Skip to content
CSH Handbook
72-hour kit pillar

The 72-Hour Emergency Kit for UK Households

A nine-section household kit, built for UK realities — storm-driven power cuts, boil notices, regional supply disruption. Calm. Legal. Sourced from UK supermarkets.

Last updated 2026-05-12 · Reviewed by Connor Dullaway

TL;DR

A complete UK 72-hour kit covers nine areas: water, food, light, power/comms, first aid, documents, cash, warmth, and the family plan. Most US prepper kits are wrong for UK households. The full breakdown — what to buy, where, and what to skip — is in the handbook. The free preview below covers Water in full.

72 hrs

UK Gov & EU Civil Protection household baseline

9 sections

What a complete UK household kit covers

~£180

Typical from-scratch UK build cost

Annual

Rotation cadence (suggested: BST start)

Why 72 hours

Three days is the consensus window across UK Government, NHS, EU Civil Protection, and the Met Office. Most localised disruptions in the UK — Storm Arwen, Storm Éowyn, the 2007 floods, the 2019 Whaley Bridge dam incident, regional water main failures — are resolved or substantially recovered within that window for most affected households.

A household that can self-supply for 72 hours becomes invisible to emergency services in the best way: it doesn’t need them. That frees responders to reach people who genuinely can’t cope.

The nine-section kit, at a glance

Most US prepper content over-engineers some of these and ignores others. UK households have a different risk profile and a different legal/retail context. Here’s the structure — with a free deep-dive on Water below, and the rest covered in detail in the handbook.

1. Water

Storage, treatment, boil notices, the 200 L hot-water tank trick most UK households don’t know about. Full preview below.

Free preview below ↓

2. Food (no-cook bias)

3 days × 2,000 kcal × people. UK supermarket buying list. Calories vs convenience trade-offs. What to skip from US MRE marketing.

Read in the handbook →

3. Light

Why head-torches not torches. Lithium vs alkaline storage life. Lantern selection. Glow-stick rationale for child stress.

Read in the handbook →

4. Power & comms

Power bank sizing. UK-legal radios (PMR446, DAB+). Charging strategy. UK Emergency Alerts system, explained.

Read in the handbook →

5. First aid (NHS-aligned)

A genuine NHS-aligned list. Prescription rotation. Paediatric considerations. What “tactical” first aid kits get wrong.

Read in the handbook →

6. Documents

The ziplock pack: passport, NHS number, insurance, tenancy, prescriptions, out-of-region contacts. What to photocopy and why.

Read in the handbook →

7. Cash

How much, which denominations, why no £50s, when card networks fail (the 2024 CrowdStrike outage as case study).

Read in the handbook →

8. Warmth

Foil blankets, sleeping bag selection, camping stove safety. Why CO kills more UK households than any other emergency cause.

Read in the handbook →

9. The Family Plan

The bit households skip. Roles, locations, decision points, shut-off locations. Printable templates in the handbook.

Read in the handbook →

Free preview — Water

Here’s one of the nine sections in full. The rest of the handbook follows the same depth and citation standard.

How much water

The working figure for a UK 72-hour kit is 4.5 litres per person per day: 1.5 litres for drinking and 3 litres for hygiene and minimal cooking. A family of four needs roughly 54 litres on hand. Bottled spring water from any UK supermarket works; rotate annually.

The 200-litre store you didn’t know about

A typical UK loft cold-water tank holds 200+ litres of usable water. In an emergency that water is drinkable after boiling or chemical treatment. Most UK households don’t know it’s there. The handbook covers identification, access, isolation, and treatment.

Filters

Add one portable water filter (Sawyer Mini or LifeStraw Personal) per adult. These are sub-£25 retail in the UK and treat questionable tap water if a boil-water notice is issued. Filters do not remove chemical contamination. For chemical events you boil; for biological events filters or chlorine work.

One thing not to do

Don’t store water in old fizzy-drink bottles. Residual sugar feeds bacteria. Use new food-grade containers or unopened bottled water rotated annually.

Common UK questions

  • Brita filter? For taste, not for contamination. Don’t rely on it during a boil notice.
  • Water butt? Garden water is non-potable. Useful for flushing and washing only.
  • Where to fill containers? Tap water, refrigerated, rotated annually. Treat as “just in case” not “sterile forever”.

What the handbook adds (that this page doesn’t)

  • The full nine-section deep dive — same depth as the water preview, ×8 more sections
  • UK retailer sourcing tables — Tesco, Aldi, Argos, Decathlon, with current price ranges
  • The UK regional risk map — flood corridors, storm exposure, supply chokepoints
  • The Family Plan templates — printable, ready to fill in
  • Medical kit decisions — NHS-aligned, no fantasy supplies
  • Legal grey areas — multi-tools, knives, generators, water collection
  • Annual rotation calendar — what to refresh and when

Frequently asked questions

Why 72 hours specifically?
It’s the window where UK Government, EU Civil Protection, and most national emergency services align in their advice. Most localised UK disruptions are resolved within 72 hours.
Should I just buy a prepacked kit off Amazon?
Most prepacked “emergency kits” on Amazon are US-spec, oversized, and rarely opened after purchase. Build the kit yourself using the structure above and you’ll spend the same or less and actually know where it is when you need it.
Is it legal to keep a knife in an emergency kit in the UK?
A multi-tool with a folding blade under 3 inches (e.g. Victorinox Huntsman) is legal to own and store. Locking blades and longer fixed blades have legal implications for carrying in public; the handbook covers the household exemptions.
Where do I keep the kit?
Sealed plastic crate or backpack, accessible in the dark in under 60 seconds. Not the loft. Not the car boot. Under the stairs, in a hallway cupboard, or at the bottom of a wardrobe near the front door.
How often should I check it?
Annual rotation. Pick a memorable date — start of British Summer Time is a common choice. The handbook has a full rotation calendar.

Primary sources cited

  1. UK Cabinet Office — Prepare campaign
  2. EU Civil Protection — Preparedness Union Strategy 2025
  3. NHS — First aid kit recommendations
  4. National Grid ESO — Winter Outlook
Get the free checklist
8-page UK kit PDF
Get it →