Retail Staff Safety And Customer Violence

leo zheng • January 23, 2026

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Retail Staff Safety And Customer Violence

Customer abuse and violence have long been treated as an unfortunate but unavoidable part of working in retail. From verbal aggression at the checkout to threats, spitting, and physical assaults, frontline staff are often expected to absorb poor behaviour in the name of customer service.

However, recent evidence makes it clear that this mindset is no longer acceptable — or sustainable.

A submission by the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association (SDA) to Safe Work Australia’s Best Practice Review highlights a confronting reality across Australia’s retail and fast-food sectors: customer violence has become one of the most significant work health and safety risks facing retail employees today.

This is not a marginal issue affecting a small number of workers. It is a systemic challenge that demands a coordinated, industry-wide response.

The scale of the problem

According to the SDA’s 2024 survey of retail and fast-food workers:

  • 87% experienced verbal abuse or aggression from customers in a single year
  • 12.5% were victims of physical violence — a significant increase from previous years
  • 9% reported being spat on by customers
  • 17% of incidents involved sexual harassment, with young female workers at greatest risk
  • More than half of workers said abuse came from repeat offenders, not one-off incidents

These figures expose a workplace reality that many retail employees know all too well. Abuse is frequent, escalating, and often normalised — particularly for younger workers, women, and casual staff.

Crucially, this is not only a physical safety issue. Repeated exposure to customer aggression has serious psychosocial impacts, contributing to stress, anxiety, burnout and workforce attrition across the sector.

When criminal law moves faster than workplace safety

In response to rising incidents, several Australian states have introduced or strengthened criminal laws to protect retail workers. These include tougher penalties for assaults, retail banning orders, and expanded police powers.

While these measures are important, they are inherently reactive — they intervene after harm has already occurred.

The SDA submission argues that workplace health and safety regulation has not kept pace with the changing risk profile of retail work. Despite customer abuse being one of the most commonly reported hazards, it is often poorly addressed within existing WHS frameworks.

As a result, many retail businesses lack structured, preventative systems for identifying risks, managing incidents, and supporting workers before situations escalate.

Retail violence is a workplace issue — not a customer service problem

One of the most important messages for retail leaders is this: customer abuse and violence must be recognised as a WHS issue, not simply a customer behaviour issue.

When violence is framed as a service challenge, responsibility is implicitly shifted onto frontline staff — placing pressure on them to de-escalate situations without adequate training, authority or support.

When it is treated as a workplace safety risk, it demands a different response: planning, consultation, accountability and investment.

The added complexity of shopping centres

The challenge is particularly acute in shopping centres, where multiple businesses, centre management teams and security providers operate within the same physical space.

In these environments, responsibility for safety can become fragmented. Workers may be employed by individual retailers, while security, surveillance and emergency procedures are managed centrally by the centre operator.

Without strong coordination and consultation across all parties, critical gaps can emerge — in incident response, communication, and emergency preparedness.

The SDA submission highlights the need for stronger collaboration mechanisms so that safety planning reflects the reality of multi-employer retail environments.


What can retail businesses do now?

While regulatory reform continues to be debated, retail organisations do not need to wait to take action. There are clear, practical steps businesses can take to better protect their teams.

1. Acknowledge the risk

The first step is cultural. Retail leaders must openly acknowledge that customer aggression is a legitimate workplace hazard. This recognition sets the foundation for meaningful prevention and signals to employees that their safety is taken seriously.

2. Develop clear violence prevention plans

Businesses should implement structured workplace violence prevention or control plans that include:

  • Identification of high-risk situations and environments
  • Clear procedures for responding to aggressive behaviour
  • Defined escalation pathways involving supervisors, security or police
  • Regular review and documentation of incidents

These plans should be written, communicated, and embedded into daily operations — not left as informal guidance.

3. Invest in training and early intervention

Frontline staff should not be left to manage abusive behaviour alone. Training in de-escalation, recognising warning signs, and knowing when to disengage is essential.

Equally important is ensuring workers understand that walking away from unsafe situations is supported, not penalised.

4. Support reporting and follow-up

Many incidents go unreported because staff believe nothing will change. Retailers can address this by:

  • Making reporting simple and accessible
  • Acting consistently on reported incidents
  • Supporting workers affected by abuse, including aftercare where needed
  • Actively managing repeat offenders

5. Strengthen collaboration in shared retail environments

For shopping centres, safety cannot sit with individual stores alone. Centre management,

tenants and security teams must work together on:

  • Emergency response planning
  • Information sharing
  • Incident coordination
  • Staff communication and training

A coordinated approach reduces confusion and improves response when incidents occur.

Safety is a business issue

Protecting retail workers is not only a moral and legal responsibility — it is also a business imperative.

Unsafe workplaces lead to higher staff turnover, reduced engagement, reputational risk and declining customer trust. Conversely, retail environments that prioritise safety foster more resilient teams, better service outcomes and stronger brands.

As the retail industry continues to evolve, so too must its approach to worker safety. Customer abuse and violence are not inevitable. With leadership, collaboration and proactive planning, they are preventable.

The challenge now is for the industry to move beyond acceptance and towards action — ensuring that retail work is not only essential, but safe.

References

Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association (SDA). Submission to Safe Work Australia – Best Practice Review of the Model Work Health and Safety Laws. Submitted 3 November 2025.

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