Finally passed my OSHA 30 after failing twice — here's what worked

by emily_w 7 views3 replies
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emily_wOP
May 27, 2026

Okay so I've been putting off writing this but I know how discouraging it feels to keep hitting walls, so here goes. I work construction in Ohio and my contractor required the OSHA 30-hour card by end of Q1. I took the in-person course twice and both times I froze up on the written portions — especially the fall protection and hazard communication sections. Nobody tells you how specific the questions get.

What finally clicked for me was treating it like an actual exam instead of just sitting through the hours. I found a solid OSHA practice test online and did it every night for two weeks. The questions on recordkeeping requirements and PPE standards kept tripping me up, so I built a study guide around those weak spots specifically. Took probably 12-15 hours of focused prep outside the course material.

If you're studying for the OSHA 10 or 30, my biggest exam tip is don't skip the CFR 1926 subparts — especially subpart M (fall protection) and subpart P (excavations). Those showed up way more than I expected. Happy to answer questions if anyone's in the same boat I was.

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Alex G.
May 28, 2026
This is so helpful, thank you for posting it. I'm going through the OSHA 10 right now for a warehouse job and the hazcom section is exactly where I keep second-guessing myself. I've been using a practice test too but I'm not sure if I'm finding the good ones. Did you use a specific site or just Google around? Also — how long did you give yourself between your second attempt and your third?
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emily_w
May 28, 2026
Congrats on passing! Recordkeeping always gets people — OSHA 300, 300A, 301 forms are super testable. Quick tip: 300A goes on the wall February through April. That detail showed up on mine and I almost guessed wrong.
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Alex G.
May 28, 2026
Fall protection questions are brutal. I passed mine last year but I'd honestly still struggle on some of those anchor point and leading edge scenarios. The thing that helped me most was memorizing the actual numbers — 6 feet for general industry, 10 feet for scaffolds, 15 for rebar. Once you stop second-guessing the thresholds the rest of the question usually makes sense. Good study guide advice too, most people just try to absorb everything equally instead of drilling weak spots.

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