Creating a safe and healthy work environment requires a company's commitment to prioritising workplace safety. This study aims to determine whether safety knowledge, safety climate, and work stress influence safety behaviour. The research method used is convenient sampling. The study involved 243 workers employed in Karawang Regency. The research instruments used were the Safety Behaviour Scale developed by Neal and Griffin, Safety Knowledge developed by Vinodkumar and Bhasi, Safety Climate measured using the LSCAT developed by Cox and Cheyne, and Work Stress measured using the PSS-10 developed by Cohen (1983). The study was analysed through a series of reliability tests, normality tests, determination tests, multiple regression tests, and simple regression tests. The results showed that safety knowledge, safety climate, and work stress significantly influence safety behaviour, contributing 33,2%. Regression analysis revealed a significance value of 0.000 (p < 0.05), indicating that the regression model is statistically significant. It can be concluded from this study that safety knowledge, safety climate, and work stress effectively have a positive influence on safety behaviour.
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