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Not sure which kit is right for your mission?

What are you preparing for? On-duty response, family preparedness, outdoor adventure... Answer 5 quick questions and we'll match you with the right gear.

<h2>Your pre-tax dollars can fund your preparedness.</h2>

Your pre-tax dollars can fund your preparedness.

Most of our trauma kits and first aid supplies qualify for HSA and FSA reimbursement. Don't let your benefits expire — invest them in gear that could save a life.

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<h2>Our Mission.</h2>

Our Mission.

We've been downrange. We know what it costs to be unprepared. ViTAC was built by U.S. Army Special Operations veterans to make sure the people who run toward the threat — and the families who depend on them — have gear that works when everything is on the line.

— ViTAC Solutions Founders | 40+ years combined Special Operations experience

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Add'l Info

If you only remember this:

  • A 72-hour survival kit is the minimum recommended by FEMA and emergency management agencies for disaster readiness
  • The right kit depends on your scenario: evacuation (go bags), sheltering at home (bucket kits), or vehicle emergencies (roadside kits)
  • Quality matters—field-tested components, long shelf life (5+ years), and trauma-grade medical supplies can make the difference when it counts

What Are Emergency Survival Kits?

Emergency survival kits are pre-assembled collections of essential supplies designed to sustain you and your family during disasters, power outages, natural catastrophes, or evacuation scenarios. These kits typically include food, water, first aid, shelter, fire-starting tools, and signaling devices—everything you need when emergency services are delayed or unavailable.

At ViTAC Solutions, every survival kit is built around the core principle of field-tested reliability. We don't include filler items. Our kits follow FEMA guidelines and expert recommendations, ensuring you have the right gear when seconds matter.

Why Emergency Preparedness Kits Matter

Natural disasters don't wait for convenient timing. Hurricanes, earthquakes, wildfires, blizzards, and floods can strike with little warning, leaving families stranded without power, clean water, or access to medical care. A well-stocked disaster preparedness kit bridges the gap between crisis and rescue, providing critical nutrition, hydration, trauma care, and shelter until help arrives or conditions stabilize.

The difference between a generic kit and a professional-grade system comes down to component quality, caloric density, medical capability, and real-world testing. Our kits are designed by veterans and survival experts who understand what works under pressure.

How to Choose the Right Survival Kit

Not all emergency kits serve the same purpose. Here's how to match the right kit to your situation:

Scenario: Are you evacuating (wildfire, flood) or sheltering in place (hurricane, blizzard)? Go bags and bug out bags are built for mobility with backpack or rolling bag carry. Bucket kits and shelter-in-place systems are designed for home storage with extended supplies.

Duration: Most kits cover 72 hours, the standard FEMA recommendation. For extended grid-down scenarios or remote locations, consider 7-day or 2-week systems with higher calorie counts and water filtration.

Number of people: Kits scale from individual EDC (everyday carry) systems to 10-person family or workplace kits. Children's kits include age-appropriate food, comfort items, and smaller gear. Pet kits ensure your animals aren't left behind.

Environment: Vehicle kits include roadside tools like jump starters and tow ropes. Waterproof dry bags protect gear during floods or river crossings. Classroom lockdown kits address active-threat scenarios with sanitation and trauma supplies.

Medical capability: Basic kits include bandages and antiseptic. Trauma-grade kits add tourniquets, chest seals, hemostatic gauze, and airway tools for severe hemorrhage or penetrating injuries.

Shelf life: Look for 5-year minimum on food and water. Freeze-dried meals can last 15+ years. Regularly rotate perishable items like batteries and medications.

What's Inside Our Survival Kits

Our collection includes over 40 expert-curated kits covering every preparedness scenario. You'll find 72-hour bug out bags with dynamo flashlights and tube tents, 5-gallon hurricane buckets with water purification and sanitation, children's kits with comfort items and kid-friendly nutrition, roadside emergency systems with jump starters and tow ropes, and long-term evacuation packs with 7+ days of freeze-dried meals and fishing gear.

Premium kits feature components from trusted manufacturers: Sawyer water filters, Datrex emergency rations, ESEE knives, Maxpedition bags, and Nitecore lighting. Trauma kits include TCCC-grade (Tactical Combat Casualty Care) supplies like windlass tourniquets and vented chest seals. Every item is selected for durability, caloric efficiency, and proven performance in the field.

Who These Kits Are For (And Who They're Not For)

These kits are for: Families in hurricane, earthquake, or wildfire zones who need grab-and-go readiness. Preppers building layered emergency systems for home, vehicle, and workplace. Parents who want age-appropriate kits for children with comfort items and proper nutrition. Homeowners preparing for extended power outages or winter storms. Pet owners who refuse to leave animals behind during evacuations.

These kits are not: Substitutes for professional medical training or emergency services. Guaranteed solutions for every scenario (preparedness is about improving odds, not eliminating risk). Long-term wilderness survival systems (most are designed for 72 hours to 2 weeks). Tactical gear for combat situations (though many include field-tested military components).

Explore Related Preparedness Resources

Building a complete preparedness strategy goes beyond a single kit. Explore our trauma first aid kits for advanced medical capability, survival guides and manuals including SAS Survival Handbook and The Ultimate Survival Medicine Guide, fire-starting tools like weatherproof ignition kits and ferrocerium rods, and water filtration systems for long-term hydration solutions. For tactical medical readiness, browse our IFAK and bleeding control collection.

Start Building Your Readiness Today

Disasters don't announce themselves. The time to prepare is now, when stores are stocked, roads are clear, and you can make decisions without panic. Whether you're starting with a compact EDC kit for your vehicle or building a comprehensive family system, every step toward preparedness is a step toward peace of mind.

Browse our complete collection of field-tested survival kits and find the system that fits your family, your environment, and your readiness goals.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should be in a 72-hour emergency survival kit?
A complete 72-hour kit should include food (minimum 1,200 calories per person per day), water (1 gallon per person per day or filtration), first aid supplies, shelter (emergency blanket or tube tent), fire-starting tools, flashlight or headlamp, whistle for signaling, and hygiene items. Premium kits add trauma medical gear, multi-tools, paracord, and emergency communication devices.

How do I choose between a bug out bag and a shelter-in-place kit?
Bug out bags are designed for evacuation scenarios where you need to leave quickly—wildfires, floods, or mandatory evacuations. They prioritize portability with backpack or rolling bag carry. Shelter-in-place kits are for staying home during hurricanes, blizzards, or power outages, with larger supplies stored in buckets or totes. Many families maintain both types for layered preparedness.

How long do survival kit food and water supplies last?
Most emergency food bars and water pouches have a 5-year shelf life when stored in cool, dry conditions. Freeze-dried meals can last 15-25 years. Water filtration systems like Sawyer filters can purify thousands of gallons. Check expiration dates annually and rotate supplies as needed. Avoid storing kits in hot vehicles or direct sunlight, which degrades food and water faster.

Are children's survival kits different from adult kits?
Yes. Children's kits include age-appropriate food (familiar flavors, smaller portions), comfort items like coloring books and toys to reduce stress, child-sized gear like ponchos and blankets, and hand-rechargeable flashlights that don't require battery changes. Caloric needs are adjusted for smaller body sizes, and packaging is designed to be less intimidating for young children during crises.

What's the difference between a basic first aid kit and a trauma kit in survival gear?
Basic first aid kits handle minor injuries: cuts, scrapes, burns, sprains, and common medications. Trauma kits are designed for life-threatening hemorrhage and include tourniquets, hemostatic gauze, chest seals for penetrating wounds, nasopharyngeal airways, and trauma shears. If your kit includes outdoor activities, remote locations, or disaster scenarios with delayed EMS, trauma-grade medical supplies are critical.

Can I use these kits for camping or backpacking trips?
Many of our kits work well for outdoor recreation, especially compact go bags and waterproof dry bag systems. However, kits designed for disaster preparedness may be heavier than ultralight backpacking gear and include items like emergency radios or sanitation supplies that aren't necessary for planned trips. EDC kits and bug out bags are the most versatile for dual-use scenarios.

How do I maintain and update my emergency survival kit?
Inspect your kit every 6-12 months. Check expiration dates on food, water, and medications, and replace as needed. Test batteries in flashlights and radios, or switch to hand-crank models. Rotate clothing for seasonal appropriateness and growing children. Update emergency contact information and local evacuation routes. Store kits in accessible locations away from extreme temperatures, and ensure every family member knows where kits are located.

Do I need a separate survival kit for my vehicle?
Yes. Vehicle kits should include roadside-specific tools like jumper cables or jump starters, tire repair or inflator, tow straps, reflective triangles or flares, and winter supplies (blankets, hand warmers, ice scraper) if you live in cold climates. Add a compact 72-hour kit with food, water, and first aid in case you're stranded. Our roadside emergency kits combine both mechanical tools and survival essentials in one system.

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