Texas shelter readiness
Texas Tornado
Use a Texas tornado checklist for fast shelter access, debris safety, alerts, and outage support.
Best for
Put your highest-priority shelter items where they can be reached in minutes, not in deep storage.
What this page covers
Tornado kits work best when they support a fast shelter move and help the household handle debris and outages after the storm. That means a strong tornado checklist goes beyond canned food and batteries. Most households also need a faster document plan, clearer communication habits, and a simple way to keep the highest-priority items together instead of scattered across rooms.
Good first action
Head protection, sturdy shoes, lights, and a backup alert tool are worth staging near the shelter location.
Build your family checklist
Five-minute setup for a household-sized emergency supply plan.
How this checklist helps
Tornado kits work best when they support a fast shelter move and help the household handle debris and outages after the storm. That means a strong tornado checklist goes beyond canned food and batteries. Most households also need a faster document plan, clearer communication habits, and a simple way to keep the highest-priority items together instead of scattered across rooms.
Texas households benefit from planning around timing as much as item count. Build the 72-hour baseline first, then add the fast shelter and cleanup layer that matches this hazard. Use the generator above to size quantities by family members, pets, and vehicles, and use the sample list below as a static planning model you can print or compare.
Static sample
Sample four-person three-day tornado kit
This example adds shelter-speed and debris-safety items to a standard family baseline.
| Item | Quantity | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Water | 12 gallons | A four-person household using the standard one gallon per person per day baseline for three days. |
| Shelf-stable meals and snacks | 36 meal equivalents | Three meal equivalents per day for four people, using foods that are easy to serve during an outage. |
| Flashlights or lanterns | 4 | Enough light for bedrooms, bathrooms, and a shared living area during a night outage. |
| Battery or hand-crank radio | 1 | A backup way to receive alerts when power, Wi-Fi, or mobile charging becomes unreliable. |
| First aid kit | 1 household kit | Stock the basics first, then add allergy medicine, child-safe medications, and other family-specific items. |
| Phone chargers and backup battery | 1 household set | Helps keep communication, maps, and emergency contact access available during disruptions. |
| Helmets or head protection | 4 | Useful when the household needs to move fast into an interior shelter space. |
| Whistles and flashlights | 4 sets | Helpful when noise, dust, darkness, or debris make communication harder. |
| Printed shelter map and contacts | 1 packet | Keeps the family plan usable even at night or during a sudden power loss. |
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