This paper presents a methodology for subjective safety analysis of safety requirements specifications of software for safety-critical systems, The methodology incorporates fuzzy set modeling and evidential reasoning to assess the safety associated with safety requirements specifications, Fuzzy set theory is used to model each safety rule and an evidential reasoning approach is employed to synthesize the information produced, Three basic parameters-failure likelihood, consequence severity, and failure consequence probability are used to analyze a safety rule in terms of membership functions, The subjective safety description associated with the safety rule is then mapped hack to the defined safety expressions which are also characterized in terms of membership functions, Such a mapping results in the production of the safety evaluation associated with the safety rule, expressed in terms of the degrees to which the subjective safety description belongs to the safety expressions, Such degrees represent uncertainty in the safety evaluation associated with the safety rule, The information produced for all safety rules can then be synthesised using an evidential reasoning approach to obtain the safety evaluation associated with the safety requirements specifications. The developed methodology is capable of dealing with multiple safety analysts who make judgements on each safety rule, A case study based on a train-set crossing is used to demonstrate the methodology.