OSHA HazCom compliance for janitorial & cleaning.
Cleaning crews work across multiple sites with chemicals decanted into spray bottles. That's exactly the OSHA HazCom failure pattern. HazCom48 fixes it across every job.
Janitorial and cleaning companies are squarely under OSHA HazCom because every spray bottle a crew member fills is a secondary container that requires a workplace label. The standard requires a written program, an SDS for every product the crew uses (bleach, quaternary ammonium, glass cleaner, floor stripper, bowl cleaner), labels on all transfer bottles, and documented training for each crew member at hire.
Common chemicals
What HazCom48 delivers
- Multi-site written HazCom program
- Spray-bottle workplace label pack with refill instructions
- Crew training acknowledgements
- Site-by-site inventory log
Janitorial & Cleaning HazCom — common questions
Does every spray bottle on the cart need a label?
Yes. Any chemical decanted into a secondary container requires a workplace label showing the product name and hazards, unless one crew member uses and consumes it entirely within a single shift.
Do I need a separate written program for each cleaning site?
29 CFR 1910.1200(e) requires the written program to reflect the hazardous chemicals known to be present at each workplace. Multi-site cleaning companies typically meet this with one master program plus site-specific addenda listing the chemicals stored or used at each location.
Can I mix bleach and ammonia products in the same closet?
No. Bleach and ammonia produce toxic chloramine gas if mixed. Both products require labels noting the incompatibility and segregated storage per the SDS handling instructions.
Ready for an audit-ready janitorial & cleaning compliance program?
HazCom48 collects your chemicals, builds the written program, prints labels, and trains your team in 48 hours.
Start compliance