mailing delay. Mobile-ready on phones and tablets. HazMat Student has run continuously since July 2007 — your certificate is backed by a stable, reachable company that will still be here for your next refresher.

Safety Managers & Employers

Training a Concrete or Masonry Crew?

Safety managers use HazMat Student to enroll concrete cutters, masons, stone fabricators, and demolition crews in silica awareness through a single corporate account — one invoice, one dashboard, one training record per worker. Pairs naturally with our Asbestos and Lead courses for full construction chemical training stacks.

💵 Volume discounts 📄 Corporate billing 📊 Completion tracking 📱 Mobile-ready 📞 Dedicated support 🎓 Instant certificates
🏢 Set Up Corporate Account

Call us: 1-888-342-9628

People also ask

Frequently Asked Questions — Silica Awareness Training

Silica awareness training teaches workers how to recognize respirable crystalline silica hazards, understand the health risks (silicosis, lung cancer, COPD, kidney disease), and follow safe work practices including the Table 1 specified controls. Required under 29 CFR 1926.1153 for construction workers and 29 CFR 1910.1053 for general industry and maritime workers exposed at or above the action level of 25 μg/m³.

Workers who perform tasks that generate respirable crystalline silica dust, including concrete cutting, masonry work, stone fabrication, sandblasting, drilling, jackhammering, mixing, grinding, demolition, foundry work, and any operation involving silica-containing materials. Both construction (1926.1153) and general industry (1910.1053) standards trigger training requirements.

OSHA's permissible exposure limit for respirable crystalline silica is 50 micrograms per cubic meter of air (50 μg/m³) as an 8-hour time-weighted average, with an action level of 25 μg/m³ under 29 CFR 1926.1153(c) and 29 CFR 1910.1053(c). The action level triggers exposure assessment, medical surveillance, and training requirements. The PEL was lowered 80% from the previous construction standard when OSHA's silica rule took effect in 2016.

Table 1 in 29 CFR 1926.1153(c) lists 18 specific construction tasks and equipment (handheld masonry saws, walk-behind saws, drivable saws, jackhammers, rotary hammers, dust-generating tools) along with required engineering and work practice controls and respiratory protection requirements. Employers who fully implement Table 1 controls for a listed task are not required to perform exposure assessment for that task under 1926.1153(d).

Silica awareness training at HazMat Student is $19.95 for online, self-paced training with instant digital certificate. The Wallet ID Card option adds $5 ($24.95 total). Corporate accounts are available for multi-worker enrollments with volume pricing and consolidated invoicing — especially efficient for construction crews where every worker needs the training.

The Silica Awareness course averages about 2 hours. The course is self-paced — you can log in and out as needed, progress saves automatically. Most workers finish in a single session.

OSHA requires training under 29 CFR 1926.1153(i) and 29 CFR 1910.1053(j) when a worker is first assigned to silica-exposed work and whenever workplace conditions change. While neither standard mandates a specific annual interval, most employers and contractor pre-qualification systems (ISN, Avetta, PEC Premier) enforce annual refresher to ensure current knowledge. Calendar the renewal 60 days before due.

OSHA can cite employers up to $16,550 per violation per worker for serious training violations (FY 2026 figures, adjusted annually). Willful or repeat violations multiply that figure up to $165,514 per violation. Silica is one of OSHA's most-cited construction standards because the 2016 rule is detailed, the dust is visible, and the documentation is straightforward for inspectors to verify. Current penalty schedule: osha.gov/penalties.

Respirable crystalline silica exposure causes silicosis (a progressive, irreversible, and fatal lung disease), lung cancer (silica is a Group 1 IARC carcinogen), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and kidney disease. Acute silicosis can develop within weeks of high exposure (a documented risk in engineered stone fabrication); chronic silicosis develops over 10-30 years of lower-level exposure. There is no cure — only prevention through exposure control and proper training.

HazMat Student's silica awareness certificate is accepted by construction contractors, general contractors, and contractor pre-qualification systems (ISN, Avetta, PEC Premier) nationwide. The certificate is suitable for OSHA recordkeeping and pre-employment training verification. Always confirm with your specific employer or site safety officer for any additional site-specific requirements.

Related courses & authoritative sources

Related Courses & Authoritative Silica Resources

Get Silica Awareness Certified Today

Trusted by concrete, masonry, stone, and construction safety managers since July 2007.

Enroll for $19.95 — 100% online, self-paced, instant certificate. Add the Wallet ID Card for $5 more if your GC needs it.

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