The Superintendent is Yelling. The Inspector is Writing. You Need the Answer Now.
You know the moment. A sub swears the trench doesn't need a box. The GC questions your tie-off height. They're waiting for you to prove them wrong—with something other than "because I said so."
Your options used to be bad: dig through an 800-page manual in your truck, or Google a vague term and hope the first result isn't a five-year-old blog post. Meanwhile, the job stops. Money burns. And the inspector keeps writing.
SAFTalk changes that. It searches the official OSHA database and hands you the exact regulation you need—CFR 1910 and 1926—in seconds. No summaries. No guessing. Just the citation that ends the argument.
Try it now. Ask a real question.
"Can I use a step ladder as a straight ladder?"
No. Self-supporting ladders (step ladders) must not be used as single ladders or in a partially closed position.
29 CFR 1926.1053(b)(4)"What's the maximum trench depth without shoring?"
Protective systems are required for trenches 5 feet or deeper, unless the excavation is in stable rock.
29 CFR 1926.652(a)(1)Built for the Field, Not the Filing Cabinet.
Whether you're walking a site or writing a HASP, SAFTalk works like having a Certified Safety Professional in your pocket—available 24/7, even when cell service isn't.
The Job Walk
Settle a dispute about ladder placement, fall protection, or trench depth instantly on your phone. Quote the standard before the foreman can unlock the job box.
The JHA / JSA
Stop paraphrasing regulations from memory. Copy-paste the exact text into your Job Hazard Analysis and know it's accurate.
The Toolbox Talk
Need a 5-minute briefing on silica dust for a masonry crew? Type the request, get a script tailored to the trade—complete with mandatory warnings required by law.
The Zero-Guess Guarantee
Generic AI hallucinates. It invents regulations that don't exist. That's dangerous when your license is on the line.
SAFTalk is different. It's strictly geofenced to official OSHA documentation. If the answer isn't in the Federal Register, we tell you. We never guess with your liability.
The Dispute Ender
Don't just tell them they're wrong. Show them. Hand over your phone with the exact text of 29 CFR 1926.1053(b)(4) on the screen.
When you back your decision with federal law, the arguments stop and the work starts.
5-Minute Briefings
Don't wing your toolbox talks. Type "silica dust briefing for concrete cutters" and get a ready-to-deliver script with the specific hazards, controls, and legal requirements for that trade.
Don't Take Our Word for It. Test It Now.
Type any OSHA question. Get the exact citation in seconds. If SAFTalk can't answer accurately before you finish your coffee, it's not ready for your job site.
We think it is.
Not sure what to ask? Try these:
- "What PPE is required for grinding metal?"
- "When do I need a competent person for scaffolding?"
- "What's the maximum height for a guardrail?"
- "Do I need fall protection at 4 feet or 6 feet?"
Every answer links directly to the Federal Register. Click through and verify it yourself.
How SAFTalk Compares
| Feature | General AI Chatbots | Google Search | SAFTalk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Source Material | The entire internet (often wrong) | Ads & SEO blogs | Official OSHA database only |
| Accuracy Risk | High (hallucinations) | Medium (outdated info) | Minimal (direct citations) |
| Speed | Fast | Slow | Instant |
| Proof | None | Manual digging | Clickable links to law |
| Field-Ready | No | No | Yes—built for mobile |