11 Practical Preparedness Tips Most Families Skip
If you only have one weekend to improve your emergency readiness, these are the highest-impact actions to prioritize first.
- Store water where it is easy to rotate. Keep at least 1 gallon per person per day and use clearly labeled refill dates so your supply stays usable.
- Pick one room as your backup operations area. Put flashlights, batteries, paper maps, chargers, and first-aid items in one location so nobody has to search in the dark.
- Test your no-power meal plan. Build a simple 72-hour menu that does not depend on refrigeration or electric cooking.
- Keep printed contact lists and meeting points. Phones fail; paper plans do not. Every household member should know where to regroup.
- Use layered lighting, not one big flashlight. Headlamps, lanterns, and a few small task lights make nighttime routines safer and more efficient.
- Practice one low-stress drill each month. A 15-minute drill reveals bottlenecks before a real emergency does.
- Protect medications and critical documents. Keep a waterproof grab pouch with IDs, prescriptions, and copies of insurance information.
- Plan for communication outages. Decide in advance who updates extended family and what fallback channel you will use.
- Set up a simple home sanitation backup. Basic hygiene supplies reduce risk quickly when utilities are interrupted.
- Know your local hazards first. Flood, wildfire, heat, and winter storms require different priorities; match your supplies to your region.
- Document what actually works in your home. After each drill, note what failed, then improve one item at a time.
Quick 72-Hour Starter Checklist
- Water and shelf-stable food for every household member
- Flashlights + extra batteries + manual can opener
- First-aid kit and essential medications
- Printed contacts, copies of key documents, and local map
Watch the Preparedness Briefing
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