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SDS Compliance Requirements by Province

What Canadian employers need to know

WHMIS is a national standard — but it is enforced with subtle nuances.

Every Canadian employer who manages hazardous products operates under WHMIS. The federal Hazardous Products Act sets the baseline — supplier labels and Safety Data Sheets must meet the same national standard coast to coast. But once those products enter a workplace, enforcement authority passes to the province or territory, and that is where the differences begin.

The core obligations are the same everywhere: maintain a compliant SDS library, ensure products are labelled, train workers. What varies is who inspects you, which legislation they carry, how often your SDS must be updated, and what language requirements apply. For organizations operating across multiple provinces, understanding those differences is not optional — it is the difference between a compliant program and a patchwork of gaps.

The Framework: Federal and Provincial WHMIS Working Together

Health Canada governs the suppliers with the Hazardous Product Act - classification, labels, and SDS content. The moment a product enters a workplace, the provincial OHS regulator takes over. While these jurisdictions based their WHMIS regulations on a common model, small variations between jurisdictions may exist.

SDS update frequency

The SDS must be updated within 90 days when significant new information becomes available in Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, and Quebec. The employer must actively seek an updated SDS every three years in workplaces regulated by federal WHMIS legislation, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and Labrador, Northwest Territories, Nova Scotia, Nunavut, and Yukon.

In practice, both groups have an overriding obligation: when significant new data is released — such as the December 2022 amendments adding new hazard classes — every employer in every jurisdiction must obtain updated SDS reflecting those changes. Employers who have not done so are non-compliant regardless of province.

Province-by-Province Reference

The table below summarizes governing legislation, enforcement authority, SDS update requirement, and key provincial notes for all thirteen jurisdictions.

Jurisdiction Governing legislation Enforcement authority SDS update rule Key notes
Ontario Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA); WHMIS Regulation R.R.O. 1990, Reg. 860 MLITSD 90 days after significant new information Ontario's Ministry of Labour is responsible for enforcement. Ontario launched a 2025–2026 inspection campaign targeting WHMIS compliance
British Columbia Workers Compensation Act; OHS Regulation Part 5 WorkSafeBC Actively seek updated SDS every 3 years WorkSafeBC prevention officers enforce both federal and provincial WHMIS. BC added mandatory written chemical inventories effective February 3, 2025
Alberta Occupational Health and Safety Act; OHS Code Part 29 Occupational Health and Safety, Alberta Employment and Immigration 90 days after significant new information OHS Code Part 29 governs WHMIS. Alberta's OHS Act was significantly updated in 2018
Quebec Act Respecting Occupational Health and Safety (AROHS/LSST) CNESST 90 days after significant new information All WHMIS training must be delivered in French. By October 2026, employers with 20+ workers must have a full prevention program
Saskatchewan Occupational Health, Safety and Ergonomics Regulation; The Saskatchewan Employment Act OHS Division, Ministry of Labour Relations Actively seek updated SDS every 3 years Closely aligned with federal model. Proactive 3-year SDS review applies
Manitoba Workplace Safety and Health Act; Regulation Part 37 Workplace Safety and Health Division, Manitoba Labour 90 days after significant new information Aligns with the 90-day reactive model. Part 37 governs WHMIS employer requirements
Nova Scotia Occupational Health and Safety Act; WHMIS Regulations OHS Division, Department of Labour, Skills and Immigration Actively seek updated SDS every 3 years Follows the 3-year proactive SDS review model
New Brunswick Occupational Health and Safety Act; General Regulation 91-191 WorkSafeNB 90 days after significant new information WorkSafeNB administers both workers' compensation and OHS enforcement
Newfoundland & Labrador Occupational Health and Safety Act (NL); Workplace Health, Safety and Compensation Act Occupational Health and Safety Division Actively seek updated SDS every 3 years Enforcement by OHS officers under Department of Digital Government and Service NL
Prince Edward Island Occupational Health and Safety Act (PEI) Workers Compensation Board of PEI 90 days after significant new information PEI's small workforce means WHMIS inspections often cover multiple compliance areas simultaneously
Federal workplaces Canada Labour Code; Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations Labour Program, Employment and Social Development Canada Actively seek updated SDS every 3 years Applies to banks, airlines, railways, federal Crown corporations. Conducts own inspection program
Northwest Territories Safety Act (NWT); Workers' Safety and Compensation Commission (WSCC) Workers' Safety and Compensation Commission Actively seek updated SDS every 3 years NWT and Nunavut share a single OHS administrative body through the WSCC
Nunavut Safety Act; Workers' Safety and Compensation Commission (WSCC) Workers' Safety and Compensation Commission Actively seek updated SDS every 3 years NWT and Nunavut share a single OHS administrative body through the WSCC
Yukon Occupational Health and Safety Act (Yukon) OHS Branch, Department of Community Services Actively seek updated SDS every 3 years Yukon follows the 3-year model. Territorial government directly administers OHS enforcement

Language Requirements: Where it Gets Complicated

At the supplier level, the information on a safety data sheet must be in both official languages of Canada, English and French. The SDS may be provided as one bilingual SDS, or as two SDSs, one each in English and French.

At the workplace level, the picture varies. The bilingual SDS obligation is a federal supplier requirement. Outside Quebec, no province mandates French for workplace labels or training. However, the requirement to ensure worker comprehension applies everywhere — training delivered in a language workers do not understand does not satisfy the employer's legal obligation in any jurisdiction.

For organizations receiving SDS from US or international suppliers: an English-only SDS does not satisfy Canadian requirements even if it is US HazCom-compliant. Importers must obtain or produce a compliant bilingual SDS before any product is used in a Canadian workplace.

Key Differences at a Glance

Dimension 90-day group 3-year group
Provinces / territories Ontario, Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, PEI, Quebec BC, Saskatchewan, NS, NL, NWT, Nunavut, Yukon, Federal
SDS update trigger Employer awareness of significant new information Proactive search required every 3 years, regardless of notification
Compliance posture Reactive — act when you learn of a change Proactive — schedule regular reviews into your WHMIS program
Recommended practice Annual review is still best practice regardless of the 90-day rule Build supplier contact and SDS verification into an annual cycle

Multi-province Employers What Multi-Province Employers Must Do

Organizations operating across provinces face the most complex compliance landscape. The practical approach is to build your WHMIS program to the highest standard across every dimension: proactive annual SDS review, bilingual SDS and workplace labels throughout the organization, and training delivered in the language workers actually work in.

For more information, visit whmis.org/jurisdictions.

CanadaSDS is purpose-built for Canadian compliance across provincial and territorial jurisdictions. Learn how we support multi-site SDS management.

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