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Go Bag Guide · Preparation · All Disasters
🚗

Vehicle Go Bag

Your car is your most important evacuation tool — and the most neglected part of most people's emergency preparation. This kit lives in your vehicle permanently. Not just during storm season. Always.

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🚨
Leave Early. When In Doubt — Go.

Voluntary evacuation orders are not suggestions for cautious people. They are the window between leaving safely and leaving in gridlock. Once a mandatory order drops, every highway out fills within 2–3 hours.

The math: Leaving 24 hours early costs one hotel night. Leaving 6 hours after a mandatory Cat 4 order can cost everything.

⚠️ Your car is your most important evacuation tool — and the most neglected

Most people prepare a go bag for the house and completely forget that their car is where they will spend 6–18 hours during an evacuation. The vehicle kit is not a replacement for your go bag — it is the permanent foundation that is already in place when you throw your go bag in the trunk and leave.

💡 The Vehicle Kit Rule: Everything in this guide stays in your car permanently. Not just during hurricane season — always. You cannot predict when you will need it. A car breakdown at night, a winter storm on the interstate, a wildfire evacuation with 15 minutes notice — your vehicle kit handles all of them.
What Lives in Your Car Year-Round

Fuel — The First Priority

Every item in this guide is useless if your tank is empty. Gas stations sell out within hours of an evacuation order — sometimes faster. After Hurricane Floyd in 1999, gas stations along I-95 in the Carolinas were completely dry within 4 hours of the evacuation order. After Rita in 2005, gridlock stretched 100 miles and hundreds of cars ran out of gas on the highway.

  • Keep tank above half — always during storm season — This is a habit, not a purchase. From June 1 through November 30, never let the tank drop below half. Fill it when it hits half, not when the light comes on.
    Habit — priceless
  • 2-gallon approved fuel can — stored safely — A sealed, approved 2-gallon fuel can in the trunk provides a critical safety net if you run out during gridlock evacuation. Use ethanol-free fuel if possible for longest storage life.
    Emergency backup
  • Fuel stabilizer — STA-BIL for stored fuel — Add to stored fuel in your can. Keeps gasoline viable for up to 24 months. Without it, stored gas degrades in 30–60 days.
    With stored fuel

🔋 Power & Charging

  • Dual USB-C fast-charge car adapter — Your car's charging port is a power station during evacuation. A dual fast-charge adapter keeps two phones, tablets, or battery banks charging simultaneously.
    Always in car
  • 12-foot USB charging cables — all types — Long cables reach back seats. Keep USB-C, Lightning, and Micro-USB. Family evacuations mean multiple devices charging from different positions.
    Always in car
  • 400W power inverter — AC outlet from 12V — Converts your car's 12V outlet to standard AC power. Runs CPAP machines, laptop chargers, small medical equipment, and phone chargers simultaneously.
    Always in car
  • Jumper cables — heavy gauge 20-foot — A dead battery during an evacuation is a crisis. 20-foot cables reach any parking lot scenario. Heavy gauge (4 AWG) starts large engines and diesel vehicles.
    Always in car
  • Portable jump starter — lithium battery pack — Starts your car without another vehicle. More reliable than jumper cables in isolation. Also charges phones via USB. A dead battery at 3am with no other cars around — this is what fixes it.
    Always in car

💧 Water & Food

  • 1 gallon bottled water — permanent in trunk — Rotate every 6 months. For drinking during breakdown, medical emergencies, and overheated radiators.
    Always in car
  • 12 emergency water pouches — Long shelf life (5 years). Individual serving size. Does not leak or degrade in heat the way bottles do.
    Always in car
  • Protein bars — 12-pack rotated every 6 months — For breakdowns, traffic jams lasting hours, and the moment you realize you left the house without eating. Rotate stock with a date label.
    Always in car
  • Can opener + 2 canned goods — For extended breakdowns. Canned tuna, beans, soup. More calorie-dense than bars for multi-day vehicle situations.
    Emergency

🛠️ Roadside Emergency

  • Full-size spare tire — know where it is — Many modern vehicles have space-saver spare tires or run-flat tires with no spare at all. Know what your vehicle has before you need it.
    Know your vehicle
  • Tire inflator + sealant — 12V compressor — For slow leaks and punctures that don't require a full tire change. A 12V compressor with sealant gets you to the next exit on a flat tire.
    Always in car
  • Road flares or LED emergency triangles — Required by law in many states after a roadside stop. Flares are more visible in rain. LED triangles are reusable and safer.
    Always in car
  • Reflective safety vest — Worn when outside the vehicle on a roadway. Visibility in rain and darkness. Required for roadside assistance workers — should be required for everyone.
    Always in car
  • Basic tool kit — wrenches, screwdrivers, pliers — For minor field repairs and adjustments. A compact roll-up tool kit fits under a seat.
    Always in car
  • Duct tape + zip ties — 10 of each — The universal field repair tools. Secure loose bumpers, broken mirrors, and trim pieces that would otherwise fly off at highway speed.
    Always in car

🩺 First Aid & Safety

  • Trauma-level first aid kit — Not a small travel kit. A proper kit with tourniquet, hemostatic gauze, compression bandages, gloves, and wound care. Car accidents happen during evacuations at elevated rates.
    Always in car
  • Tourniquet — CAT or SOFTT-W — A tourniquet is the single most effective tool for stopping life-threatening limb bleeding. Learn how to use it before you need it. Takes 5 minutes to learn.
    Always in car
  • Emergency mylar blankets — 4-pack — For shock treatment, cold exposure after a breakdown, and covering injured patients while waiting for help.
    Always in car
  • N95 masks — 10-pack — For wildfire smoke, post-hurricane debris dust, chemical spills, and any evacuation through compromised air quality.
    Always in car
  • Work gloves — heavy leather — For moving debris blocking the road, changing a tire, and any situation where your hands are in contact with sharp or contaminated material.
    Always in car
  • Small fire extinguisher — ABC rated — Vehicle fires are not rare. An ABC-rated extinguisher handles flammable liquids, electrical fires, and solid materials. Mount under a seat within easy reach.
    Always in car

🗺️ Navigation & Communication

  • Paper road atlas — your state + neighboring states — GPS fails during power outages, cell tower failures, and when every navigation app is routing 500,000 cars simultaneously. A paper atlas never fails.
    Always in car
  • Offline maps downloaded on your phone — Google Maps and Apple Maps allow offline download of specific regions. Download your state + 2 neighboring states before storm season.
    Download now
  • NOAA hand-crank emergency radio — For weather updates when cell service is congested or down. Battery-powered or hand-crank. Keeps you informed of changing evacuation routes.
    Always in car
  • Emergency whistle on keychain — For signaling if trapped in or under a vehicle. A whistle carries further than a voice and requires no energy to sustain.
    On keys
  • Notepad and permanent markers — For leaving notes on your home for family members, writing down important information without phone battery, and communicating with neighbors.
    Always in car

🌡️ Temperature & Comfort

  • Cooling towels — 4-pack — For vehicle breakdowns in Gulf Coast summer heat. Reduce body temperature while waiting for roadside assistance.
    Hot climate essential
  • HotHands hand warmers — 10-pair — For cold-climate breakdowns and winter storm evacuations. Also warms hypothermic passengers.
    Cold climate essential
  • Extra clothing layer — one per person — A lightweight jacket or hoodie per family member stored in the trunk. Temperatures drop unexpectedly, A/C runs cold during long drives, and shelters are often cold.
    Always
  • Emergency cash — $100 in small bills — Separate from your go bag cash. Specifically for the car: gas stations, tolls, and roadside vendors during evacuation.
    Always in car
  • Phone numbers written on paper — If your phone dies and you have no charger, you cannot call anyone whose number you do not know by memory. Write 10 critical numbers on a laminated card in the glove box.
    Critical backup
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Essential Products — Amazon Prime

Lithium Jump Starter 2000A

💡 Starts any car without another vehicle. Also charges phones via USB. Fits in glove box.

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🔌 400W Power Inverter — AC Outlet

💡 Run CPAP, laptop, and all chargers from your car's 12V outlet simultaneously.

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🚗 Dual USB-C Fast Charge Car Adapter

💡 65W total. Fast charges two phones or tablets simultaneously from your car.

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🩺 CAT Tourniquet — Combat Application

💡 The gold standard tourniquet. Used by military and emergency responders. Learn to use it.

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❤️ Trauma First Aid Kit — Car Size

💡 Tourniquet, hemostatic gauze, compression bandages, gloves. Not a travel kit — a real one.

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🔧 12V Tire Inflator + Compressor

💡 Inflates a flat tire enough to reach the next exit. Plugs into your car's 12V outlet.

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📻 NOAA Hand-Crank Emergency Radio

💡 Weather updates when cell towers fail. Hand-crank backup. Essential in every vehicle.

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😷 N95 Masks — 10-Pack

💡 Wildfire smoke, post-hurricane dust, chemical spills. Keep in glove box permanently.

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🗺️ US Road Atlas — Paper

💡 GPS fails during major disasters when everyone is using it simultaneously. Paper never fails.

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🧯 ABC Fire Extinguisher — Car Size

💡 Vehicle fires are not rare during accidents and disasters. Mount within reach under a seat.

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I rotate food and water in my vehicle kit?
Water pouches every 5 years — check the printed expiration date. Bottled water every 6 months, more frequently in hot climates where summer temperatures in a parked car exceed 130°F and accelerate plastic breakdown. Protein bars every 6–12 months depending on brand. Mark your calendar for May 1st and November 1st — check and rotate twice a year. Eating slightly expired protein bars during a breakdown is fine. Using contaminated water is not.
My car already has roadside assistance through my insurance. Do I still need this kit?
Absolutely. Roadside assistance programs depend on cell service, GPS signal, and available service vehicles. During a major evacuation with hundreds of thousands of cars on the road, roadside assistance response times can be 4–8 hours or more — if they can reach you at all. Your vehicle kit handles the gap between when something goes wrong and when help arrives. They are not substitutes for each other.
What is the most important single item in the vehicle kit?
The fuel habit — keeping your tank above half during storm season. Every other item in this guide costs between $10 and $150 and can be bought on Amazon in a day. Running out of gas during a mandatory evacuation with gridlock behind you and no open stations ahead is a situation that no amount of preparation recovers from quickly. The tank-above-half habit costs nothing and prevents the scenario that kills vehicle evacuations.
🏠 Protect Your Home
The best go bag is one you never need
Hurricane shutters let most coastal families shelter safely in place.
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Build Your Vehicle Kit Today

Everything on this page ships in 1–2 days. It lives in your car forever once it's there.

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