The alarm sounds, people file out the exits, and within a few minutes the building is empty. That part usually goes fine. The hard part comes next, at the assembly point, when someone has to answer the single question that decides whether firefighters walk into a burning building: is everyone out? An emergency evacuation headcount is how a facility answers it, and on too many sites the answer still depends on a clipboard and a raised voice.
The stakes are not abstract. When no one can confirm who made it out, emergency crews may risk their lives searching for a person who already left through another door, or call off a search while someone is still inside. Accounting for everyone after an evacuation is a basic expectation of any emergency plan, and in the United States OSHA requires it outright. This guide explains what that requirement means, why paper roll call keeps failing, and how digital headcount and accountability systems confirm every occupant is safe, especially across multiple sites.
Under OSHA's emergency action plan standard, 29 CFR 1910.38, every covered employer must have procedures for emergency evacuation, including exit route assignments, and procedures to account for all employees after the evacuation. The regulation never uses the phrase "muster point," but it creates the duty that makes one necessary: a known place where a headcount happens and a designated person confirms who arrived and who did not.
That headcount is not paperwork for its own sake. It is the information handed to responders so they know whether anyone might still be inside, and where. Emergency accountability, put plainly, is the difference between a controlled response and a guess.
The clipboard is the default, and it fails in predictable ways.
It is slow. Reading names one by one at an assembly area takes minutes a serious emergency may not allow, and every minute of uncertainty is a minute responders cannot act on.
It is out of date. A sign-in sheet filled in at the door hours ago does not reflect who stepped out for lunch, left early, or arrived after it was written. The list describes the morning, not the moment.
It is in the wrong place. The roster is often inside the building the evacuation just cleared, or stuck at one assembly point while people gather at others.
And it misses people. A roll call built from an employee roster leaves out the visitors, contractors, and delivery drivers who were on the floor when the alarm sounded, who are exactly the people least likely to know where to go.
A digital emergency evacuation headcount replaces the clipboard with a live picture, and it works because the count starts before the emergency does.
The foundation is an accurate occupancy list, a real-time record of who is on site right now, drawn from everyday check-in, badge access, or pre-registration rather than assembled in a panic. That answers the first of the two questions an evacuation poses: who was on site.
At the assembly point, wardens mark people safe from a phone or tablet, and the unaccounted list updates live across every device and every muster point at once. That answers the second question, who is now safe, and it does so in seconds rather than minutes. The system can then hand responders a precise list of who is still missing, with names and last known locations, instead of a shrug.
This is what occupant tracking systems are for. The technology varies, from handheld badge readers to QR and kiosk check-in to mobile apps, but the principle holds: turn the everyday record of who is present into a safety tool the moment it is needed.
The system is only as good as the place it reports from. A workable assembly or muster point follows a few well-established rules. It sits a safe distance from the building and any hazard, commonly at least 50 meters. It is reachable from every evacuation route without crossing a dangerous area. It stays clear of the routes emergency vehicles need. And it is large enough for everyone and visible even in smoke or darkness. Larger sites need more than one, which is exactly why a headcount that stays in sync across all of them matters.
Building evacuation procedures should name these points, mark them clearly, and put them into regular drills, because a muster point no one can find under stress is not a plan.
The regulation speaks to employees, but a real evacuation does not check badges. Visitors touring the site, contractors working on the floor, and drivers at the dock are all occupants whose safety the facility is responsible for, and they are the hardest to account for because they never appear on an employee roster.
A headcount that only knows employees has a blind spot precisely where the risk runs highest. The occupancy list has to include everyone who came through the gate, which means visitor and contractor check-in has to feed the same accountability picture as the employee record.
For an organization running many sites, the evacuation problem multiplies. Each location tends to keep its own rosters and run its own drills, so the standard varies with whoever manages the site, and headquarters has no fast way to learn the status of a site in another state during an unfolding event. Phone calls, the usual fallback, are the first thing to fail when everyone is dialing at once.
Facilities safety management at scale depends on two things: the same accountability standard applied everywhere, and a central, real-time view of every site's status. With those in place, a regional or corporate team can see which sites are clear and which have someone unaccounted for, without waiting on a callback.
A facility with a working system can state, within about a minute of an evacuation, that everyone who was on site is either marked safe at an assembly point or identified as missing by name and last known location, and it can do that for every site from one place. The count includes visitors and contractors, not just staff. The everyday check-in that produces the occupancy list is something people already do, so nothing extra has to happen during the emergency itself. And every drill produces a record that shows the system works before it has to.
The accountability question, who is on site and who is now safe, is hard to answer well because the pieces usually live apart: an employee roster in one place, a visitor log in another, contractor access in a third. Pulling them into one live picture is what makes a headcount both fast and complete.
EmergencyOS runs the evacuation and accountability workflow across locations, so wardens mark people safe, the unaccounted list updates in real time, and headquarters sees every site's status from one place. It draws on the same live occupancy record that VisitorOS and SecurityOS maintain, so visitors and credentialed contractors are counted alongside employees rather than forgotten at the assembly point. As part of FacilityOS, that capability sits in the same platform as the rest of a site's operations, which is what lets the everyday check-in become the emergency headcount without anyone standing up something new when it matters.
How do facilities account for everyone after they evacuate a building? They run a headcount at a designated assembly or muster point, where a warden confirms who arrived against a record of who was on site. Paper rosters are still common but slow and often out of date. Digital systems start from a live occupancy list, let wardens mark people safe from a phone or tablet, and produce a real-time list of anyone still missing to hand to responders.
What does OSHA require for evacuation accountability? OSHA's 29 CFR 1910.38 requires covered employers to have an emergency action plan with evacuation and exit-route procedures and procedures to account for all employees after an evacuation. It does not mandate a specific method, so the headcount approach is left to the employer.
What is a muster point? A muster point, also called an assembly or emergency assembly area, is a predetermined safe location where everyone gathers after an evacuation so a headcount can confirm no one is missing. Good ones sit well clear of the building and hazards, are reachable from all routes, and stay out of the way of emergency vehicles.
How do you account for visitors and contractors during an evacuation? By putting them on the same occupancy list as employees. Visitor and contractor check-in should feed the accountability system, so the headcount reflects everyone who was actually on site, not just staff.
How is a digital headcount faster than a roll call? It starts from a record of who was already on site and lets multiple wardens mark people safe at once, with the unaccounted list updating live across every device and assembly point. That turns a several-minute roll call into a count that resolves in about a minute.
Regulatory requirements vary by jurisdiction and industry; the OSHA standard cited is the US federal baseline.