Every year in the UK, approximately 40,000 children sustain injuries on playgrounds serious enough to require a hospital visit. That is roughly 770 children per week — with fractures, dislocations, lacerations, and head injuries among the most common outcomes requiring emergency treatment.

Playgrounds are vital spaces for childhood development — the physical activity, social interaction, and risk-taking they enable are essential to children's physical and mental health. The goal of playground safety is not the elimination of challenge or risk but the prevention of serious harm from poorly designed, maintained, or managed equipment.

40,000 children hospitalised every year

Every year in the UK, approximately 40,000 children sustain injuries on playgrounds serious enough to require a hospital visit. That is roughly 770 children per week — with fractures, dislocations, lacerations, and head injuries among the most common outcomes requiring emergency treatment.

Playgrounds are vital spaces for childhood development — the physical activity, social interaction, and risk-taking they enable are essential to children's physical and mental health. The goal of playground safety is not the elimination of challenge or risk but the prevention of serious harm from poorly designed, maintained, or managed equipment.

Key facts & figures

  • ~40,000 children per year in the UK sustain injuries on playgrounds serious enough to require a hospital visit — approximately 770 per week (RoSPA).
  • 80% of playground accidents are caused by falls — making surface impact the dominant injury mechanism.
  • ~84% of hospitalisations from playground injuries are broken bones — predominantly upper limb fractures (arms and wrists).
  • 40% of playground accidents are directly related to the equipment itself — the remaining 60% involve collisions, inappropriate use and surface hazards.
  • ~4% of playground injuries involve children being bitten by dogs brought onto playground sites.
  • ~4% of playground injuries are caused by broken glass on the surface, and at least 4% involve children struck by swing seats.

Key facts & figures (overview)

  • Approximately 40,000 children per year in the UK sustain injuries on playgrounds serious enough to require a hospital visit — approximately 770 per week (RoSPA)
  • 80% of playground accidents are caused by falls — making surface impact the dominant injury mechanism
  • Broken bones make up approximately 84% of hospitalisations from playground injuries — predominantly upper limb fractures (arms and wrists)
  • Only 40% of playground accidents are directly related to the equipment itself — the remaining 60% involve collisions between children, inappropriate use, and surface hazards
  • Of those equipment-related accidents: 80% involve falls to the surface — making impact-absorbing surfacing the single most important physical protection measure
  • Swings account for the highest number of equipment-related fall injuries — not because they are especially dangerous but because they are the most numerous and most used piece of equipment
  • Overhead rotating bars are identified as among the most dangerous items on playgrounds — generating significant fall and entrapment risks
  • Dog bites are a specific playground hazard: approximately 4% of playground injuries involve children being bitten by dogs brought onto playground sites
  • Glass is cited as a cause of approximately 4% of playground injuries — from broken glass on the playground surface
  • At least 4% of playground injuries involve children struck by swing seats
  • The primary legislation governing playground safety includes: Occupiers' Liability Act 1957, Health and Safety at Work Act 1974, Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, and EN 1176 (British/European safety standards for playground equipment)
  • Local authorities must carry out annual independent inspections of their playgrounds; many commission RoSPA or RoSPA-accredited inspectors for this purpose

Who is responsible for playground safety?

Local authorities are responsible for the safety of playgrounds they own and manage. Under the Occupiers' Liability Act 1957, they owe a duty to take reasonable care to ensure visitors are reasonably safe for the purposes for which they are invited. This includes:

  • Ensuring equipment is safely designed and installed to EN 1176 standards
  • Maintaining impact-absorbing surfaces to required specification
  • Carrying out regular inspections — routine (visual), operational (monthly), and annual (independent)
  • Acting promptly when defects are reported
  • Providing appropriate age labelling and signage

Schools that operate playgrounds have equivalent obligations to their pupils as lawful visitors.

Private playground operators — including those at soft play centres, leisure parks, and commercial family attractions — have the same Occupiers' Liability duty plus additional commercial regulation requirements. Meeting these duties starts with a competent risk assessment of every site and piece of equipment.

Surface safety: the most important physical protection

RoSPA's data is clear: 80% of equipment-related playground accidents involve falls to the surface. The single most effective physical protection measure against serious playground injury is therefore adequate impact-absorbing surfacing — not more padding on equipment or lower equipment heights.

Approved surfacing materials under EN 1177 include: rubber mulch; bonded rubber; sand; woodchip/bark; and engineered wood fibre. Concrete, asphalt, compacted earth, and grass (which becomes compacted and bare under high-use equipment) do not provide adequate impact absorption and should not be used as the primary surfacing under any equipment from which a child can fall.

The critical parameter is Critical Fall Height (CFH) — the maximum height from which the surface can absorb a head impact without causing life-threatening injury. Every surface material has a rated CFH at defined depths; equipment heights must not exceed the CFH of the installed surface.

Playground injury factor (UK)Figure
Children hospitalised per year~40,000 (~770/week)
Accidents caused by falls80%
Hospitalisations that are broken bones~84%
Accidents related to the equipment itself40%
Injuries from dog bites~4%
Injuries from broken glass on the surface~4%
Injuries from being struck by swing seatsat least 4%

Written by CPD experts

This guide was produced by Online CPD Academy, a UK provider of CPD-accredited online training. Their health and safety curriculum addresses risk assessment, Occupiers' Liability obligations, and inspection protocols for schools, local authorities, and leisure operators.

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Mark McShane
Mark McShane
Health & Safety Training Specialist, Online CPD Academy

Mark writes about workplace and public safety, compliance and accredited training for Online CPD Academy, a UK provider of CPD-certified and RoSPA-approved online courses.