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The 10 Most-Inspected U.S. Employers in OSHA Records (2026)

Ten U.S. employers with the highest OSHA inspection counts across the current five-year enforcement window, ranked with links to each company's full record.

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Photo by Elevate on Unsplash

A high OSHA inspection count, on its own, doesn't tell you a company is unsafe. Large multi-site employers naturally accumulate more inspections than small single-location businesses. The signal you're looking for is outcomes — how many of those inspections produced citations, how severe the citations were, and whether they're tied to workplace accidents.

That said, the top of the inspection-count leaderboard is worth knowing.

The ranking

  1. Aep — Mayaguez, PR · 141 inspections, 10 violations, $16,000 in penalties
  2. U. S. Postal Service — North Bend, OR · 119 inspections, 0 violations
  3. United Parcel Service, Inc. — Chico, CA · 93 inspections, 5 violations, $62,925 in penalties
  4. Walmart Inc. — Chico, CA · 88 inspections, 0 violations
  5. Tesla, Inc. — Lathrop, CA · 78 inspections, 3 violations, $28,000 in penalties
  6. U.s. Postal Service — Orlando, FL · 75 inspections, 1 violations
  7. Waco Inc. — Radford, VA · 72 inspections, 0 violations
  8. U.s. Dept Of Army — Fort Bragg, NC · 69 inspections, 7 violations
  9. Target Corporation — La Quinta, CA · 68 inspections, 1 violations, $475 in penalties
  10. Amazon.com Services Llc — Stockton, CA · 67 inspections, 1 violations, $935 in penalties

Why the same names keep appearing

Three categories dominate this list:

  1. National multi-site employers — postal services, package delivery, large retail, food service. Inspections happen at the facility level, so an employer with thousands of facilities will outpace a single-site company by orders of magnitude.
  2. Industries that OSHA prioritizes — construction, manufacturing, warehousing. Higher hazard classification means more frequent programmed inspections.
  3. Establishments with reported accidents — fatalities, hospitalizations, and amputations are required to be reported and almost always trigger an inspection.

If you're researching a specific employer in this list, click through to their page to see whether the inspections cluster around a specific facility, time period, or accident.

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