Roadside Readiness: 19 Essential Emergency Preparedness Items Every Vehicle Should Carry

by Nathan Scott
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You can never predict where you’ll be when disaster strikes, that’s why it’s essential to have the appropriate emergency preparedness items in your vehicle at all times.

Which items should you include in your vehicle, you should consider adding the following: (By Nicholas Oetken)

 

1. Backpack – Keep most of the items on this list in a backpack so you can evacuate your vehicle with everything if you need to. Make sure your backpack is well made, rugged, has comfortable and adjustable straps, and has neutral colors that will help you blend in and not stand out. Here’s the Back pack we use in our cars, very strong and versatile.

 

2. Blanket

Keep two blankets in your car at all times. The best one to get will be wool blankets or reflective heat blankets. Both will work well at keeping you warm. Avoid cotton blankets because they do a very poor job of resisting water.

Make sure that both blankets can pack down nice and compact so you can stash one or both away in your backpack if you need to bug out from the car. 

3. Cash

Keep at least $100 in cash in your car at all times. This should be divided up into $20, $10, $5, and $1 bills. Keep the cash in a Ziploc bag for convenience and to help create some barrier in between it and the outside elements. 

4. Clothes (Extra)

Always keep an extra change of clothes in your car. Have one pair of hiking boots or shoes (you don’t want to evacuate your vehicle in sandals or flip flops), an extra pair of cargo pants or jeans, an extra shirt, a jacket, extra pair of socks, and gloves. 

5. Fire Starting Devices

Plan on having at least three different fire-starting devices in your car at all times: matches, a magnesium flint striker, and a lighter will represent your best bets.  While you’re at it, include items that are easily flammable so you can get a fire going quickly.   This Fire Starter is rated as one of the best!

 


6. First Aid Kit

Always keep a complete first aid kit in your car, and keep it separated in its own pack for ease of organization and transportation. This pack could then fit inside your backpack if you needed it to. Make sure to fully familiarize yourself with the inside of your first aid kit so you know all of its contents.

For this reason, it may be wise to buy all of the components separately and make your first aid kit truly customizable. It’s one way to make sure that you know everything that is included in the kit. 

7. Flag (Red or Orange)

A brightly colored red or orange flag can be tied to the outside of an immovable vehicle during a winter snowstorm. This way, you should be visible to other cars coming by so you can hopefully be rescued. 

8. Flares

Flares can also be used for signaling for help, such as if your vehicle becomes stranded, and from much farther distances than a red flag can. Have at least three in your car.  These flares can be a real life-saver!

 

9. Flashlight

Always keep a good flashlight with an extra set of batteries in your car. This will make it easier to inspect your vehicle or to leave the car at night or in darkness if you have to. The best kind of flashlight to keep in your vehicle will have a powerful LED beam, but will also be small and compact so it can be easily carried around. 

10. Food

Keep enough food in your car to help you survive for at least three days. You need food that is small, portable, long-lasting, and come packed with nutrition.

Simple protein bars or energy bars would fill this bill nicely, but nothing too chocolatey, or it will melt. You can also include MRE’s or similar food items where all you need is water and some heat to cook them up. 

13. GPS Device

Keep a GPS device in your car with spare batteries. This can help you to navigate while you drive, and to navigate if you are forced to leave your car and bug out on foot.   This Garmin GPSMAP 66SR is rated as one of the best GPS devices.

 

12. Gun (Optional)

This one is optional. Some people are uncomfortable at the thought of keeping a firearm in their car under the fear that someone may break into their vehicle and steal it. It has happened before.  The best solution is to keep your firearm secured, such as in a car safe in between the seat and center console or underneath the driver’s seat. Just make sure that the firearm is easily accessible so you can defend yourself from the driver’s seat if need be. Have extra ammunition as well. 

13. Knife

Keep two knives in your car at all times, a fixed blade knife and a folding blade knife that you can keep clipped to the inside of your pocket. If you already keep a knife clipped in your pocket, it doesn’t hurt to have backups.

The fixed blade knife will be used for more heavy-duty tasks such as defense or shelter building or splitting wood, while the folding knife will be used for more precise work.

14. Jumper Cables

Even people who don’t keep a survival kit in their vehicle will usually at least understand the importance of keeping jumper cables in their car. If you don’t have jumper cables in your vehicle yet, change that.   We found these sturdy low-cost Jumper cables to keep in our car at all times.

15. Paracord

Paracord truly is one of the most versatile survival items ever invented. Keep at least one to two hundred feet in your car at all times. You can use it for shelter building, rappelling down a steep edge, making fishing line or a clothesline, or in the worst-case scenarios, for tying somebody up.

16. Personal Hygiene Kit

This is one of the most overlooked survival items to have in general, but it’s important, especially if you get stranded many miles away from the nearest town or city.

A complete personal hygiene kit has everything from hand sanitizer to soap to toothpaste to toothbrushes to a mirror and so on. It’s important to keep yourself clean. 

17. Prescription Medications

Keep at least a three days’ supply of prescription medications in your car at all times too, especially if you really on these medications to stay alive or in good health.

18. Shovel

A shovel will prove its worth to you on more than one occasion. You can dig trenches and latrines, use it for defense, or just dig holes as needed.  A full-size shovel should work for the back of a pickup truck. For a sedan or SUV; however, you can go with a smaller foldable camping shovel that will be much smaller and more portable.  You may want to consider getting this comprehensive 250 Piece Survival Gear Kit, that comes with a First Aid Kit, a Molle Compatible Bag, and Emergency Tent.

19. Water and Water Purification

Keep enough water in your car to survive for a minimum of three days. Preferably, keep it in a metal water canteen rather than plastic containers. This way, your canteen can be used for boiling water over a fire should you run out. It’s also more durable and will resist puncture hits much better.

While you’re at it, also include a water filtration device; such as a LifeStraw, and water purification tablets so you can make water you find safe to drink as well.  The items listed above should be kept in your vehicle at all times.

Conclusion: You should also consider adding more emergency preparedness items depending upon your current location, road access, and based upon the emergency you most likely will encounter.

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