Both paper and digital records are legally acceptable to OSHA. But "legally acceptable" and "practically defensible" are two very different things when an inspector is standing in your trailer asking for 3 years of documentation.
OSHA has accepted electronic records since 2002. Requirements: records must allow retrieval, be printable, be secured against unauthorized edits, and be accessible to inspectors. OSHA does not require a handwritten signature — a drawn digital signature meets the standard.
| Scenario | Paper | Digital |
|---|---|---|
| OSHA asks for 2-year-old records | Hope you filed it right | Searchable in seconds |
| Office fire or flood | Records gone | Cloud backup, safe |
| GC requests compliance report | Hours of manual work | One-click CSV export |
| Prove Spanish-speaker was trained | English sheet — questionable | Bilingual record + timestamp |
| Prove worker understood training | Signature only | Quiz score + timestamp + signature |
The quiz advantage: Digital training with a quiz proves workers understood the material — not just sat through it. OSHA inspectors increasingly ask about comprehension after incidents.
Free 15-minute demo, no commitment. We'll set up your first training session live.
Book a Demo →