Fall Clearance Distance Calculator
Calculate total fall clearance distance for lanyards and self-retracting lifelines.
Positive if anchor is above D-ring, negative if below. 0 = anchor at D-ring height.
Falls from Height: The Leading Cause of Workplace Fatality
Falls from height remain the single largest cause of workplace fatalities in Australia and globally. Safe Work Australia data consistently shows falls account for 20–30% of all worker deaths each year. The vast majority of these are preventable with proper hazard assessment, correct system selection, and adequate clearance verification — which is exactly what this calculator addresses.
When a fall arrest system stops a falling worker, it must do so before the worker contacts a lower level or obstruction. This requires that the total required clearance distance — the sum of four components — is less than the actual available clearance at the work location.
The Fall Clearance Formula
Required Clearance = FFD + DD + HBS + SF Where: FFD = Free-Fall Distance (lanyard length or SRL activation distance + anchor offset) DD = Deceleration Distance (~1.06 m for lanyards; ~0.6 m for SRLs) HBS = Height Below D-ring when Suspended (~1.5 m or worker_height × 0.55) SF = Safety Factor Margin (minimum 0.9 m / 3.0 ft) Example (shock-absorbing lanyard, 1.75 m worker): FFD = 1.8 m (lanyard) DD = 1.06 m HBS = 1.75 × 0.55 = 0.96 m SF = 0.9 m Required = 1.8 + 1.06 + 0.96 + 0.9 = 4.72 m
Fall Arrest vs Restraint — Understanding the Difference
Fall arrest systems (lanyards, SRLs, inertia reels) are designed to stop a worker who has already fallen. They require adequate clearance below the work position. Fall restraint systems prevent a worker from reaching an unprotected edge entirely — they do not require the same clearance calculations but require careful rope/lanyard length management to prevent reaching the edge. Both systems require appropriate anchor points with minimum 15 kN / 1500 kg rated capacity.
Lanyard vs SRL — When to Use Each
- Shock-absorbing lanyard: Best for work on fixed structures where clearance is confirmed to be adequate. Simple, low-maintenance, no moving parts. Requires 4–6 m clearance typical.
- Self-retracting lifeline (SRL): Best where clearance is limited (e.g., work above a mezzanine floor, on scaffolding, or near lower levels). SRLs arrest falls much faster and require 1.5–3.0 m typical clearance. More expensive but dramatically reduces fall distance.
Swing Fall Hazard
One of the most underestimated hazards in fall protection is the swing fall (pendulum effect). If a worker falls while not directly below the anchor point, they will swing in an arc — potentially striking walls, columns, equipment, or edge protrusions at high speed. General guidance: keep the anchor within 15° of directly above the work position. For horizontal lifeline systems, the D-factor (deflection factor) significantly increases the effective free-fall distance and must be calculated separately using the manufacturer's documentation.
Australian and International Standards
In Australia, the selection and use of fall protection equipment is governed by: AS/NZS 1891 series (Industrial Fall-Arrest Equipment — Harnesses, Lanyards, Connectors, Inertia Reels); AS/NZS 4488 series (Industrial Rope Access); and the model WHS Regulations under the WHS Act 2011. In the US, ANSI/ASSP Z359 series covers fall protection equipment and fall protection program requirements. Both frameworks mandate competent person assessment of anchor points and system selection.
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले प्रश्न
- What is fall clearance distance?
- Minimum vertical obstacle-free distance below anchor to stop worker before striking lower level.
- Lanyard vs SRL?
- Lanyard (1.8m fixed). SRL arrests in 0.6-1.2m, less clearance needed.
- Deceleration distance?
- Lanyards ~1.06m; SRLs ~0.3-0.6m.
- Why does worker height matter?
- Feet hang ~1.5-2.0m below the D-ring when suspended.
- Swing fall?
- Pendulum swing when anchor is not directly overhead.
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