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2026 Statistics

Key Facts: SACPCMP CHS Manager Exam

100

Practice Questions

Syllabus Aligned

3 hours

Exam Time Limit

SACPCMP Guidelines

60%

Passing Score

SACPCMP Council

R1,317

Examination Fee

SACPCMP Fees

7 days

OHS Act Section 24 Report Deadline (to DoL)

General Administrative Regulations

Monthly

Mandatory Client Audit Frequency

Construction Regulation 5

The SACPCMP Construction Health & Safety Manager exam is a 3-hour proctored assessment with a passing score of 60%. It costs R1,317 (excluding application/annual fees) and requires 4-5 years of post-qualification construction safety experience. The exam tests South African OHS Act, Construction Regulations 2014 (CR 5, 6, 7, 8), COID Act, risk assessments (HIRA), site documentation, operational safety controls, and incident management.

Sample SACPCMP CHS Manager Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your SACPCMP CHS Manager exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1Under Section 16(1) of the South African Occupational Health and Safety Act (Act 85 of 1993), who is primarily responsible for ensuring that the duties of the employer are compiled with?
A.The designated Construction Health and Safety Manager
B.The Construction Supervisor appointed under Regulation 8(7)
C.The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the company
D.The Department of Employment and Labour Inspector
Explanation: Section 16(1) of the OHS Act 85 of 1993 explicitly states that the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) is charged with the primary responsibility of ensuring that the employer complies with their duties. The CEO is legally accountable unless delegation has occurred under Section 16(2).
2According to Construction Regulation 5 of the Construction Regulations 2014, an Agent appointed by the client to manage health and safety must be registered with which body?
A.SACPCMP (South African Council for the Project and Construction Management Professions)
B.Saiosh (South African Institute of Occupational Safety and Health)
C.The Department of Employment and Labour
D.ECSA (Engineering Council of South Africa)
Explanation: Construction Regulation 5(5) and (6) allow a client to appoint a competent Agent in writing. The Agent must be registered with a statutory body approved by the Chief Inspector, which is the SACPCMP, ensuring they meet the statutory competency requirements for construction safety oversight. (Construction Regulation 6 deals with the duties of designers.)
3Under Section 17 of the South African OHS Act, what is the minimum threshold of employees that triggers the statutory requirement to designate health and safety representatives?
A.More than 5 employees
B.More than 20 employees
C.More than 50 employees
D.More than 100 employees
Explanation: Section 17(1) of the OHS Act 85 of 1993 mandates that every employer who employs more than 20 employees must designate in writing, for a specified period, health and safety representatives for such workplace.
4Which piece of legislation governs the compensation of South African construction workers who sustain injuries or contract diseases in the course of their employment?
A.COID Act (Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act, Act 130 of 1993)
B.Basic Conditions of Employment Act (BCEA)
C.Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA)
D.Employment Equity Act (EEA)
Explanation: The Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act (COIDA), Act 130 of 1993, establishes a system of compensation for disablement or death caused by occupational injuries or diseases contracted by employees in the course of their employment.
5Under Section 19 of the OHS Act, a Health and Safety Committee must be established if the employer has designated how many health and safety representatives?
A.Five or more representatives
B.Ten or more representatives
C.Two or more representatives
D.Fifty or more representatives
Explanation: Section 19(1) of the OHS Act 85 of 1993 mandates that an employer must establish one or more health and safety committees if they have designated two or more health and safety representatives for a workplace.
6What is the statutory minimum frequency at which a Health and Safety Committee must meet, according to the South African OHS Act?
A.At least once every month
B.At least once every three months
C.At least once every six months
D.Only when an incident occurs
Explanation: Section 20(2) of the OHS Act 85 of 1993 requires that a health and safety committee must meet at least once in every three months, though they may choose to meet more frequently.
7Under Construction Regulation 8(1), what are the legal requirements for a contractor appointing a Construction Manager?
A.The contractor must appoint one full-time competent Construction Manager in writing for a single site.
B.The contractor may verbally appoint a part-time Construction Manager for multiple sites.
C.The contractor must appoint a Construction Manager only if the project value exceeds R10 million.
D.The contractor must appoint the Construction Health and Safety Officer as the Construction Manager.
Explanation: Construction Regulation 8(1) requires a principal contractor to appoint one full-time competent employee in writing as the Construction Manager. This manager is responsible for managing all the construction work on a single site, ensuring safety and compliance.
8What does Section 16(2) of the South African OHS Act allow the Chief Executive Officer of a company to do?
A.Fully transfer all ultimate civil and criminal liabilities to project subcontractors
B.Delegate in writing any of their duties under the Act to competent persons under their control
C.Exempt the company from health and safety inspections by the Department of Employment and Labour
D.Appoint any worker as a health and safety representative without consulting employees
Explanation: Section 16(2) of the OHS Act 85 of 1993 allows the CEO to delegate in writing any of the duties assigned to them under the Act to competent persons under their control. However, this delegation does not fully absolve the CEO of their overall accountability.
9According to Construction Regulation 5(1), who has the primary duty to prepare the baseline risk assessment and the health and safety specifications for a construction project?
A.The Principal Contractor
B.The SACPCMP Council
C.The Construction Health and Safety Manager
D.The Client (or their appointed Agent)
Explanation: Construction Regulation 5(1)(a) and (b) mandates that the Client must prepare a baseline risk assessment and a suitable, sufficiently documented health and safety specification for the intended construction work.
10Under Section 24 of the South African OHS Act, which incident type must be reported directly to an inspector of the Department of Employment and Labour?
A.An incident resulting in the death of a person, or the loss of a limb or part of a limb
B.A minor cut requiring only basic first aid treatment on-site
C.An employee reporting late to work due to personal illness
D.A dispute between a contractor and a client regarding contract payments
Explanation: Section 24 of the OHS Act requires the reporting of serious incidents, such as those causing death, unconsciousness, loss of a limb or part of a limb, or injuries requiring medical treatment where the person is likely to fail to work for 14 days or more.

About the SACPCMP CHS Manager Exam

The SACPCMP Construction Health & Safety Manager (CHSM) examination is the professional registration assessment for safety managers in South Africa. It evaluates competence in implementing, managing, and auditing health and safety systems on construction sites. The exam heavily features the South African Occupational Health and Safety Act (Act 85 of 1993), the Construction Regulations 2014, HIRA methodologies, fall protection planning, contractor management, incident reporting, and safety documentation.

Assessment

100 multiple-choice and scenario questions covering South African OHS laws and site practices

Time Limit

3 hours

Passing Score

60%

Exam Fee

R1,317 (SACPCMP (South African Council for the Project and Construction Management Professions))

SACPCMP CHS Manager Exam Content Outline

20%

Legal & Regulatory Framework

OHS Act 85 of 1993, Section 16(1) and 16(2) duties, Section 37(2) mandatary agreements, COID Act civil liability exclusions, and Construction Regulations 2014 legal appointments (CR 8).

20%

Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment (HIRA)

Baseline, issue-based, and continuous risk assessments, hierarchy of controls, safe work procedures (SWPs), risk matrix calculations, and workforce facilitation.

20%

Health & Safety Plans & Documentation

Site-specific Health and Safety Plans, client Health and Safety Specifications, consolidated H&S Files, fall protection plans, method statements, and equipment inspection registers.

20%

Operational Safety & Site Controls

Excavation shoring, scaffolding SANS 10085 standards, working at heights fall arrest, electrical DB wiring (SANS 10142), temporary works (CR 12), noise zones, and hot work controls.

20%

Incident Management, Audits & Training

Section 24 incident reporting windows, COID Act accident reporting, root cause analysis (5 Whys), first aid box ratios, monthly client audits, evacuation drills, and site inductions.

How to Pass the SACPCMP CHS Manager Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: 60%
  • Assessment: 100 multiple-choice and scenario questions covering South African OHS laws and site practices
  • Time limit: 3 hours
  • Exam fee: R1,317

Keys to Passing

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

SACPCMP CHS Manager Study Tips from Top Performers

1Thoroughly memorize the legal appointments under Construction Regulation 8, including the specific duties of the Construction Manager and Safety Officer.
2Understand the permit thresholds under Construction Regulation 3 (e.g. project duration and value details).
3Be prepared to calculate risks using probability and severity matrices, and identify immediate vs. root causes.
4Memorize the time limits: an OHS Act Section 24 incident becomes reportable when a person cannot work for 14 days or more, and the written report (WCL1/WCL2) must reach the provincial director within 7 days; COID Act accident reports to the Commissioner are also due within 7 days.
5Review the SANS 10085 standards for scaffolding, including vertical lift heights, guardrails, and inspection frequencies.
6Know the difference between fall prevention and fall arrest systems, and when a fall protection plan is required.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the SACPCMP Construction Health & Safety Manager registration?

It is a statutory professional registration in South Africa under the SACPCMP. Registration is legally required for any professional managing health and safety on construction sites, ensuring they meet minimum competency, education, and experience standards.

What is the passing score for the SACPCMP exam?

The passing score is 60%. Candidates scoring between 35% and 59% may be permitted to write an exam re-write within six months upon payment of the exam fee, while candidates scoring below 35% must re-apply from the beginning.

How much does the SACPCMP CHSM exam cost?

The examination fee itself is approximately R1,317. However, the total registration process includes an application fee (~R1,127), initial registration fee (~R1,424), and an annual fee (~R4,108). All fees are subject to annual adjustments and VAT.

What are the eligibility requirements for CHS Manager registration?

Candidates typically need a relevant built environment or safety degree/diploma plus at least 4-5 years of verified experience in construction safety management, or a candidate registration status and logbooks proving their experience.

What topics are covered on the exam?

The exam covers the Occupational Health and Safety Act 85 of 1993, Construction Regulations 2014, COID Act, hazard identification and risk assessment (HIRA), site documentation (H&S Plan, H&S File), operational safety controls (working at heights, excavations, scaffolding), and safety management systems (incident investigation, auditing, inductions).