HAVS calculator
Add each vibrating tool you use in a day with its vibration magnitude and trigger time.
- Quick answer
- Free
- Check before use
No signup. Use it as a planning aid, then review against the actual site.
Checked against HSE thresholds
result updates as you add entries
Check the detail here, then carry it into the RAMS
This tool helps with one part of the paperwork. The builder brings the task, method, hazards, evidence prompts and sign-off together in the full RAMS draft.
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Trigger time is the time the tool is actually running in the operator's hands — usually far less than total task time.
Plant & tools you type are remembered on this device for next time — nothing is sent to us.
How the HAVS points system works
Under the Control of Vibration at Work Regulations 2005 there are two thresholds for hand-arm vibration, both measured as a daily exposure averaged over eight hours — written A(8):
- Exposure Action Value (EAV) — 2.5 m/s² A(8), or 100 points. At or above this you must plan to reduce exposure and provide health surveillance for regularly exposed workers.
- Exposure Limit Value (ELV) — 5 m/s² A(8), or 400 points. This is a legal ceiling that must not be exceeded — and HSE warns that routinely working up to it will still cause many workers to develop HAVS.
Each tool contributes 2 × a² × hours points, where a is the in-use vibration magnitude in m/s². Points from different tools simply add together, which is what makes the points system easier to use on site than the underlying A(8) maths.
Getting the inputs right
- Trigger time, not task time. Only the time the tool is actually running in the operator's hands counts — for many jobs that's a small fraction of the time on task.
- Use realistic magnitudes. Manufacturer test values often understate real use; HSE recommends using in-use data where available. The presets in this calculator are indicative typical values only.
- Both hands exposed? Use whichever hand receives the greater vibration — don't average the two.
- Several tools in a shift? Enter each one separately; the calculator combines them into one daily figure, which is how the regulations require multi-tool exposure to be assessed.
Rules of thumb from HSE
Regular use of hammer-action tools for more than about 15 minutes a day, or rotary tools for more than about an hour a day, is enough to need a proper assessment. Tingling or numbness that lasts more than ten minutes after putting a tool down is a warning sign that exposure is already too high.
Source: HSE guidance on hand-arm vibration (hse.gov.uk/vibration/hav) and the Control of Vibration at Work Regulations 2005.
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