Slip Testing for Legal and Risk Reports

Not all reports hold up under scrutiny

When slip testing is used in legal or insurance matters, methodology and documentation matter as much as the result. Reports must align with AS 4663:2013 and clearly explain conditions, and do not deviate from the standard.

Slip resistance testing serves different purposes depending on context.

In routine compliance, it confirms whether a surface meets a standard.
In legal and insurance matters, it becomes evidence.

That distinction changes how testing must be conducted, documented, and interpreted.

When Testing Is Used as Evidence

Slip testing is frequently required in:

  • Personal injury and public liability claims
  • Workplace incidents
  • Disputes relating to design or construction
  • Insurance assessments

In these situations, results are examined by multiple parties, often with competing interpretations.

What Makes a Report Defensible

A defensible report must go beyond raw results.

It requires:

Methodological Clarity
Testing conducted in accordance with AS 4663:2013, with clear documentation of procedures.

Defined Test Conditions
Surface & site condition, contamination, moisture, and slope must be recorded. These factors materially affect results.

Appropriate Sampling
Multiple readings across representative areas – not isolated measurements.

Transparent Interpretation
Results explained in relation to classifications, location, and expected use.

Why Weak Reports Fail

Reports are often challenged due to:

  • Insufficient detail on how testing was conducted
  • Lack of clarity around environmental conditions
  • Over-reliance on average values without context
  • Failure to link results to real-world risk
  • Limited photographic evidence of site conditions

In legal settings, ambiguity weakens credibility.

The Role of Standards

Testing aligns with:

  • AS 4663:2013 for in-situ measurement
  • AS 4586:2013 for classification reference
  • HB 198:2014 for interpretation guidance

However, standards alone are not enough.
The report must demonstrate how they apply to the specific scenario.

Practical Considerations

In legal and risk contexts:

  • Timing of testing matters (post-incident vs current condition)
  • Surface condition may have changed since the incident
  • Cleaning and maintenance records become relevant
  • Interpretation must consider probable conditions at the time

This requires both technical accuracy and contextual understanding.

Get a Defensible Assessment

When slip testing is used in legal or risk matters, clarity and structure are critical. Ensure your report stands up to scrutiny.

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