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Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE — ANSI/OSHA Compliant
Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE — ANSI/OSHA Compliant

Werner Cross-Arm Strap Review (2026)

Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, WC Safety earns from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. We stock this product; commissions do not influence our review.

★★★★½ 4.4/5

Reviewed by Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial

Werner Cross-Arm Strap — Key Specifications (from the listing)
Brand Werner
Type Anchorage connector
Configuration noted on listing D-ring connection point
Standards Verify markings and instructions on the product
Typical price $13.72
Model / SKU A111003

The Werner Cross-Arm Strap is an anchorage connector from Werner, stocked at $13.72. It's built for budget-first crews and kit-builders adding beam anchorage capability for pocket change — this review covers what the listing documents, where it beats its closest rival, and who should buy something else.

Why the Werner Cross-Arm Strap Stands Out

At under fourteen dollars the Werner cross-arm strap is the cheapest legitimate anchorage connector we stock — the pass-through beam strap distilled to its minimum viable form from a brand every contractor already knows. There's no premium story; the price IS the story.

Specification and Configuration

What the listing commits to: D-ring connection point. We don't restate ratings the listing doesn't surface; the governing rule is OSHA's: anchorage for personal fall arrest must hold 5,000 lb per attached worker or be designed with a 2:1 safety factor under a qualified person. The anchor hardware is only half of that equation — the structure it attaches to is the other half, and no anchor rating fixes a weak substrate.

An anchor is the A in the ABC of fall protection — it pairs with a full-body harness and a connector (SRL or shock-absorbing lanyard) to form a complete system. Position anchors to minimize swing fall, calculate clearance before first use, and inspect before each use like every other system component. Any anchor that has taken a fall arrest load comes out of service per the manufacturer's instructions.

Where It Falls Short

Its limits, honestly: Heavy daily industrial use — the premium straps' hardware and webbing earn their price difference in service life.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • D-ring connection point
  • Honest listing — verify markings on arrival
  • $13.72 — consumable-tier pricing
  • Werner — Werner is best known for ladders, but its fall-protection line carries the same jobsite ubiquity

Cons

  • Anchor strength depends on the structure it attaches to — hardware rating alone doesn't make a compliant anchor point
  • Heavy daily industrial use

Who Should Buy It

Order the Werner Cross-Arm Strap if you are budget-first crews and kit-builders adding beam anchorage capability for pocket change.

Who Should Skip It

Skip it for heavy daily industrial use — the premium straps' hardware and webbing earn their price difference in service life.

How It Compares

Three times the price separates the Werner from Guardian's premium strap — that difference buys length, hardware, and duty cycle. Occasional use takes the Werner; daily wrapping takes the Guardian. The full field is ranked in our best roof anchors guide, and the anchor-requirements reference covers the 5,000 lb rule in depth. Head-to-head rival: Guardian 10787 Premium 6 ft Strap.

Other Anchors We Stock

Fall Protection Guides

Browse the Fall Protection Silo

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Werner Cross-Arm Strap rated for?

The listing doesn't restate a rating and we don't invent one. OSHA 29 CFR 1926.502(d)(15) requires personal fall arrest anchorage capable of 5,000 lb per attached worker, or a 2:1 engineered safety factor — verify the product markings and instructions on arrival.

What surface does the Werner Cross-Arm Strap install on?

At under fourteen dollars the Werner cross-arm strap is the cheapest legitimate anchorage connector we stock — the pass-through beam strap distilled to its minimum viable form from a brand every contractor already knows. Match the anchor pattern to the substrate — wood ridge anchors, concrete anchors, beam straps, and seam clamps are not interchangeable, and using one on the wrong surface is the category's classic fatal error.

Werner Cross-Arm Strap vs Guardian 10787 Premium 6 ft Strap — which should I buy?

Three times the price separates the Werner from Guardian's premium strap — that difference buys length, hardware, and duty cycle. Occasional use takes the Werner; daily wrapping takes the Guardian.

Who is the Werner Cross-Arm Strap best for?

Budget-first crews and kit-builders adding beam anchorage capability for pocket change.

When should I skip the Werner Cross-Arm Strap?

Heavy daily industrial use — the premium straps' hardware and webbing earn their price difference in service life.

How much does the Werner Cross-Arm Strap cost?

$13.72 at WC Safety; the linked Amazon listing tracks live market pricing.

Can I reuse the Werner Cross-Arm Strap after a fall?

No — any anchorage component that has arrested a fall comes out of service for evaluation per the manufacturer's instructions, and most temporary anchors are simply retired. Post-fall reuse is where anchor failures hide.

What connects to the Werner Cross-Arm Strap — SRL or lanyard?

Either, as part of a complete personal fall arrest system with a full-body harness. An SRL minimizes free fall and clearance; a shock-absorbing lanyard costs less. Our SRL guide and lanyard guide rank the options.

How many workers can tie off to one anchor point?

One worker per anchor unless the anchor and structure are engineered for more — OSHA's 5,000 lb requirement is per attached worker. Multi-worker anchorage is qualified-person territory, not a field improvisation.

What does OSHA require of a fall-protection anchor?

Capable of supporting 5,000 lb per attached worker, or designed and used under a qualified person's supervision at a 2:1 safety factor, independent of any platform anchorage. Our anchor-requirements reference walks the full rule.

How do I inspect the Werner Cross-Arm Strap before use?

Check structural deformation, cracks, corrosion, webbing or cable damage where applicable, legible markings, and the integrity of the substrate it's attached to. Anchors are inspected before each use like every system component.

Where should I position a roof or beam anchor?

As close to directly above the work as practical — swing fall is the under-appreciated killer, and every foot of lateral offset adds pendulum energy to an arrest. Reposition the anchor rather than working far to the side of it.

Temporary or permanent anchor — how do I choose?

By access frequency: one job gets a temporary (often disposable) anchor; repeat access to the same location justifies a permanent engineered point. The break-even is faster than most buyers expect once labor to re-install is counted.

Is Werner a good fall-protection brand?

Werner is best known for ladders, but its fall-protection line carries the same jobsite ubiquity — cross-arm straps, concrete anchors, and kits sold wherever contractors already buy access equipment.

Do anchor points need to be engineered or certified?

Certified anchors (designed by a qualified person for the specific structure) are one OSHA path; the 5,000 lb non-certified path is the other. Residential temporary anchors typically ride the 5,000 lb path installed per the manufacturer's instructions — deviate from those instructions and the rating evaporates.

How much fall clearance do I need below the anchor?

Free fall plus deceleration plus worker height plus safety margin — the anchor's height above the work surface drives the whole calculation. Our fall-clearance reference includes the worked math for lanyard and SRL systems.

The Bottom Line

The Werner Cross-Arm Strap does its job at its price: D-ring connection point at $13.72. Rated 4.4/5 on documented spec, configuration, and value for the intended buyer.


About the Author

Steven Eaton is the founder of WC Safety and an industrial PPE specialist who sources and evaluates fall-protection equipment for construction, industrial, and utility buyers.

How We Review

Reviews draw on the manufacturer's published listing data and OSHA 29 CFR 1926.502 / 1910.140 anchorage requirements. We do not run lab tests or invent specifications; where a listing states no rating, the review says so. Ratings reflect documented spec, configuration, and value.

Affiliate Disclosure

WC Safety is an Amazon Associate and earns commissions on qualifying purchases through links on this page. Affiliate relationships do not influence our ratings.

Editorial Standards

Claims are drawn from listing data and published standards. Fall protection is life-safety equipment: anchor selection and installation are governed by the manufacturer's instructions and your competent/qualified person. Report errors to safetynw2012@gmail.com.

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