Emergency Kit Under $150

I Built My Emergency Kit for Under $150 โ€” Here's Exactly What's In It | SurvivElle
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I Built My Emergency Kit for Under $150 โ€” Here's Exactly What's In It

Affiliate Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. I may earn a small commission on purchases at no extra cost to you. Full disclosure โ†’

I hear the same thing from women every time I talk about emergency preparedness.

"I know I need to do this. I just don't know where to start. And I can't afford to spend a fortune on gear I might never use."

Both of those things are completely understandable. And both of them have a solution.

I built a complete, functional 72-hour emergency kit for under $150. Not a "starter kit" that leaves out the important stuff. Not a curated Amazon list of products I've never touched. A real kit I would actually rely on โ€” with real prices I verified myself.

Here is exactly what I bought and why.

The Rules I Set Before Shopping

Before I spent a single dollar I set three non-negotiable rules:

  1. Every item had to earn its place. Nothing goes in because it sounds cool or looks good in a flat-lay photo. Every item solves a specific problem I might actually face.
  2. Function over aesthetics. No "for her" premium pricing for the same product in a different color. No pink tax.
  3. Female-specific needs get addressed. This kit covers what most survival kits leave out.

The Complete Kit

Water โ€” $22

  • Sawyer Squeeze Water Filter โ€” $30 (but regularly on sale for $22). This filters 100,000 gallons and weighs 3 ounces. It is the single best value purchase in emergency preparedness. Non-negotiable.
  • Aquatabs Water Purification Tablets โ€” $8. 50 tablets, each treats 1 liter. For when the filter is not enough โ€” viruses require chemical treatment. Lightweight, 5-year shelf life.

Food โ€” $28

  • CLIF Bars x12 โ€” $14. 240 calories each. 12 bars provides approximately 2,880 calories โ€” roughly one day for most women under stress. Shelf stable, no cooking required, familiar taste reduces stress.
  • Emergency Food Bars x2 packs โ€” $14. 3,600 calorie bars designed specifically for emergency use. 5-year shelf life. Two packs adds another two days of calorie coverage.

First Aid โ€” $45

This is where most budget kits fail. A $12 first aid tin with a dozen bandages is not a trauma kit. I invested here because first aid is where the kit either works or it does not.

  • RATS Tourniquet โ€” $18. Military-trusted. One-handed application. If something goes badly wrong this is the item that saves a life. Non-negotiable.
  • Israeli Pressure Bandage โ€” $8. The standard for controlling serious bleeding. Used by military medics worldwide.
  • QuikClot Hemostatic Gauze โ€” $12. Stops serious bleeding faster than standard gauze. Worth every dollar.
  • Nitrile Gloves x6 pairs โ€” $7. Never treat wounds without gloves. Six pairs covers multiple uses.

Light and Power โ€” $28

  • Black Diamond Spot 400 Headlamp โ€” $18. Hands-free light is not a luxury. It is essential. The Spot 400 has 400 lumens, red night vision mode, and lasts 200+ hours on low. Best headlamp at this price point.
  • Anker PowerCore 10000 Power Bank โ€” $22 (frequently on sale for $18-20). Charges most phones 2-3 times. Always charged. Always in the bag.

Documents and Cash โ€” $8

  • Waterproof Document Bag โ€” $8. Copies of your ID, passport photo page, insurance cards, medication list, and emergency contacts. Laminated paper works too. This costs almost nothing and matters enormously.

Female-Specific โ€” $12

  • Feminine hygiene supplies โ€” $8. One full cycle worth โ€” tampons, pads, pain reliever. Stress alters cycles. Plan for the unexpected.
  • SABRE Pepper Spray โ€” $15 (I found it for $12 on sale). A woman alone during a displacement event needs a safety tool. Accessible, not buried in the bag.

The Bag โ€” $22

  • 5.11 Rush 24 Backpack โ€” $110 retail but I found mine at a military surplus store for $22. If you cannot find this deal, the Amazon Basics 40L Backpack is $28 and fully functional. What you need is a bag with a load-bearing hip belt and enough capacity. Skip the pink version.

The Total

Water: $22 | Food: $28 | First Aid: $45 | Light/Power: $28 | Documents: $8 | Female-specific: $12 | Bag: $22

Total: $165 at full retail โ€” under $150 with sales and substitutions.

โœ… What This Kit Covers

Hydration for unlimited duration (with filter and purification tablets) ยท Three days of food ยท Trauma-capable first aid ยท Communications power ยท Documentation ยท Female-specific needs ยท Personal safety. This is a real kit. Not a prop.

What Is Not In This Kit โ€” And Why

I deliberately left out several items that appear on most emergency kit lists because I believe in the honest truth about what belongs in a go-bag versus what belongs in your home storage:

  • A tent or shelter: A go-bag assumes you are going somewhere with shelter. If you need field shelter you are building a bug out bag โ€” a different and more expensive kit.
  • A generator: This is home preparedness, not go-bag territory.
  • 30 days of food: A go-bag is for 72 hours. Your home pantry covers longer scenarios.
๐Ÿ”—
Related Read
The Pink Tax: Why Your Survival Gear Could Actually Fail You โ†’

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Elle โ€” Founder, SurvivElle
Real preparedness built by women, for women. No fear, no fluff โ€” just the truth and a plan. Ready for Anything, Everyday!