A ladder cage and a personal fall arrest system are not interchangeable terms. A cage surrounds part of the climbing path, while a personal fall arrest system is intended to arrest a fall through compatible equipment and an engineered connection. The required solution depends on the jurisdiction, ladder configuration, access height and site risk assessment.
Functional difference
| Item | Ladder cage | Personal fall arrest system |
|---|---|---|
| Main function | Provides a surrounding ladder structure | Arrests a fall through connected equipment |
| User equipment | Project dependent | Compatible harness and connection equipment required |
| Design review | Cage geometry and ladder clearance | Anchorage, clearance and rescue planning |
| Inspection | Structure, fixings and corrosion | System components and user equipment |
US project note
For United States projects, review the current official requirements in 29 CFR 1910.28 and the ladder requirements in 29 CFR 1910.23. Do not assume that a cage alone satisfies every fall-protection requirement.
Questions for the project engineer
- Which jurisdiction and owner specification apply?
- Is the ladder new or existing?
- What clearance is available around the climb?
- How will rescue be performed after a fall?
- Who will inspect the system and user equipment?
Frequently asked questions
Can a cage and fall arrest system be used together?
Possibly, but compatibility and clearance must be engineered for the project.
Does a cage stop a falling worker?
A cage should not be described as equivalent to a personal fall arrest system.
Can an existing cage be modified?
Modification requires a site review and confirmation of structural and clearance conditions.
Who selects the final system?
The responsible project designer, owner and safety professionals should confirm it.
Can the ladder manufacturer provide connection parts?
Custom parts can be fabricated to an approved project drawing.
Send the applicable standard and ladder drawing for fabrication review. Updated July 2026.
