Workplace First Aid Vs Emergency First Aid: What’s The Difference And Which Course Do You Need?
Choosing the right first aid course should feel straightforward, not stressful. If you are weighing up Emergency First Aid at Work (EFAW) and the 3-day First Aid at Work (FAW), the right choice depends on your workplace risks, headcount, and the Health and Safety Executive’s guidance.
This practical guide explains the differences, what each course covers, how assessment and certification work, and when to choose one over the other. You will also see real-world scenarios for offices, manufacturing, transport, sports clubs, and childcare to help you decide with confidence.
SEF First Aid Assistance delivers both options nationwide, including onsite courses at your premises and open dates in Halifax, West Yorkshire. Trainers focus on practical, supportive delivery that builds confidence and good judgement under pressure.
What is the legal duty for UK employers?
Under the Health and Safety (First-Aid) Regulations 1981, employers must provide adequate and appropriate first aid equipment, facilities, and trained people so employees receive immediate help if injured or taken ill at work. What counts as adequate depends on a first aid needs assessment. You should factor in:
- Workplace hazards and risks, including lone working and shift patterns
- The nature of work, machinery, and processes
- Workforce size, layout, and locations
- Accident and incident history, including near misses
- Travel distance to emergency medical services and site access
HSE guidance explains that low-risk workplaces often need at least one person trained in EFAW. Higher-risk or larger workplaces typically require FAW-trained first aiders. Many employers choose a blend so cover is always in place.
EFAW vs FAW at a glance
Emergency First Aid at Work (EFAW) is a 1-day course focused on life-threatening emergencies and immediate responses. It suits low-risk environments and teams that need prompt, practical skills to stabilise a casualty until help arrives.
First Aid at Work (FAW) is a 3-day, Level 3 qualification that covers EFAW content plus additional injuries and illnesses likely in higher-risk settings. It is appropriate where your assessment indicates more comprehensive knowledge is needed and where you need first aiders to manage a wider range of incidents.
Both qualifications are typically valid for 3 years. Annual refreshers are strongly recommended to maintain confidence and skills between renewals.
If you want a deeper look at FAW content and booking options, see our page on first aid at work, including details about first aid certification and requalification.
What is covered in Emergency First Aid at Work?
EFAW focuses on the priorities that save lives in the first few minutes. Typical topics include:
- Primary survey and scene safety
- Unresponsive casualty management and recovery position
- CPR and use of an automated external defibrillator
- Choking
- Seizures
- Bleeding and shock
- Minor injuries and basic incident reporting
Assessment is practical and ongoing during the day. On successful completion, learners receive a Level 3 Award in Emergency First Aid at Work, valid for 3 years.
If you prefer a concise, hands-on option, explore our one day first aid courses for emergency first aid at work.
What is covered in First Aid at Work?
FAW includes all EFAW elements and adds depth for injuries and illnesses that higher-risk workplaces may face. Topics typically extend to:
- Fractures, dislocations, sprains, and strains
- Head, spinal, chest, and eye injuries
- Burns and scalds, including chemical burns
- Poisons and exposure to harmful substances
- Asthma, anaphylaxis, heart attack, stroke, and diabetes
- Hypothermia and heat-related illness
- More detailed incident reporting and workplace considerations
Assessment includes ongoing practical observation and written elements across the 3 days. The FAW qualification is valid for 3 years. SEF First Aid Assistance offers a 2-day First Aid at Work requalification for holders renewing within permitted timelines.
Which course fits common UK workplace scenarios?
- Office or call centre, small retail unit, or light warehouse: Usually EFAW is sufficient if your assessment shows low risk. Consider at least one EFAW-trained person per site and shift, with cover for leave.
- Manufacturing, engineering, woodworking, construction support, or environments using hazardous substances: FAW is typically the safer choice due to machinery, tools, and higher injury potential. Some teams add a catastrophic bleeding control module for extra resilience.
- Transport and logistics, drivers and escorts, multi-site operations: A blend often works best. EFAW for general cover, FAW for supervisors or higher-risk areas, and enough trained people to maintain cover across routes and shifts.
- Sports clubs and gyms: EFAW gives a solid base for common incidents. Where impact injuries are common or you host events, consider FAW or add specialist content such as basic life support and sports injury first aid.
- Childcare settings, nurseries, and childminders: Choose paediatric options that meet the Department for Education’s Early Years Foundation Stage requirements. Our paediatric first aid and blended paediatric routes provide recognised training and a paediatric first aid certificate. EFAW or FAW can complement but do not replace paediatric requirements.
If you are unsure, SEF First Aid Assistance can help you map training levels to your risk profile and staffing patterns. For groups, see our in house first aid training for seamless onsite delivery across the UK.
Do employers have to provide first aid training?
Yes. Employers must ensure adequate and appropriate first aid arrangements, which usually includes trained first aiders. The exact level, EFAW or FAW, comes from your first aid needs assessment. Even very small or low-risk businesses should have someone trained to handle immediate emergencies.
Is first aid valid for 2 or 3 years?
EFAW and FAW are typically valid for 3 years from the achievement date. HSE strongly recommends annual refreshers in between to keep skills current. For FAW holders, you can complete first aid requalification over 2 days if you renew within the permitted window; otherwise, you may need the full 3-day FAW again.
How often should you do a first aid refresher?
Plan a short refresher annually. This is not a full requalification, but it reinforces critical steps such as CPR, defibrillator use, and bleeding control. It helps first aiders stay calm, capable, and compliant. When your 3-year certificate is due, book a first aid renewal course or the FAW requalification as appropriate.
How SEF First Aid Assistance delivers
- Nationwide coverage with onsite delivery at your premises, plus open courses in Halifax, West Yorkshire.
- Friendly, practical training with continuous assessment and supportive coaching.
- Options to add role-specific content, including sports injury scenarios or high-risk modules.
- Alignment with mental wellbeing and communication under pressure so responders can act clearly and support colleagues after difficult incidents.
You can book a group at your site or join a scheduled date. If you have mixed needs across sites, we will help you build a simple training plan that keeps cover in place.
Quick FAQ
- What is the difference between EFAW and FAW? EFAW is a 1-day course for immediate, life-saving skills in low-risk settings. FAW is a 3-day course that adds wider injury and illness management for higher-risk workplaces.
- What does EFAW cover? Primary survey, CPR and defibrillator use, choking, seizures, bleeding, shock, and minor injuries.
- Do employers have to provide first aid training? Yes. The Health and Safety (First-Aid) Regulations 1981 require adequate and appropriate first aid arrangements, which typically include trained personnel.
- Is first aid valid for 2 or 3 years? EFAW and FAW are generally valid for 3 years. Check your certificate dates and plan ahead.
- How often should refreshers be done? Aim for an annual refresher, then complete the full requalification at 3 years.
Next steps
If you know what you need, you can book a first aid course for your team or as an individual. If you are still deciding, we are happy to advise and match EFAW, FAW, or paediatric first aid to your risks and schedules. Explore our pages for first aid training and first aid refresher courses to get started, then contact us to talk through dates, onsite delivery, and open course options in Halifax.