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Emergency Preparedness

Family Smoke Preparedness Checklist

Prepare cleaner air, emergency supplies, medications, alerts, evacuation routes, and family communication before smoke arrives.

2 min read Updated July 15, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

Prepare before fire season: register for alerts, identify two evacuation routes, create cleaner indoor air, and keep medications and go bags ready.

2-Minute Summary

A family smoke plan connects air-quality protection with wildfire evacuation readiness. It should cover alerts, communication, cleaner indoor air, respirators, medications, food, water, power needs, children, pets, transportation, and at least two routes out. Review the plan before high-risk weather, not after smoke is already inside the home.

Quick Action Guide

Register for alerts

Enroll every adult in local emergency alerts and keep a battery-powered information source.

Alerts and evacuation orders outrank website dashboards.

Prepare cleaner air

Select a room, obtain filters, and test equipment before smoke season.

Label replacement filters and keep cords and exits safe.

Build go bags

Include medicines, documents, water, food, chargers, clothing, N95s, and household-specific needs.

Store bags where they can be grabbed quickly.

Practice leaving

Drive two routes, choose a meeting point, and assign responsibilities for children, pets, and people needing assistance.

Leave immediately when ordered and earlier when conditions require.

Build one plan for smoke and evacuation

Smoke preparation and evacuation planning belong together. A home may have unhealthy air while remaining safe to occupy, or fire behavior may require immediate evacuation even when the AQI is not yet high. Your plan should make both decisions easier.

Alerts and information

  • Register for county, city, and utility alerts.
  • Enable emergency alerts on household phones.
  • Keep a battery or hand-crank radio.
  • Bookmark official fire, weather, AQI, and evacuation pages.
  • Choose one out-of-area contact who can help reconnect separated family members.

Evacuation routes and meeting points

Identify at least two routes out of the neighborhood. Drive them in daylight and consider how traffic, closed gates, downed lines, livestock trailers, or smoke could affect them. Choose a meeting point well outside the hazard area.

Cleaner indoor air

Select a clean-air room, test portable cleaners, verify HVAC filter compatibility, and store replacement filters. Make sure air-conditioning and recirculation settings are understood before smoke season. Identify public cleaner-air or cooling locations for situations when the home is too smoky or hot.

Medication and medical needs

Keep an updated medication list, copies of prescriptions, clinician contacts, insurance information, and essential devices. CDC recommends preparing a 7- to 10-day prescription supply when possible. Plan for refrigerated medication, oxygen, mobility equipment, and backup power.

Go bags

Include water, shelf-stable food, medications, first aid, flashlight, radio, batteries, chargers, cash, keys, maps, important documents, N95 respirators, clothing, hygiene items, and comfort items. Add glasses, hearing-aid batteries, menstrual products, infant supplies, and disability-specific equipment.

Children and schools

Know school closure, pickup, and reunification procedures. List approved pickup adults. Include medications, copies of action plans, and comfort items. Practice the plan without using frightening detail.

Pets and animals

Prepare carriers, leashes, identification, photographs, medical records, food, water, bowls, litter, waste supplies, and medication. Confirm which shelters, hotels, friends, or boarding locations accept animals. Large-animal owners need trailers, routes, and destinations planned early.

Transportation

Keep fuel or vehicle charge above a practical minimum during red-flag periods. Store a vehicle kit and paper map. Arrange help for anyone who does not drive or needs accessible transportation.

Practice and update

Run a short drill: receive a pretend alert, gather people and animals, load essential items, and drive the route. Note delays and adjust the plan. Update contacts and supplies twice a year.

Leave early

Do not delay evacuation to gather property, improve indoor air, or wait for the AQI to change. Fire and evacuation instructions take priority.

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should we review the plan?

Review at least yearly and before high-risk weather, then update after moves, medication changes, or new household needs.

How much medication should we keep?

CDC suggests preparing a 7- to 10-day supply when possible. Follow pharmacy, insurance, and clinician rules.

Do we need N95 respirators?

Include properly fitting NIOSH-approved N95s for adults who may need to be outdoors in smoke. They do not replace evacuation.

What belongs in a go bag?

Medicines, documents, water, food, first aid, chargers, radio, flashlight, clothing, hygiene items, maps, and household-specific supplies.

Should every person have a bag?

A shared kit can work, but distributing essentials prevents one lost bag from eliminating all supplies.

How do we plan for pets?

Prepare carriers, leashes, food, water, medication, records, identification, and pet-friendly destinations.

What if someone uses powered medical equipment?

Plan batteries, charging, transportation, backup locations, and utility medical-baseline programs where available.

How can children participate?

Give age-appropriate jobs, practice calmly, include comfort items, and teach the meeting point and emergency contact.

When should we leave?

Follow local orders. Leave earlier if instructed by your plan, if anyone needs extra time, or if you feel unsafe.

Can the website map replace official alerts?

No. The map is a convenience tool; verify information with official local agencies.

Take it with you

Family Smoke Preparedness Checklist Quick Guide

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