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100+ Free High Risk Work Licence — Forklift Truck (LF) Practice Questions

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2026 Statistics

Key Facts: High Risk Work Licence — Forklift Truck (LF) Exam

100

Practice Questions

OpenExamPrep

NAI

Closed / unpublished

Safe Work / regulators

Must-pass

Calcs (typical RTO practice)

RTO/assessor practice

5 yrs

Licence Validity

WHS Regulators

The Australia HRWL Forklift Truck (LF) pathway uses a closed-book NAI knowledge and calculation assessment plus practical for TLILIC0003. Critical calculations and safety items are commonly treated as must-pass. This prep includes 100 practice questions.

Sample High Risk Work Licence — Forklift Truck (LF) Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your High Risk Work Licence — Forklift Truck (LF) exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1Under Australian WHS law, what is a forklift operator's primary duty of care while performing high-risk work?
A.Meet production quotas even if it means exceeding site speed limits.
B.Take reasonable care for their own safety and ensure their acts do not adversely affect others.
C.Only follow verbal instructions from the warehouse manager, ignoring written SWMS.
D.Personally weld cracked forks so the truck can stay in service.
Explanation: Workers must take reasonable care for their own health and safety and ensure their acts or omissions do not adversely affect others. Production pressure never overrides WHS duties for LF-class high-risk work.
2Which High Risk Work Licence class is required to operate a standard mast forklift truck (not an order picker) in Australia?
A.LO — Order-picking forklift truck
B.WP — Boom-type elevating work platform
C.LF — Forklift truck
D.DG — Dogging
Explanation: SafeWork NSW and other regulators list LF as the class for a forklift truck with mast and elevating carriage. LO is a separate class for order-picking forklifts where controls elevate with the load.
3What national unit of competency underpins the LF forklift High Risk Work Licence assessment?
A.TLILIC0004 Licence to operate an order picking forklift truck
B.TLILIC0003 Licence to operate a forklift truck
C.TLILIC0005 Licence to operate a boom-type elevating work platform
D.CPCCLSF2001 Licence to erect, alter and dismantle scaffolding basic
Explanation: training.gov.au lists TLILIC0003 — Licence to operate a forklift truck as the licensing unit for LF. Competence in the unit does not itself issue the HRWL; the regulator issues the licence after NAI assessment.
4According to the TLILIC0003 definition, when is a powered industrial truck treated as a forklift truck requiring an LF licence?
A.Only when it travels on a public road with number plates.
B.When it has a mast and elevating carriage with forks or attachments that can be raised 900 mm or more (excluding pedestrian/pallet trucks).
C.Whenever any pallet mover is used indoors, including manual pallet jacks.
D.Only when the rated capacity exceeds 5 tonnes.
Explanation: The unit defines a forklift truck as a powered industrial truck with a mast and elevating load carriage that can raise forks/attachments 900 mm or more, excluding pedestrian-operated and pallet trucks. Capacity and public-road status do not define the LF class.
5How long is an Australian High Risk Work Licence, including LF, typically valid before renewal is required?
A.12 months
B.2 years
C.5 years
D.10 years
Explanation: SafeWork NSW and other state regulators state HRW licences expire after 5 years and must be renewed to continue high-risk work. Classes added later usually share the same expiry date as the card.
6Before starting a forklift task, what should you confirm from the work order or equivalent briefing?
A.Only the destination aisle letter, ignoring load weight and stacking height.
B.Task requirements such as load details, destination, site conditions, and any special controls, then confirm with relevant people.
C.That you may skip the site inspection if you drove that aisle yesterday.
D.That manufacturer manuals can be ignored if you have driven any forklift before
Explanation: TLILIC0003 Element 1 requires identifying task requirements from work orders or equivalent, confirming with relevant people, and conducting a site inspection. Load mass, path, and controls all matter for safe planning.
7In WHS terms, what is the difference between a hazard and a risk when planning forklift work?
A.There is no difference; regulators use the words interchangeably.
B.A hazard is anything with potential to cause harm; a risk is the likelihood and consequence of that harm occurring.
C.A hazard is always an overhead powerline; a risk is always a pedestrian.
D.A hazard is only chemical; a risk is only mechanical.
Explanation: A hazard has potential to cause harm (unstable load, slope, pedestrian traffic). Risk combines how likely harm is and how severe it would be if it occurred. Controls aim to eliminate or reduce that risk.
8Which workplace traffic hazard is especially critical to control when operating a forklift in a warehouse?
A.Pedestrians sharing aisles and blind intersections with the forklift path
B.Other forklifts only—pedestrians are never considered a traffic hazard
C.Only outdoor public roads, never indoor warehouses
D.Only when the forklift is diesel; electric trucks need no traffic controls
Explanation: Safe Work Australia workplace traffic guidance emphasises separating pedestrians and powered mobile plant. Model WHS regulations also require powered mobile plant not to collide with pedestrians. Shared aisles and blind corners are high-risk collision settings.
9What should you do if you identify overhead powerlines or service pipes on the planned forklift path?
A.Raise the load as high as possible so you can see under the lines.
B.Stop and apply site exclusion/clearance controls; do not operate inside unsafe proximity until hazards are controlled.
C.Assume insulated lines are always safe to touch with the mast.
D.Only worry about powerlines outdoors; indoor service pipes never matter.
Explanation: Overhead hazards (powerlines, service pipes) are specifically listed for forklift operations. Keep masts and loads clear of exclusion zones and stop work if clearances cannot be maintained. Never assume insulation makes contact safe.
10Minimum age commonly required to be assessed for an LF High Risk Work Licence in Australia is:
A.16 years
B.17 years
C.18 years
D.21 years
Explanation: State and territory regulators require HRWL applicants to be at least 18. You must also meet identity and English requirements set by the issuing regulator (for example SafeWork NSW requires proof of identity and enough English to work safely).

About the High Risk Work Licence — Forklift Truck (LF) Exam

The High Risk Work Licence for Forklift Truck (LF class) is required in Australia to operate a powered industrial truck with a mast and elevating load carriage fitted with fork arms or other attachments that can be raised 900 mm or more, excluding pedestrian-operated trucks, pallet trucks, and order-picking forklifts (LO class). Assessment is based on the national unit of competency TLILIC0003 — Licence to operate a forklift truck. It covers planning the task, hazard identification, pre-start checks, stability and load-centre calculations, safe load shifting, traffic and pedestrian controls, and shut-down procedures under Model WHS Regulations Part 4.5.

Assessment

Closed-book National Assessment Instrument (NAI) knowledge and calculations assessment, plus a practical forklift operation assessment, administered by an accredited high-risk work assessor through a Registered Training Organisation (RTO).

Time Limit

Varies by RTO / assessor (closed-book knowledge and calculations, then practical)

Passing Score

Competency-based overall. Candidates are commonly required to answer calculations and safety-critical theory correctly and must demonstrate competent practical operation; exact marking rules sit in the closed NAI.

Exam Fee

RTO training and assessment fees commonly fall roughly in the $350–$650 AUD range depending on provider and duration, plus a separate regulator HRWL application fee (e.g. SafeWork NSW 2026–27: $95 per class for a new licence; renewal and other states/territories differ—check your regulator). (State and Territory Work Health and Safety (WHS) regulators (e.g., SafeWork NSW, WorkSafe Victoria, WorkSafe Queensland).)

High Risk Work Licence — Forklift Truck (LF) Exam Content Outline

23%

Plan Work & Hazard Identification

Task planning from work orders, site inspection, WHS duties, hierarchy of control, SWMS/risk assessment, traffic and pedestrian hazards, overhead and ground conditions, weather, and communication.

23%

Pre-Start Inspection & Preparation

Data plate and logbook checks, structural and safety-device inspections, fluid/fuel/battery checks, tagging out defects, selecting attachments, and confirming site controls.

26%

Stability, Capacity & Calculations

Stability triangle, centre of gravity, load centre distance, rated capacity from the data plate, derating for longer load centres or attachments, and safe load placement.

28%

Operate & Shut Down

Safe travel with forks low and mast tilted back, ramps and slopes (no turning on grades), stacking/unstacking, pedestrian awareness, tip-over response, emergency stops, parking, isolation, and post-operational checks.

How to Pass the High Risk Work Licence — Forklift Truck (LF) Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: Competency-based overall. Candidates are commonly required to answer calculations and safety-critical theory correctly and must demonstrate competent practical operation; exact marking rules sit in the closed NAI.
  • Assessment: Closed-book National Assessment Instrument (NAI) knowledge and calculations assessment, plus a practical forklift operation assessment, administered by an accredited high-risk work assessor through a Registered Training Organisation (RTO).
  • Time limit: Varies by RTO / assessor (closed-book knowledge and calculations, then practical)
  • Exam fee: RTO training and assessment fees commonly fall roughly in the $350–$650 AUD range depending on provider and duration, plus a separate regulator HRWL application fee (e.g. SafeWork NSW 2026–27: $95 per class for a new licence; renewal and other states/territories differ—check your regulator).

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

High Risk Work Licence — Forklift Truck (LF) Study Tips from Top Performers

1Memorise load-centre derating: new capacity ≈ (rated load centre ÷ actual load centre) × rated capacity, then always confirm against the data plate and attachment charts.
2Know the stability triangle: the combined centre of gravity must stay inside the triangle formed by the two front drive-wheel contacts and the rear steer-axle pivot.
3Drill pre-start checks and tagging out: if the data plate is missing/unreadable, brakes fail, or forks/chains are damaged, do not operate—tag out and report.
4Practise ramp rules and travel posture: carry loads low with mast tilted back; on grades, keep the load upgrade (load toward the top of the slope) when loaded.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between LF and LO forklift licences?

LF (Forklift truck) covers a counterbalance or similar forklift with a mast and elevating carriage where the operator does not elevate with the load. LO (Order-picking forklift truck) is required when the operator's controls are incorporated with, and elevate with, the load carriage. An LF licence does not authorise LO work.

How long is an LF High Risk Work Licence valid?

Australian High Risk Work Licences, including LF, are valid for 5 years and are recognised nationally. You must renew with your state or territory regulator before expiry (renewal windows commonly extend up to 12 months after expiry, after which full re-assessment may be required).

What does the TLILIC0003 assessment include?

You complete training with an RTO, then an accredited assessor delivers the closed-book National Assessment Instrument covering knowledge and calculations, plus a practical forklift operation assessment. Passing competence in the unit alone does not issue the licence—you must apply to your state WHS regulator (often within 60 days of assessment) for the LF class HRWL.

What happens if I fail the calculations component?

Calculations and safety-critical items are commonly treated as must-pass competency by assessors. If you are not yet competent on calculations or practical, you will need re-assessment for the failed component under your RTO’s reassessment policy. Exact NAI scoring rules are not publicly released.