72-Hour Family Emergency Plan — Free Printable PDF
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Most families mean to have a plan. Few actually write one down.
This free 4-page printable walks your family through the five core pillars of 72-hour preparedness — water, food, shelter, communications, and critical documents — in plain language, without the fear-mongering.
Fill it out together. Print it. Put it somewhere everyone can find it.
What’s included:
- The 5 Pillars planning template with fill-in fields for your household
- Shelter-in-place vs. evacuate decision guide
- Evacuation route map page with vehicle prep checklist
- Family roles & responsibilities assignment table
- Children’s separation protocol
- 30-day review reminder with drill type selector
Free instant PDF download. No purchase necessary — just your email address.
Description
Most emergency plans live in someone’s head. That’s not a plan. That’s a wish.
When the power goes out, the roads close, or the alert hits your phone at 2 a.m., your family shouldn’t be figuring out where to go, who to call, or whether you have enough water. That conversation should already be done.
The 72-Hour Family Emergency Plan from SurvivalTechnician.com is a printable PDF template your family fills out together — calmly, at the kitchen table, before anything happens. It takes about an hour. It covers everything that matters. And it will be there, on paper, when your phone battery is dead and the Wi-Fi is down.
This is not a doomsday document. It’s a confidence document.
WHAT’S INSIDE — 4 PAGES OF STRUCTURED PLANNING
Page 1 — Cover & Family Info Includes your family name, date completed, number of adults and children, and a clear summary of how to use the plan. Designed to live on your refrigerator, in your go-bag, or in a binder with your important documents.
Page 2 — The 5 Pillars
The core of the plan. Five sections, each with fill-in fields tailored to your household:
Pillar 1: Water — Daily target, 72-hour supply goal, current stored gallons, primary purification method, and backup method. Built around FEMA’s 1 gallon per person per day standard.
Pillar 2: Food — Calorie targets per person, a checkbox inventory of what you currently have accessible, cooking method if power is out, and space for dietary needs and allergies.
Pillar 3: Shelter — A side-by-side decision table: when to shelter in place vs. when to evacuate. Fields for your primary address, two bug-out destinations, and estimated drive times.
Pillar 4: Communications — Emergency alert enrollment, weather radio, two family meeting points, and your out-of-area contact. Includes a practical note on why an outside-region contact is the most underrated move in any local emergency.
Pillar 5: Documents & Finance — A 10-item document checklist (IDs, passports, insurance cards, prescriptions, deeds, and more) with a checkbox and location field for each. Plus an emergency cash field, because ATMs go offline too.
Page 3 — Evacuation Route Map A large blank map area to draw or print your primary route, with labeled waypoints (starting point, two waypoints, destination). Followed by a two-row route table for your primary and alternate routes — description, distance, drive time, and road type. A hazard-avoidance freewrite section. And a 10-item vehicle emergency kit checklist: jumper cables, first aid kit, water, blanket, paper maps, flashlight, cash, phone charger, tow strap, and duct tape.
Page 4 — Family Roles & 30-Day Review A seven-role assignment table — Plan Coordinator, Water Manager, Food Manager, Communications Lead, First Aid Lead, Pet/Livestock, and Vehicle Responsibility — with a backup person for each role. Neighbor coordination fields with space to note skills and resources. A children’s separation protocol designed to be memorized, not just written down. And a 30-day review reminder box where you schedule your next drill, select the drill type, and name who leads it.
WHY A PRINTED PLAN BEATS A DIGITAL ONE
Your phone needs power. Cloud storage needs internet. A printed plan in a waterproof sleeve needs nothing. The families who come through emergencies calmly are the ones who already had the conversation — who goes where, who calls whom, who grabs the dog. This plan forces that conversation.
WHO THIS IS FOR
- Families with children who want a simple, structured starting point
- Households who’ve been meaning to get organized but haven’t sat down to do it
- New homeowners or renters who’ve never thought through their evacuation options
- Anyone who already has supplies but hasn’t connected them into an actual plan
WHAT YOU GET
- Instant PDF download (4 pages, letter size, print-ready)
- Designed for home printing or any print shop
- Brand-consistent with the SurvivalTechnician BOB Checklist — pair them together
- Fillable by hand — no special software required
- Includes affiliate disclosure in footer per FTC guidelines
HOW TO USE IT
- Download and print the PDF (standard letter paper, any home printer)
- Sit down with your household — all adults, older kids too
- Fill out each section together — this is the point, the conversation matters
- Store one copy somewhere visible (fridge, binder, bedside)
- Put a second copy in your go-bag
- Set a calendar reminder to review it annually or after any major life change
Preparedness isn’t about expecting the worst. It’s about not being caught unprepared when normal life gets interrupted — and it always does, eventually.
Download it free. Fill it out this weekend. Then put it somewhere your family can actually find it.
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