You can build a simple, solid family plan in about an hour. Follow this guide to make a one-page plan, a compact communication sheet, and a 72-hour kit checklist with add-ons for infants and pets. You’ll finish with clear roles, meeting points, and a drill schedule you can actually keep.
Disasters are confusing. A short plan reduces panic and saves time. You don’t need a binder—one clear page and a basic kit will cover most family situations.
Common gaps are predictable: no shared meeting place, no out-of-area contact, missing meds, and forgotten pet supplies. We fix those first. Use federal templates to speed the process and keep it standard. Ready.gov and the Red Cross publish plain-language checklists and a fillable family communication plan PDF.
Success looks like: one page that says who does what, where you meet, how you contact each other, and a small kit ready to grab. That’s enough to get your family moving in the right direction.
Next action: Block 60 minutes on your calendar and commit to finishing a one-page plan tonight.
Start with three steps. Keep it short and clear.
1) Identify people and roles
2) Choose meeting points
3) Record alerts and routes
Store the plan where everyone can find it: a printed copy on the fridge, a wallet card, a phone screenshot, and a cloud copy. Share it with caregivers and nearby family.
Next action: Write your two meeting points with full addresses and text them to the family group tonight.
Use a one-page template to speed this up. The FEMA family communication plan PDF covers the basics and prints well.
Fill in these prompts:
Print two copies: one for the fridge and one folded into your main go-bag.
Assign roles now so you aren’t negotiating later. Example:
Simple decision rules:
Routes:
Practice each role once so everyone knows the drill.
When cell networks clog, short text messages often get through. Your plan should fit on a wallet card and a phone screen.
Build your contact list:
Storage and backups:
If networks are down:
Next action: Create and distribute a wallet-size contact card to every family member and caregiver.
Aim for a simple 72-hour setup. Start with the basics, then add infant and pet items. Store kits by the main exit. If possible, keep a small duplicate kit in the car.
You don’t need to buy everything at once. Add one or two items per paycheck. Use low-cost substitutions (store-brand food, basic flashlights) and rotate pantry items you already eat.
Next action: Pack water, a flashlight, and a basic first-aid kit into one bag tonight, then build from there.
Prioritize items that keep you hydrated, informed, and safe.
Make a go-bag for each adult and older child. Add a lightweight “grab bag” for the baby and a compact pet kit.
Babies need routine. Pack enough for 3 days, plus a little extra.
Pack these in a small, always-ready infant bag near the main exit.
Pets are family too. Many shelters require pets to be crated.
Check pet-friendly hotels and local shelter policies ahead of time. Practice loading your pet into the carrier so evacuation is calmer.
Protecting meds and documents reduces stress during a move or shelter-in-place. Make a clear medication list and keep copies of prescriptions. For temperature-sensitive meds (insulin, certain injectors), plan safe storage and transport. Talk to your pharmacist or clinician about emergency refills and device needs.
Documents should be portable and protected. Use a waterproof folder for originals and keep scanned copies in an encrypted cloud account and on a labeled USB drive.
Next action: Create a one-page medication list and place it in your documents folder tonight.
Build a simple, complete list:
Take clear photos of each medication label. Save the images with your plan and in the cloud. Ask your pharmacist about emergency refill rules in your area and the best way to keep temperature-sensitive meds safe if power is out (cooler with cold packs, safe storage time, etc.).
Prioritize documents you may need to identify, treat, travel, or re-enter services:
Store originals in a waterproof, portable folder near your go-bag. Keep encrypted digital copies in a reputable cloud account and on a password-protected USB. Consider leaving copies with a trusted out-of-area relative.
Short, regular practice makes plans real. Do a 5-minute home fire drill every three months. Pick a weekend and practice getting everyone to the primary meeting spot. Twice a year, run a tabletop review around the kitchen table: walk through what you’d do for a fire, flood, storm, or quake. Check go-bags and swap expired items at the same time.
Make it kid-friendly. Use simple phrases, assign a helper job, and keep it positive. Practice with pets so carriers and leashes feel normal.
Avoid these common mistakes:
Next action: Schedule a 10-minute fire drill for this weekend and set a 6-month calendar reminder to review your plan.
Add short “if X, then do Y” bullets to your plan for your top two or three risks. Check your city or county site for local hazards and alert systems. Know the difference between sheltering in place and evacuating, and what will trigger each choice.
Home mitigation goes a long way: secure tall furniture in quake zones, know where your gas and water shut-off valves are, and keep gutters clear in fire-prone areas. Learn how local alerts arrive on your phone and radio.
Next action: Pick your top two local hazards and write one action line for each on your plan.
Practice “Drop, Cover, and Hold On” with the whole family. Secure bookshelves, TVs, and water heaters. Keep sturdy shoes under the bed to protect feet from broken glass. After shaking stops, expect aftershocks. Meet at your outside spot, do a headcount, and check for gas leaks before re-entering.
Follow official weather alerts. Shelter in an interior room for severe storms. If water is rising or flood warnings are issued for your area, move to higher ground and avoid driving through water. Charge phones early, keep a power bank ready, and know the safest room in your home.
Plan two ways out of every sleeping room. Test smoke alarms monthly and replace batteries as needed. Keep hallways clear. Sleep with bedroom doors closed to slow fire spread. Practice a nighttime escape: shoes on, grab the small door-side bag, meet at the mailbox.
You don’t need to buy everything at once. Use these budget moves:
Get reputable help:
Quick wins checklist:
Next action: Download the plan template, print the kit checklist, and add one item to your go-bag today.
Next action: Review these notes with your family and add any needed medical or local-policy details to your plan.