A forklift is a powered industrial truck that uses two steel forks to lift, move, and stack loads. You’ll find them in warehouses, construction sites, freight depots, manufacturing plants, and cold-storage facilities right across Australia. They’re workhorse machines — but they’re also responsible for a significant share of serious workplace injuries every year.
Safe Work Australia data consistently shows that forklifts are among the most dangerous pieces of powered mobile plant in the country. That’s not a reason to avoid them; it’s a reason to understand them properly. If you’re thinking about a career in logistics, warehousing, or transport, a forklift licence isn’t just paperwork — it’s the difference between competent operation and a serious incident.
This guide covers the essentials: how forklifts work, the main types you’ll encounter on an Australian worksite, the core safety principles every operator must know, and what the forklift licence Australia process looks like from start to finish.
Understanding the mechanics helps you operate safely. A forklift has four main systems working together:
The relationship between load weight, load centre, and stability is captured in the forklift’s data plate. Every operator must read and understand the data plate before lifting anything — it tells you the maximum rated capacity at a given load centre distance. Exceed those figures and you risk a tip-over.
Forklifts aren’t one-size-fits-all. The right machine depends on the load, the surface, and the workspace. Here are the types covered under Australian training frameworks:
The standard warehouse workhorse — the one most people picture when they hear "forklift". It has two forks at the front and a counterweight at the rear. Available in LPG, diesel, or electric versions. Rated for 1.5 to 10 tonnes in most commercial applications. You need your TLILIC0003 certificate to operate one.
Designed for narrow-aisle racking in high-bay warehouses. The forks extend forward on a pantograph mechanism, letting you place pallets deep into racking without driving the whole truck in. Reach trucks are electric-only and operate on smooth, flat floors. They require separate training beyond the standard LF licence.
The operator platform rises with the forks, so the picker can hand-select items at height. Common in e-commerce fulfillment centres. Fall-protection harnesses are mandatory — the operator is elevated during use.
Four-wheel drive, higher ground clearance, pneumatic tyres. Built for outdoor construction sites, timber yards, and agricultural settings where the ground isn’t level or sealed. Operating one on soft ground requires specific training in load stability on slopes.
A boom replaces the fixed mast, allowing the load to be placed at a distance and height not possible with a standard forklift. Common on construction sites. Requires separate high-risk work licence (HC class) in some jurisdictions.
Forklift incidents follow predictable patterns. Most are preventable with consistent application of basic safety rules. These aren’t suggestions — they’re the standards tested in your TLILIC0003 assessment and enforced under the Work Health and Safety Act.
Before you start the engine, walk around the machine. Check fluid levels, tyre condition (or battery charge on electric models), fork condition, mast operation, horn, lights, and seatbelt. Any defect gets tagged out — you don’t operate a defective machine. Australian workplaces must maintain a written pre-start checklist under WHS regulations.
In most warehouses, 10 km/h is the maximum travel speed — and lower near pedestrian zones. Separation of forklifts and foot traffic is the single most effective risk control. Where separation isn’t possible, exclusion zones and traffic management plans are mandatory.
Always carry loads as low as possible while travelling — forks tilted back, load no more than 150–300 mm off the floor depending on the surface. Never carry a load that obscures your forward view without a spotter or reversing. Stacking height must account for rated capacity at the relevant load centre; never estimate.
Always travel with the load uphill — drive forward going up a ramp, reverse going down. Never turn on a ramp. Forks should be tilted back to prevent the load shifting forward on a descent.
In Australia, operating a forklift (licence class LF) is classified as high-risk work under the model WHS Regulations. That means you need a High Risk Work Licence issued by your state or territory regulator — and to get one, you must complete the TLILIC0003 unit of competency through a Registered Training Organisation (RTO).
The TLILIC0003 forklift licence assessment covers both theory and practical competency. Theory covers legislation, pre-operational checks, load calculations, stability principles, and hazard identification. The practical involves demonstrating safe operation on an actual machine — loading, unloading, stacking, unstacking, and manoeuvring in tight spaces.
Most RTOs run two-to-three day courses. Some candidates take longer if they have no prior plant operation experience. Preparing with a forklift practice test before the theory assessment helps identify gaps in your knowledge before assessment day.
Once you complete training, your RTO submits your competency evidence and you apply for the High Risk Work Licence through your state regulator:
The LF licence is nationally recognised — you don’t need a separate licence if you move states. It’s valid for five years and must be renewed before expiry.
Based on what RTOs consistently report, the most common failure points are:
Every one of these is covered in the TLILIC0003 theory content. Working through a TLILIC0003 practice test — including the load stability questions — significantly reduces the chance of a surprise on assessment day.
Forklift operators in Australia typically earn between 8 and 8 per hour depending on industry, shift penalties, and location. Mining and resources sites pay considerably more — often 5 to 0 per hour for experienced operators. Casual rates through labour-hire are common in warehousing and logistics.
Many operators progress to senior material handler, warehouse supervisor, or logistics coordinator roles. Once you hold the LF licence, adding a Vehicle Loading Crane (CV) or Order Picking Forklift (LP) endorsement broadens your options significantly.
Most training courses use LPG counterbalance forklifts, but you’ll encounter all three power types in the field. Here’s what sets them apart:
Electric: Zero emissions at point of use — ideal for food-handling and cold-storage environments. Quieter and lower running cost per hour. Requires battery management discipline: deep-discharging lead-acid batteries shortens their life significantly. Lithium-ion batteries are increasingly common and charge faster.
LPG: Most common for indoor/outdoor general warehousing. Quick to refuel — a cylinder swap takes under five minutes. The LPG cylinder must be secured correctly; an improperly fitted cylinder is an explosion risk. In confined spaces, LPG combustion produces carbon monoxide, so ventilation requirements apply.
Diesel: High torque, suited to rough terrain and heavy outdoor loads. Not appropriate for indoor use without exhaust management. Still common in ports, timber yards, and construction despite the emissions profile.
Several specific obligations apply to forklift operation in Australian workplaces. If you’re an operator — not just a trainee — you need to know these cold:
The theory component isn’t something to wing. Questions cover load stability calculations, WHS legislation, pre-operational check procedures, and hazard identification scenarios. Candidates who come in without preparation regularly fail on load-centre calculations and legislation questions — two areas that feel abstract until you’ve worked through practice examples.
The practical component trips people up on the basics: forgetting to buckle the seatbelt, travelling with forks too high, and not clearing the overhead before raising the mast. These aren’t complex skills — they’re habits. The best preparation is deliberately practising each step in the right order until it’s automatic.
If you want to gauge your readiness before the real assessment, working through a free forklift practice test gives you a realistic indication of where your knowledge sits. Pay particular attention to load chart reading — it’s consistently one of the harder theory sections for new candidates.
The TLILIC0003 unit of competency is well within reach for anyone who prepares properly. Most people who fail do so because they underestimate the theory content. Go in prepared, and you’ll pass.