Psychosocial Safety in Victoria

What’s Changing & What Managers Must Do Now

Psychosocial safety is no longer “nice to have” — it’s now a compliance requirement in Victoria, with new regulations taking effect 1 December 2025. These changes put mental health risks on the same footing as physical safety and signal a shift Australia-wide towards stronger protections.

What's Actually Changing?

From 1 December 2025, the Occupational Health and Safety (Psychological Health) Regulations 2025 come into force. Employers must now:

  • Identify psychosocial hazards

  • Assess & Control the risks (with higher-order controls first)

  • Consult with workers/HSRs

  • Review & Document controls

Think: workload pressure, customer aggression, bullying, role conflict, poor communication, traumatic content and after-hours contact.

These changes bring Victoria in line with other states that already follow the National Model Code of Practice.

Why This Matters to Managers

Because psychosocial harm is now treated like any other workplace hazard — and regulators expect work design changes, not just posters or EAP referrals.

Practical examples of compliant controls include:

  • Realistic workloads & staffing levels

  • Safe communication expectations (including Right to Disconnect)

  • Safe customer-facing environments

  • Clear role clarity & escalation procedures

  • Training for managers to intervene early

5 Minute HR Challenge: Two real-world scenarios.
You’re the Manager - What do you do?

Scenario A

A salaried coordinator regularly receives non-urgent messages from their team leader between 7:30–9:30pm. They have caring responsibilities and are showing signs of stress.

Your options:

  1. Do nothing — it’s part of a professional role

  2. Tell the employee to set boundaries

  3. Treat after-hours non-urgent contact as a psychosocial hazard, set team rules, implement controls (delay send, escalation rules), train the leader, and document the changes

After-hours contact is a recognised Psychosocial risk.

Treat after-hours non-urgent contact as a psychosocial hazard, set team rules, implement controls (delay send, escalation rules), train the leader and document the changes.

Scenario B

Your receptionist is facing escalating customer aggression. Yesterday someone slammed the counter and shouted abuse. There’s no duress alarm, no two-staff coverage, and no refusal-of-service procedure.

Your options:

  1. Offer EAP only

  2. Put up a “zero tolerance” poster

  3. Treat aggression as a psychosocial hazard, install controls (duress alarm, physical layout, staffing), give clear authority to refuse service, and review incidents regularly

EAPs and posters are not primary controls.

Treat aggression as a psychosocial hazard, install controls (duress alarm, physical layout, staffing), give clear authority to refuse service, and review incidents regularly.

What You Can Do Now

Review current risk registers and ensure psychosocial hazards have been identified
Update policies to include psychosocial safety considerations
Consult with employees and health and safety representatives (HSRs)
Train people managers to identify risks, report and to implement early intervention strategies
Regularly review and monitor existing controls

If you need support reviewing your policies or strengthening your approach to psychosocial safety, our team is here to help. Reach out to our team at [email protected] | 1300 720 004.

Information in HR Advice Online guides and blog posts are meant purely for educational discussion of human resources issues. It contains general information about human resources matters and due to factors, such as Government legislation changes, may not be up to date at the time of reading. It is not legal advice and should not be treated as such.

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