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Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE โ€” ANSI/OSHA Compliant
Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE โ€” ANSI/OSHA Compliant

BrightCare First Aid Kit Refill Supplies, 154 Piece First Aid Restock Pack Review (2026)

Is the BrightCare 154-Piece First Aid Restock Pack the right refill for your kit?

Short answer: Yes โ€” if what you want is the most pieces for the money and you do not need a documented ANSI fill class on the packaging. The BrightCare pack ships 154 pieces for $24.99, nearly double the piece count of the Urgent First Aid ANSI Class A Refill Kit at the same price tier. What it does not ship with is an ANSI Z308.1 class rating or a stated person count โ€” it is a general-purpose, brand-agnostic restock pack, not a formal compliance refill. If your kit or cabinet needs a documented Class A or Class B fill for an inspection binder, buy that instead; if you just want a first aid box that stays full, this is a strong value pick.

Refill packs get bought for two very different reasons: some buyers need a specific ANSI classification on record, and most buyers just want the box on the wall to not be empty. The BrightCare First Aid Kit Refill Supplies, 154 Piece First Aid Restock Pack is built for the second group. This review looks at where it sits in the First Aid Kit Refills collection, which kits and cabinets in the First Aid Kits collection it works well with, and when a formally classed refill is the smarter buy instead.

Editorial verdict: 4.2/5. At $24.99, the BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack delivers the most pieces per dollar in its price tier โ€” the tradeoff is that it carries no ANSI Z308.1 class rating, so it is a volume pick for general restocking, not a documented compliance refill.

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As an Amazon Associate, WC Safety earns from qualifying purchases. Prices and availability are accurate as of the date shown and are subject to change.

Pros

  • 154 pieces for $24.99 โ€” the highest piece count at this price point in the refill lineup
  • Brand-agnostic: drops into any kit, cabinet, bag, or drawer that needs general restocking
  • No proprietary format โ€” works across households, vehicles, and light office use, not just one container type
  • Cheaper per piece than most of the ANSI-classed refills stocked nearby
  • Simple, no-decision-overhead reorder for anyone not chasing a specific compliance class

Cons

  • No ANSI Z308.1 class printed on the pack โ€” cannot serve as your only proof of a compliant fill
  • No stated person-count rating, so sizing a kit to it is a judgment call, not a spec lookup
  • Bulk pack, not injury-type-organized like the MFASCO alternative
  • Not the right pick if your workplace inspection requires a documented Class A or Class B refill

Who the BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack is for

  • Home and vehicle first aid buyers who want a deep restock without shopping a compliance spec sheet.
  • Facilities teams supplementing a formally classed kit from the Workplace First Aid Kits collection with extra volume of the items that run out fastest.
  • Budget-conscious buyers comparing options in the First Aid Kit Refills collection who care more about total pieces than a printed class letter.
  • Anyone restocking a non-regulated kit โ€” a home cabinet, boat, RV, or personal bag โ€” where ANSI classification was never the point.

What the BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack does well

The best piece count in its price bracket

At $24.99, 154 pieces is nearly double what the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill ships for $24.95, and it edges out the First Aid Only 90583 at the identical $24.99 price. For buyers who are restocking a kit that does not need to satisfy a specific ANSI class on paper, raw piece count is the number that matters, and BrightCare wins it at this price tier.

Brand-agnostic, format-agnostic restocking

Nothing about this pack is tied to a proprietary container. It restocks any kit, bag, drawer, or small cabinet that needs a general top-up โ€” a home first aid box, a glovebox kit, a break-room drawer, or a second kit sitting in a Medique 712MTM 3-Shelf First Aid Cabinet. If the container just needs more wound-care volume, this pack fits.

Strong economics against a full kit replacement

A 154-piece refill for $24.99 is a fraction of the cost of buying a new kit outright. Compared to a mid-tier cabinet like the First Aid Only 90575 3-Shelf Cabinet at $143.87, refilling the fill rather than replacing the container is the obvious money-saver, and BrightCare's higher piece count stretches that refill further before the next reorder.

A low-friction reorder anchor

Because it is a single line item with no class-matching to double-check, BrightCare is an easy default to set on a recurring reorder for kits that do not carry a formal compliance requirement โ€” inspect periodically, reorder when supplies run thin, done.

Where the BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack falls short

No ANSI classification on the label

This is the pack's central limitation: the title and packaging carry no ANSI Z308.1 Class A or Class B designation and no stated person-count rating. If your workplace kit or cabinet needs a documented class for an OSHA inspection or an internal safety audit, this pack cannot be the sole answer โ€” the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill or First Aid Only 90583 are the classed picks at the same price. Our OSHA first aid kit requirements explained reference breaks down what a documented ANSI Z308.1-2021 fill actually needs to include.

Sizing is a judgment call, not a spec

Without a stated person-count rating, matching this refill to a specific kit size means estimating rather than looking up a number. For a small kit or drawer it is plenty; for a large multi-shelf cabinet, plan on multiple packs and check fill levels directly rather than relying on a rated capacity.

Bulk organization, not injury-type organization

Like most volume-focused refills, the pack arrives as bulk components rather than sorted by injury type. The MFASCO ANSI Class A First Aid Kit Refill Pack organizes its fill by injury type, which speeds up shelf-loading if several people restock the same cabinet.

BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack vs the competitive set

Refill ANSI class Pieces Price Amazon
BrightCare 154-Piece First Aid Restock Pack (this review) Not classed 154 $24.99 Check price
Urgent First Aid Class A Refill, 25 Person A 78 $24.95 Check price
First Aid Only 90583 25-Person Refill ANSI fill 25-person fill $24.99 Check price
General Medi 160-Piece Refill Bag Non-ANSI 160 $11.93 Check price
MedSoft First Aid Kit Refill, 200 Piece Non-ANSI 200 $28.90 Check price

Against the field: the General Medi bag beats BrightCare on raw pieces-per-dollar but skips even the loose ANSI-adjacent framing; the MedSoft 200-piece refill ships more pieces at a slightly higher price; and the two classed refills at BrightCare's exact price point trade piece count for a documented ANSI fill.

BrightCare vs the closest same-price siblings

Spec BrightCare 154-Piece Urgent First Aid Class A First Aid Only 90583
Piece count 154 78 25-person fill
ANSI classification None stated Class A ANSI fill
Person-count rating Not stated 25 person 25 person
Price $24.99 $24.95 $24.99
  • Buy BrightCare if you want the most pieces for the money and your kit does not need a documented ANSI class.
  • Buy the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill if you need a Class A designation on record for a 25-person kit.
  • Buy the First Aid Only 90583 if you own a First Aid Only branded kit and want a factory-matched restock with an ANSI fill.

Compare all three on Amazon โ†’ BrightCare 154-Piece Urgent First Aid Class A First Aid Only 90583

Which kits and cabinets this refill works well with

Because it ships with no formal person-count rating, treat this pack as a general volume top-up rather than a spec-matched restock. It works well behind a First Aid Only 91248 OSHA-Compliant 50-Person Kit or a First Aid Only 223-U OSHA-Compliant 25-Person Kit as an added-volume supplement, inside a Medique 712MTM 3-Shelf First Aid Cabinet where extra bandage and wound-care volume gets used quickly, or dropped straight into a home, vehicle, or personal bag with no container-matching required at all. For larger multi-shelf cabinets such as the UniShield 3-Shelf Metal First Aid Cabinet, ANSI Class A, plan on more than one pack. For a fuller survey of what belongs on the wall in the first place, see our best first aid cabinets and wall-mount stations guide and the best workplace first aid kits guide.

Top kits this refill supplements, on Amazon โ†’ First Aid Only 91248 First Aid Only 223-U

Category context: general restocks vs classed refills

OSHA's 29 CFR 1910.151 requires adequate first aid supplies to be "readily available" โ€” a requirement that is about supply levels, not brand. ANSI Z308.1-2021 defines the fill classes (Class A, Class B) that many employers use as the documented standard for meeting that requirement. A general-purpose pack like BrightCare's 154-piece refill can absolutely keep a kit stocked for OSHA/ANSI first aid programs in practice, but it does not carry the printed classification some inspection processes want to see on the box. If your program needs that paper trail, pair a classed refill from the First Aid Kit Refills collection with this pack for volume, or read our OSHA first aid kit requirements explained reference before choosing. Upstream container decisions are covered in our complete first aid kit buyer's guide; component-level top-ups come from the Bandages and Wound Care collection and Burn Care collection.

Total cost of ownership

A general first aid kit or cabinet is a buy-once container with a consumable fill, and the fill turns over on two clocks: usage and expiration. At $24.99 for 154 pieces, BrightCare's per-piece cost undercuts most of the classed refills on the shelf, which makes it an efficient way to keep a non-regulated kit topped up between full restocks. Pair it with occasional single-item buys from the wound care shelf โ€” fabric bandages like Band-Aid Flexible Fabric bandages or blue detectable Curad knuckle bandages for food-handling environments โ€” and a home or light-duty kit stays stocked for well under the cost of replacing a cabinet like the First Aid Only 90575 3-Shelf Cabinet outright.

Final verdict: 4.2/5

The BrightCare 154-Piece First Aid Restock Pack does one job very well โ€” delivering the most first aid pieces for the money at its price point โ€” and one job it does not attempt: carrying a documented ANSI fill class. Buy this for home, vehicle, and general-purpose restocking, or as a volume supplement behind an already-classed workplace kit. Buy the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill or the First Aid Only 90583 instead if your program needs a documented Class A or ANSI fill on file, or the UniShield Class B refill with medications for a larger cabinet that needs a full classed reload including OTC meds.

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BrightCare 154-Piece First Aid Restock Pack โ€” FAQ

Is the BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack ANSI Z308.1 compliant?

No โ€” the pack does not carry a stated ANSI Z308.1 Class A or Class B designation. It is a general-purpose 154-piece restock pack. If you need a documented ANSI class, choose the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill or First Aid Only 90583 instead.

What's included in the 154-piece count?

The pack is sold as a 154-piece bulk first aid restock assortment; check the current listing for the exact item breakdown before ordering if you need a precise inventory for procurement records.

Which first aid kits does this refill work with?

Any kit, cabinet, bag, or drawer that needs general wound-care restocking, regardless of brand โ€” including small kits like the ProHeal 10-Person ANSI Class A First Aid Kit and cabinets like the Medique 712MTM 3-Shelf First Aid Cabinet. There is no proprietary fit requirement.

BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack vs Urgent First Aid Class A Refill โ€” which should I buy?

Buy BrightCare for the higher piece count at essentially the same price if you do not need a documented class. Buy the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill if your 25-person kit needs a recorded ANSI Class A fill โ€” see our Urgent First Aid Class A Refill review for the full breakdown.

BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack vs First Aid Only 90583 โ€” which should I buy?

At the same $24.99 price, BrightCare ships more raw pieces while the First Aid Only 90583 ships a documented ANSI fill sized for 25 people. Choose based on whether volume or classification matters more for your kit.

Will one pack refill a 50-person first aid kit?

There is no stated person-count rating, so treat the pack as a volume top-up rather than a spec-matched fill for a 50-person kit like the First Aid Only 91248 OSHA-Compliant 50-Person Kit. For a documented 50-person fill, the Urgent First Aid Class B Refill is the classed option.

Is this refill OSHA compliant?

The pack can help keep a kit stocked for OSHA/ANSI first aid programs in practice, but it is not labeled "OSHA-compliant" and carries no ANSI class. Our OSHA first aid kit requirements reference explains what OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 actually requires and how ANSI Z308.1 fits in.

How often should a first aid kit be refilled?

Inspect monthly or quarterly and refill whenever stock runs thin. Because BrightCare's higher piece count covers more usage before running out, many buyers get more than a year of general use from one pack.

Do first aid refill contents expire?

Dated items โ€” antiseptics, ointments, and any OTC medications โ€” carry expiration dates and must be replaced when they lapse. Bandages and dressings keep longer but should stay sealed and clean.

Is this a good pick for a home or vehicle kit vs a workplace kit?

Yes โ€” this is exactly the profile it fits best. Home, vehicle, and personal kits rarely need a documented ANSI class, so BrightCare's piece-count value shines there more than in a regulated workplace program.

Can I use this refill in a first aid cabinet instead of a soft-case kit?

Yes. It works the same way in a wall cabinet such as the UniShield 3-Shelf Metal First Aid Cabinet as it does in a portable kit โ€” load the pieces onto the shelves or into the case.

What's the best refill if I need formal ANSI classification for compliance paperwork?

Choose the Urgent First Aid Class A Refill, the Urgent First Aid Class B Refill, or the First Aid Only 90583 โ€” all three carry a documented ANSI fill class that BrightCare does not.

Does this pack include OTC medications?

The pack is built as a general wound-care restock. If your program needs a medication-inclusive reload, the UniShield Class B refill with medications is the pack on our shelf explicitly built around that.

Can I mix this refill with single-item restocks?

Yes โ€” many buyers pair BrightCare's bulk volume with as-needed singles: fabric bandages like Band-Aid Flexible Fabric bandages, blue detectable Curad knuckle bandages for food handling, or dressings from the Burn Care collection.

Is there a trauma-level refill equivalent?

For IFAK and bleeding-control stations, refills are a different category entirely โ€” see the RHINO RESCUE IFAK Refill Kit with CAT Gen-7. BrightCare's general wound-care pack does not restock tourniquets or hemostatic dressings.

Where does this refill fit if I am building a first aid program from scratch?

Start with the container and classification decision in the which first aid kit do you need guide, buy a kit or cabinet that matches your headcount and risk class from the workplace kits collection, and use a pack like this one for volume top-ups between full classed restocks.

Why trust this BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack review? WC Safety operates as an independent industrial and personal PPE and safety-supply retailer โ€” we stock this refill alongside the kits and cabinets it can supplement, and we sell to safety managers, facilities teams, and everyday households. This review is authored by our editorial desk, not by BrightCare or any paid third party. Category framing is cross-referenced against ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 and OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 (OSHA medical services and first aid standard). Disclosed: WC Safety stocks this product and earns Amazon affiliate commissions on outbound clicks; neither factor influences the rating.
By Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial โ€” Workplace first aid and emergency-preparedness desk ยท specialization: ANSI Z308.1 kit classes, OSHA first aid compliance, and general-purpose restocking programs.
Last reviewed: ยท Sources reviewed: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021, BrightCare product listing and labeling, FDA OTC drug labeling guidance.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Specifications are taken from the manufacturer's published listing; nothing beyond the label is claimed โ€” this listing states no ANSI class and no person-count rating, and none is implied here.
How this refill review was researched. We evaluated the BrightCare 154-Piece Restock Pack as a curation and comparison exercise: mapping its stated 154-piece count against the ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 class definitions it does not claim, OSHA's 29 CFR 1910.151 supply expectations, and the competing refill packs stocked in our own catalog. No first-person durability testing is claimed. Reviewed on any revision to ANSI Z308.1 or OSHA first aid guidance.
Disclosure. WC Safety participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program; outbound Amazon links on this page use our affiliate tag and may earn us a commission at no cost to you. We also stock this product in our own store. The 4.2/5 rating reflects fit-for-purpose, price against the competitive set, and value per piece โ€” not sponsorship, which we do not accept. This article is not medical, legal, or regulatory advice; consult your safety officer or a qualified professional for site-specific first aid program requirements.
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