Large Family Emergency Kit: 6+ Person Preparedness Guide
Six or more people means bulk storage, clear role delegation, and systems that scale. Here’s how large households plan, store, and execute emergency preparedness effectively.
A large family emergency kit for 6 or more people requires a fundamentally different approach than smaller households. The quantities are larger, but more importantly, the logistics are more complex: more mouths to feed with varying needs, more people to coordinate during evacuation, and a greater diversity of ages, abilities, and requirements. Done right, a large household is actually more resilient than a solo prepper: more hands, more skills, and more capacity to carry and manage supplies.
This guide covers the systems, quantities, and strategies that make large household emergency preparedness work: including bulk storage infrastructure, age-range food planning, multi-vehicle evacuation coordination, and the right products for households of 6–12 people.
Large Household Preparedness Advantages
Six people seems like a harder preparedness problem. In many ways it’s actually easier:
- Economies of scale: A 25 lb bag of rice costs $1.50/lb. Six people buying together versus six singles each buying separately saves 30–50% on bulk supplies.
- Division of labour: Six people can maintain a significantly more comprehensive preparedness system than one or two can. Assign roles, distribute expertise, run parallel tasks during an emergency.
- Physical capacity: Six adults (or adults + older teenagers) can transport substantially more supplies during evacuation. Multiple vehicles dramatically increase total carry capacity.
- Skills diversity: A large household likely includes people with medical training, mechanical skills, cooking expertise, and other competencies that complement each other.
- Morale and resilience: Community is the most effective psychological buffer against disaster stress. Large households have this built in.
Water for 6+ People
| Household Size | 2 Weeks @ 1 gal/day | 2 Weeks @ 2 gal/day | Storage Solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 people | 84 gal | 168 gal | 3× 55-gal drums |
| 8 people | 112 gal | 224 gal | 4× 55-gal drums |
| 10 people | 140 gal | 280 gal | 5× 55-gal drums |
| 12 people | 168 gal | 336 gal | 6× 55-gal drums or 1× 275-gal IBC tote |
Water filtration becomes even more important at large household scale. A gravity filter that can process high volumes: or a dedicated home water filtration system: is the right solution:
- Royal Berkey or Crown Berkey (the large family versions): 6-gallon capacity, 2× the output of the Big Berkey
- Propur ProOne Big+ Gravity Filter: similar capacity at lower price point
- Sawyer Squeeze + gravity setup: high-volume filtering for large groups at lower cost
Bulk Food Planning for 6+ People
At 6+ people, buying bulk from Costco, Sam’s Club, or restaurant supply stores becomes the most cost-efficient approach. Per-calorie cost drops significantly:
2-Week Bulk Food List for 6 Adults
- White rice (50 lb bag): ~90,000 calories; covers ~45 adult-days
- Dried beans (20 lb): protein for the full period
- Rolled oats (15 lb)
- Pasta (15 lb)
- Canned vegetables × 42 (1 per person per day)
- Canned fish and meat × 30
- Peanut butter × 6 large jars
- Crackers × 12 boxes
- Granola bars × 84 (1 per person per day)
- Cooking oil (3 litres)
- Spices, salt, bouillon, condiment packets
- Coffee/tea (6-person, 14-day supply)
Freeze-Dried Supplement for Large Families
At this scale, buying individual freeze-dried buckets per person adds up quickly. Better options:
- Augason Farms 6-month 1-person bucket × 1 per adult = 6-month supply for 6 people from 6 buckets at ~$500 total
- Wise Company Deluxe 1-Year Emergency Food Supply: designed for up to 4 adults, supplement with additional buckets for larger households
- Church preparedness programs: LDS (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) canneries and preparedness resources are open to the public and offer bulk food at cost in many regions
Storage Infrastructure for Large Households
At 6+ people, ad hoc closet storage stops working. You need dedicated storage infrastructure:
- Dedicated preparedness room or large closet: A 10×10 room with full-height shelving can store a 3-month supply for 6–8 people
- Heavy-duty wire shelving units: 6-tier units, 72″ tall, 48″ wide; 4 units along one wall provide ~96 linear feet of shelf space
- 5-gallon food-grade buckets with gamma seal lids: Store bulk dry goods; a 10-bucket set stores ~300 lb of grains and legumes
- IBC tote for water: One 275-gallon tote is easier to manage than multiple 55-gal drums; requires fork or pump access
- Inventory management: A shared spreadsheet or whiteboard with item quantities and expiration dates; review monthly for a household this size
- Separate “immediate access” kit: Keep a 72-hour kit in a go-bag-accessible location separate from bulk storage; don’t dig through the storage room in an emergency
Role Delegation in a Large Family
Six people without clear roles create confusion. Assign explicit responsibility for each preparedness domain:
| Role | Responsibilities | Best Assigned To |
|---|---|---|
| Water Officer | Storage, filtration, rationing, quality | Most methodical adult |
| Food Officer | Inventory, cooking, rationing, rotation | Primary household cook |
| Power Officer | Generator, power station, fuel management | Most mechanically inclined adult |
| Medical Officer | First aid kit, medications, triage | Medically trained person or designated learner |
| Communications Officer | Radio, phone charging, information gathering | Most tech-comfortable adult |
| Security/Logistics | Evacuation coordination, vehicle loading, situational awareness | Physically capable adult |
Multi-Person Evacuation Planning
Evacuating 6+ people is a logistical exercise that must be planned before the emergency:
- Vehicle inventory and capacity: How many vehicles? How many seats? How much cargo? Map this before you need it.
- Load plan: What goes in which vehicle? Water and food first; then gear; then people. Pre-assign.
- Separation protocol: If a vehicle is unavailable or people are separated, where do they go? Designate primary and secondary meeting points.
- Communication plan: Two-way radios between vehicles; designated check-in times; out-of-area contact number everyone knows.
- Special needs passengers: Elderly household members, children, pets: plan loading and transportation specifically for each.
- Trailer: A household of 6+ may benefit from a small utility trailer for additional supply transport capacity.
Multigenerational Households
Many large households include grandparents, teenagers, and young children under one roof. Address each generation’s specific needs:
- Elderly household members: Mobility limitations, medications, medical devices, hearing aids: see our Senior Emergency Kit Guide for complete coverage
- Young children: Formula, diapers, comfort items, age-appropriate food: covered in our Family of 4 Guide
- Teenagers: Can carry their own load, take on real responsibilities; invaluable in a large family emergency
- Adults with disabilities: Integrate specific needs into the household plan: see our Disabilities Emergency Kit Guide
Budget and Cost Savings at Scale
| Category | 6 People, 2 Weeks | 6 People, 1 Month | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Water | $150 (3× 55-gal drums) | $200 (add Berkey filter) | Biggest efficiency gain at scale |
| Food | $200 (grocery bulk) | $600 (+ freeze-dried buckets) | Costco/Sam’s saves 20–30% |
| Power | $400 (power station + stove) | $600 (+ solar panel) | Same infrastructure for 4 or 8 people |
| Storage containers | $100 (buckets + lids) | $150 (+ shelving) | Amortised over all members |
| Total (2 weeks) | ~$850 | ~$1,550 | ~$140/person for 2 weeks |
Recommended Products for Large Households
Crown Berkey Water Filter System: 6-Gallon
The largest Berkey model: designed for large families and groups of up to 150 people at a time. Holds 6 gallons, runs 4 Black Berkey filter elements simultaneously for maximum throughput, and filters up to 26 gallons per hour. For a large household relying on filtered water for cooking and drinking, this is the right-sized gravity filter. Removes bacteria, parasites, heavy metals, and many chemicals without electricity.
- 6-gallon capacity: up to 26 gallons/hour
- 4× Black Berkey filters: 3,000 gal per filter set
- Designed for large families and groups
Camp Chef Expedition 3X Burner Stove
Cooking for 6+ people on a single-burner camp stove is impractical. The Camp Chef Expedition 3X has three 30,000 BTU burners: enough to cook multiple dishes simultaneously for a large family. It runs on standard 1 lb propane canisters or a bulk propane adapter hose. Folds flat for storage and sets up in minutes. The right camp stove when you’re feeding 6–12 people every day during an extended emergency.
- 3 burners × 30,000 BTU: large group cooking
- Works with standard canisters or bulk propane
- Folds flat for compact storage
Augason Farms 1-Year Emergency Food Supply: 4 Person
For a large family needing comprehensive freeze-dried backup, Augason Farms’ 4-person 1-year supply provides the highest volume option in a single purchase. Buy 1.5–2 of these kits and you have a full year of freeze-dried backup for 6–8 people with a 25-year shelf life. No rotation, no management: store it and it’s ready when needed. The most cost-efficient large-volume freeze-dried purchase available.
- 4 person, 1 year: 2,000+ servings
- 25-year shelf life: purchase once
- Multiple varieties to prevent meal fatigue
Large Family Emergency Prep FAQ
How do I keep everyone on the same page with the emergency plan?
A written plan, posted in a visible location (laundry room, utility closet), with each person’s role clearly assigned. Run a household tabletop exercise once a year: not a physical drill, just a conversation: “If there was a power outage for 2 weeks, who does what?” Update the plan as household composition changes. Ensure every adult and older teenager knows the evacuation meeting points, emergency contacts, and their specific role.
Should a large household have one shared kit or individual kits?
Both. The household should have a shared bulk supply (water, food, power, first aid) that is centrally managed. Each adult and older teenager should also have an individual go-bag with 72 hours of personal supplies (food bars, water filter, medications, documents). This way, if the household must split up during evacuation, each person is independently functional for 3 days. The shared supply is for shelter-in-place; the individual bags are for evacuation.
What’s the most cost-efficient way to buy food for a large family?
Warehouse clubs (Costco, Sam’s Club, BJ’s) for canned goods, rice, oats, and beans at bulk pricing: typically 20–40% cheaper than grocery stores. Restaurant supply stores (Gordon Food Service, Restaurant Depot) for commercial-size canned goods and bulk dry goods. LDS (Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) home storage centres are open to the public in many states and offer long-term food storage at very competitive prices with no membership required.