Employee Training Compliance: What’s Required and How to Track It
Employee Training Compliance: What’s Required and How to Track It
Employee training compliance isn’t optional—it’s a legal requirement that varies dramatically by state, industry, and company size. Missing a mandate can result in fines ranging from hundreds to hundreds of thousands of dollars, plus liability exposure if someone gets hurt.
But here’s the problem: there’s no single list of “required trainings.” It’s fragmented. Federal law requires certain things. Your state adds more. Your industry adds even more. And if you operate in multiple states, you’re managing multiple compliance calendars.
Let’s break down what’s actually required, which trainings matter most, and how to track it all without losing your mind.
Federal Training Requirements
These apply to virtually every business with employees, regardless of size or location.
Sexual Harassment Training
Required by: EEOC (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission)
Who must complete it: All employees and supervisors
Frequency: Varies by state. Federal baseline is that you should have a policy (not necessarily annual training), but many states mandate annual training.
What it covers:
– Definition of sexual harassment (quid pro quo and hostile work environment)
– Examples of behavior that constitutes harassment
– Reporting procedures and protections against retaliation
– Investigation processes
Failure to provide: Increases liability if a harassment claim is filed. Some states fine companies $100-$300 per untrained employee.
Workplace Safety (OSHA)
Required by: OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration)
Who must complete it: All employees, especially those in safety-sensitive roles
Frequency: Depends on the hazard. General safety training is typically annual or when hazards change.
What it covers:
– Hazard identification and avoidance
– Emergency procedures
– Personal protective equipment (PPE)
– Reporting procedures for injuries and unsafe conditions
– Industry-specific hazards (bloodborne pathogens, machinery operation, etc.)
Scope varies by industry:
– Manufacturing: Heavy focus on machinery, lockout/tagout (LOTO), chemical safety
– Healthcare: Bloodborne pathogens, ergonomics, infection control
– Retail/Service: Basic safety, emergency procedures, customer safety
– Construction: Fall protection, electrical hazards, site-specific training
Failure to provide: OSHA fines range from $9,000-$129,000 per violation, depending on severity. Plus liability if someone is injured.
I-9 Verification (Employment Eligibility)
Required by: DHS (Department of Homeland Security)
Who must complete it: All new hires must be verified; supervisors must complete Form I-9 verification training (some interpretations)
Frequency: Upon hire (training for supervisors is typically one-time, then refreshed if procedures change)
What it covers:
– Acceptable forms of identification and employment authorization
– How to properly complete Form I-9
– E-Verify (where required)
– Anti-discrimination provisions (can’t favor certain documents)
– Documentation and retention requirements
Failure to provide: Fines from $375-$3,200 per undocumented employee, plus potential criminal charges in egregious cases.
ADA Training (Disability Accommodations)
Required by: ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act)
Who must complete it: HR staff and managers handling accommodations (all employees should understand it applies)
Frequency: One-time or when procedures change; annual refresher recommended
What it covers:
– Definition of disabilities under the ADA
– Interactive process for requesting accommodations
– Types of reasonable accommodations
– How to respond to accommodation requests
– Documentation and confidentiality
Failure to provide: Lawsuits and settlements averaging $50,000-$300,000 per claim, plus EEOC investigations.
State-Specific Training Requirements
California (Most Regulated State)
California has the strictest employment training requirements in the country. If your company operates in California, these are non-negotiable.
Sexual Harassment Training (CA-specific):
– Requirement: All supervisors must complete at least 1 hour of training within 6 months of hire, then biennial (every 2 years)
– Non-supervisory employees: Companies should provide training but it’s not strictly mandated
– Fine for non-compliance: $300 per violation (interpreted as $300 per supervisor per violation period)
Workplace Violence Prevention (SB 553):
– Requirement: All employers must provide training on recognizing and responding to workplace violence
– Frequency: Upon hire and annually
– Who: All employees
– Fine: $500-$1,000 per violation
Retaliation Protection Training:
– Requirement: All employees must be trained on labor code protections against retaliation
– Frequency: Upon hire and annually
– Focus: Whistleblower protections, wage and hour laws, safety reporting
Pay Transparency (SB 1162):
– Requirement: Employers must provide information about compensation, benefits, and job duties in writing
– Frequency: Upon hire and when duties change
– Focus: Ensures employees understand their pay structure and can identify discrimination
Cost of non-compliance: California doesn’t play around. Fines are per-employee, per-violation. A company of 50 that misses sexual harassment training could face $15,000 in fines, plus lawsuits.
New York
Sexual Harassment Training (Executive Law 740):
– Requirement: All employees and supervisors must complete harassment prevention training
– Frequency: Annually, by October 31
– Duration: Minimum 1 hour
– Fine: $500-$5,000 per violation (per employee per year)
Paid Sick Leave Notification:
– Requirement: Employees must be notified of paid sick leave rights
– Frequency: Upon hire and annually
Workplace Violence Awareness:
– Requirement: Employees and supervisors must receive training
– Frequency: Annually
Cost of non-compliance: Like California, New York enforces aggressively. A company of 50 missing one year of sexual harassment training faces $25,000-$250,000 in fines.
Illinois (BIPA – Biometric Privacy Law)
Biometric Data Collection Training:
– Requirement: If your company collects biometric data (fingerprints, facial recognition, iris scans, etc.), employees must be trained on the policy
– Frequency: Upon hire and before collection
– Focus: Privacy rights, retention, and destruction of biometric information
Sexual Harassment Training (IHRA):
– Requirement: All employees (not just supervisors)
– Frequency: Annually, by January 1
– Duration: 2 hours
Cost of non-compliance: BIPA violations alone can result in $1,000-$5,000 per employee per violation. Sexual harassment training fines vary but are enforced at the state level.
Connecticut
Sexual Harassment and Workplace Violence Prevention (Public Act 20-113):
– Requirement: All employees and supervisors
– Frequency: Annually, before October 1
– Duration: Minimum 1 hour
– Content must include: Bystander intervention training and reporting procedures
Paid Leave Rights:
– Requirement: Notification of paid sick and personal days
– Frequency: Upon hire
Cost of non-compliance: Fines and enforcement from Connecticut Department of Labor.
Industry-Specific Training Requirements
Beyond federal and state mandates, your industry likely requires specific trainings.
Healthcare
- HIPAA Training: Handling patient health information (all staff, annually)
- Bloodborne Pathogens: Medical and support staff (annually)
- Infection Control: In response to disease outbreaks (ongoing)
- Patient Safety: Protocols and reporting (varies)
- Opioid Prescribing: For prescribers (required by some states)
Construction
- Fall Protection: OSHA 30-hour course for supervisors and crews (once, then refresher training)
- Scaffolding Safety: For anyone working at height
- Electrical Safety: For electrical workers
- Confined Spaces: If applicable to your projects
- Silica Exposure: For workers on sites with silica dust
Finance
- Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Compliance: Annual training for all employees
- Know Your Customer (KYC): Understanding client identity verification
- Securities Regulations: If trading or advising
- Fraud Prevention: Detecting and reporting suspicious activities
Food Service and Retail
- Food Safety and Handling: For food handling employees (often required annually or per local health codes)
- Allergen Awareness: For staff, especially with expanded allergen labeling laws
- Age-Restricted Sales: For anyone selling alcohol or tobacco
Manufacturing
- Machinery Operation: Lockout/tagout (LOTO), proper guarding, safe practices
- Chemical Safety (GHS): Understanding hazard labels and safety data sheets
- Ergonomics: Preventing repetitive strain injuries
- Equipment-Specific Training: For specialized machinery
Documentation and Proof of Completion
Compliance isn’t just about offering training—it’s about proving you did it.
What you must document:
– Name and date of employee
– Training topic and description
– Date training was completed
– Duration of training
– Instructor or training provider name
– Employee signature or electronic acknowledgment
– Customization (if company-specific training)
Where to store records:
– Keep in employee personnel files
– Organize by employee, by year, by training type
– Maintain for at least 3-7 years (varies by state and training type)
– Store securely (ensure confidentiality for sensitive trainings like harassment or disabilities)
Proof of completion matters because:
– In a lawsuit, you need to prove the employee was trained
– Regulators (OSHA, state labor boards) will ask to see documentation
– If you can’t prove it was done, legally it doesn’t count
The problem with paper records:
– Easy to lose or misfile
– Hard to track expiration dates for recurring trainings
– Difficult to generate compliance reports
– Risk of incomplete documentation
This is why many companies use an LMS (Learning Management System) to track training.
How to Track Employee Training Compliance
Option 1: Spreadsheet (Budget = $0, Headache = High)
Create a Google Sheet or Excel file with columns for:
– Employee name
– Training type
– Date completed
– Due date for renewal
– Proof (attach PDF or note file location)
Pros: Free, simple to start
Cons: Easy to miss renewal dates, no automated reminders, manual tracking, prone to errors as you grow
Option 2: HR Software with Training Tracking
Most modern HR platforms include training tracking:
– BambooHR: Basic training docs, limited automation
– Guidepoint: Training tracking with reminders
– Rippling: Integrated courses and tracking
– AllMyHR: 350+ pre-built compliance courses with automatic tracking and completion proof
Pros: Centralized, automated reminders, reporting capabilities, audit trails
Cons: Software cost, requires setup and management
Option 3: Dedicated LMS (Learning Management System)
Platforms like Cornerstone, SAP SuccessFactors, or Docebo provide comprehensive learning management.
Pros: Industry-leading, enterprise-grade compliance tracking, extensive reporting
Cons: Expensive ($100-$300+ per employee/year), overkill for small businesses
Option 4: Training Provider + Tracking
Outsource training to vendors (like AllMyHR’s 350+ course library) that include completion tracking.
Pros: Courses are pre-built, tracking is automatic, compliance content is expert-reviewed
Cons: Monthly fee ($99-$300+/month), limited to their course library
Best Practices for Compliance
- Create an annual training calendar
- List all required trainings by due date
- Assign someone to own compliance
-
Set reminders for 30 days before deadlines
-
Provide training in multiple formats
- Live instructor-led for complex topics
- Online self-paced for knowledge-based training
-
Videos and demonstrations for procedural training
-
Make training mandatory, not optional
- Require sign-off and attendance tracking
- Schedule during work hours when possible
-
Follow up with no-shows
-
Document everything
- Keep signed acknowledgments
- Store in centralized, secure location
-
Organize by employee and by year
-
Review and update annually
- Audit your compliance calendar each year
- Check for regulatory changes
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Retire trainings that are no longer required
-
Tailor to your business
- Generic training is a start, but company-specific training is better
- Include your policies, procedures, and culture
- Make it relevant to your industry and state
Common Compliance Mistakes to Avoid
- “We’ll do it later” → Compliance deadlines pass, you’re liable. Set reminders now.
- Training without proof → If you can’t prove it, regulators assume it didn’t happen.
- One training for all states → California and New York have different requirements. Multi-state companies need multi-state compliance.
- Outdated trainings → Laws change. Review and update training content annually.
- No follow-up for no-shows → If someone missed mandatory training, track them down and reschedule.
- Generic content → Every company is different. Customize training to your policies and risks.
AllMyHR’s Approach to Compliance Training
If managing all these trainings feels overwhelming, here’s where an integrated compliance solution helps:
AllMyHR includes:
– 350+ pre-built compliance courses covering harassment, safety, OSHA, ADA, wage/hour laws, and more
– State-specific content for all 50 states (California, New York, Illinois, Connecticut requirements included)
– Automatic tracking of who completed what and when
– Renewal reminders for trainings that expire
– Completion certificates for proof and employee records
– Compliance dashboard showing your training status at a glance
– Access to HR advisors to answer questions about what trainings your company specifically needs
At $99/month to start (plus optional add-ons), it’s designed so you’re not managing compliance alone.
→ Start for Just $1 | Book a Demo
The Bottom Line
Employee training compliance isn’t glamorous, but it’s critical. Miss a deadline, get a fine. Have an incident and can’t prove you trained employees, face liability. Most states are getting stricter, not more lenient.
The good news: most compliance training is straightforward once you know what’s required. The challenge is knowing what’s required across multiple states and industries, staying on top of changes, and proving you did it.
Start by:
1. Identifying your required trainings (ask your industry association, a lawyer, or an HR advisor)
2. Creating a compliance calendar with deadlines
3. Documenting completion in a system you’ll actually use
4. Reviewing annually to catch regulatory changes
If that feels like too much on your plate, an LMS or HR platform with built-in compliance courses takes the guesswork out. You’re not trying to become a compliance expert—you’re running your business. The right tools make compliance manageable.
Stop worrying about HR
Let AllMyHR handle the compliance & policies. You focus on growing.
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HR Content Publisher
Contributing author at AllMyHR. Helping businesses stay compliant and stress-free.
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