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

Ever Ready First Aid ANSI Class B OSHA First Aid Kit, Wall-Mountable Review (2026)

Is the Ever Ready First Aid ANSI Class B OSHA First Aid Kit the cheapest honest way to get Class B coverage on the wall?

Short answer: Yes โ€” at $59.95 this is the lowest-priced ANSI Z308.1 Class B fill we stock, and its wall-mountable plastic case that doubles as a portable kit gives it a flexibility the steel cabinets cannot match. High-headcount industrial sites that want shelving, door storage, and cabinet permanence should still price the MFASCO ANSI Class B 3-shelf cabinet; everyone else needing Class B contents without cabinet money starts here.

Class B is where workplace first aid gets serious. ANSI/ISEA Z308.1 defines it as the expanded fill for larger and higher-risk environments โ€” the tier above the common-injury Class A assortments that dominate the workplace first aid kits collection. The catch is that Class B has traditionally meant cabinet-class prices: our stocked Class B and B+ cabinets run $138.95 to $239.95. The Ever Ready First Aid Class B kit attacks that from below. It delivers the Class B fill in a wall-mountable plastic case for $59.95, and because the case is not bolted furniture, it can come off the wall and travel when the work does.

This review examines whether the plastic-case compromise is worth the roughly $80-plus saved against steel, and where this kit lands in the ranked field of our best workplace first aid kits buyer's guide.

Editorial verdict: 4.6/5. The Ever Ready First Aid ANSI Class B OSHA First Aid Kit is the value anchor of our Class B tier: a documented higher-risk fill, a wall-mountable case that converts to grab-and-go duty, and a $59.95 price that undercuts every Class B cabinet we list by half or more. Buyers who need shelf organization or 100-person scale should step up to steel; for everyone entering Class B territory, this is the smart first purchase.

As an Amazon Associate, WC Safety earns from qualifying purchases. Prices and availability are subject to change. Full affiliate disclosure.

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Pros

  • Documented ANSI Z308.1 Class B fill at the lowest price in our Class B tier
  • Wall-mountable case doubles as a portable kit โ€” one purchase, two deployment modes
  • OSHA-oriented positioning straight from the listing
  • Plastic case is lighter than steel for take-down-and-carry response
  • Leaves budget free for trauma and burn layers

Cons

  • Plastic case will not take the abuse a steel cabinet absorbs
  • No shelves or door pockets โ€” organization is case-compartment level
  • No published person rating on the listing; scale it by hazard, not headcount
  • No restock-reminder system

Who should buy the Ever Ready First Aid Class B kit

  • Workshops, light manufacturing, and maintenance operations whose hazard assessment points above Class A
  • Sites that want one unit to serve as both fixed station and response kit that travels to the incident
  • Budget-bound safety programs entering Class B before graduating to cabinets from the first aid cabinets collection
  • Employers translating an OSHA general-duty obligation into a documented fill โ€” begin with our OSHA first aid kit requirements decode
  • Anyone benchmarking the full field via the first aid kits parent collection

Strengths of the Ever Ready First Aid Class B kit

Class B contents without cabinet pricing

The economics are the headline. Our stocked Class B steel options โ€” the MFASCO Class B 3-shelf cabinet at $179.95 and the UniShield 4-shelf metal Class B cabinet at $189.95 โ€” cost three times this kit. If what your program actually requires is the ANSI Z308.1 Class B assortment on site and findable, the Ever Ready kit clears that bar for $59.95 and lets the difference fund the rest of the safety budget.

The dual-mode case is genuinely useful

Wall-mounted kits win on findability; portable kits win at the incident. This case does both โ€” it hangs at a fixed station location, then unhooks and travels to the injured worker instead of forcing the injured worker to it. In shops where an incident can happen fifty feet from the wall, bringing Class B supplies to the scene is not a convenience feature, it is response design. Steel cabinets structurally cannot do this.

Documented class takes the ambiguity out of audits

Like the top-tier picks in our lineup, this kit gives your safety binder a named standard: ANSI Z308.1 Class B, per the listing, in an OSHA-positioned package. When documentation asks what your higher-risk fill is, you have an answer sharper than a piece count. How the OSHA rule and the ANSI classes interlock is covered in our OSHA and ANSI Z308.1 reference.

It pairs naturally with a trauma layer

Sites that genuinely need Class B usually also need bleeding-control capability, and the money this kit saves buys it. A North American Rescue Individual Aid Kit or an Israeli-style dressing like the RHINO RESCUE 6-inch Israeli-style bandage from the trauma kits collection mounted beside this kit builds a two-layer station for well under one steel cabinet's price.

Where the Ever Ready First Aid Class B kit falls short

Plastic is the price of the price

A polymer case hung in a clean shop will last for years; the same case in a foundry aisle or a loading dock taking daily contact will not age like steel. Harsh environments that punish equipment are exactly the environments the EVERLIT CARE 203SFAK100 Class B+ cabinet and its steel peers exist for โ€” see our EVERLIT CARE Class B+ cabinet review.

No shelving means slower restock discipline

Cabinet formats with shelves and door pockets make missing items visible at a glance. A case kit hides its gaps until someone opens it. Offset this with a monthly open-and-check and a class-matched restock like the Urgent First Aid Class B 50-person refill from the first aid kit refills collection.

No stated headcount rating

The listing defines this kit by class and format, not by a person number. That is honest โ€” Class B is a hazard tier, not a headcount โ€” but it means you size deployment yourself: one unit per coverage zone, added units as floor area and shift patterns demand. If you want a numbered rating to point at, the cabinet tier publishes them.

Comparison: the Class B and B+ field on WC Safety

Product Class Format Price
Ever Ready First Aid Class B kit Class B Wall-mount plastic case, portable $59.95
EVERLIT CARE 203SFAK100 Class B+, 100 person 3-shelf metal cabinet $138.95
MFASCO Class B cabinet Class B (Z308.1-2021) 3-shelf metal cabinet $179.95
UniShield 4-shelf Class B Class B 4-shelf metal cabinet $189.95

Check prices on Amazon โ†’ EVERLIT CARE cabinet MFASCO Class B cabinet UniShield 4-shelf B

Class B kit vs its Ever Ready First Aid siblings

Within the Ever Ready First Aid range on WC Safety, the split is clean: class tier and role.

Spec Class B wall-mount 10-person Class A CPR mask combo
ANSI Class B fill โœ“ โ€” (Class A) โ€”
Wall-mountable โœ“ + portable โ€” โ€”
Target environment Higher-risk workplaces 10-person small business Rescue barrier add-on
Typical price $59.95 $17.70 $9.95
  • Buy the Ever Ready Class B wall-mount kit if your hazard assessment demands the higher-risk fill โ€” the subject of this review.
  • Buy the Ever Ready 10-person Class A kit if you run a small, lower-risk operation โ€” see our Ever Ready 10-person Class A kit review.
  • Add the Ever Ready CPR mask combo to either station for a $9.95 response-capability gain.

Shop the Ever Ready First Aid family on Amazon โ†’ 10-person Class A CPR mask combo

Building the higher-risk station around this kit

Class B duty usually implies hazards that deserve dedicated layers. Mount the Ever Ready Class B wall-mount kit product page unit as the core, add burn capability from the burn care collection โ€” the Water-Jel sterile burn dressing 4x16 covers large-area burns hot-work sites worry about โ€” and bolt a bleeding-control pouch beside it for machinery and blade exposure. Restock cycles run through the refills collection with the Class B-matched Urgent First Aid pack keeping the fill at its designated tier.

Top Class B station companions on Amazon โ†’ Urgent Class B refill Water-Jel 4x16 RHINO Israeli bandage

Where this kit fits: the bridge between kit and cabinet

The first aid market splits into portable kits and installed cabinets, and Class B fills have historically lived on the cabinet side. This Ever Ready unit is the bridge product: cabinet-style wall presence, kit-style portability, class-tier contents. That makes it the natural choice for two situations โ€” programs stepping up from Class A that are not ready for cabinet spend, and satellite stations extending a main cabinet's reach across a big floor. If your endpoint is a full cabinet program, the ranked steel options live in our best first aid cabinets guide; if you are still locating yourself on the kit-versus-cabinet map, the which first aid kit do you need decision guide sorts it in five minutes.

Total cost of ownership

The unit is $59.95 once. Consumable draw-down at Class B sites is real โ€” higher-risk work uses more supplies โ€” so budget a $49.95 Urgent First Aid Class B refill on whatever cycle your incident log dictates. There is no reminder system, so add the monthly check to someone's recurring duties. Against the cabinet tier, the five-year picture still favors this kit strongly for small and mid-sized deployments: even two full refills in, total spend sits under any single steel Class B cabinet's purchase price. The crossover point where cabinets win โ€” high headcount, high consumption, need for organized bulk restock โ€” is quantified in our workplace first aid kits guide.

Final verdict: 4.6/5

The Ever Ready First Aid ANSI Class B OSHA First Aid Kit earns 4.6/5 as the best value entry into documented Class B coverage on WC Safety. The dual wall-mount/portable format is more than a gimmick โ€” it is a response-design advantage steel cannot copy โ€” and the $59.95 price makes the higher-risk fill accessible to programs that would otherwise stall at Class A. Choose the MFASCO Class B 3-shelf cabinet alternative when you need shelf organization and industrial-grade housing, or the First Aid Only 746000 ANSI A+ cabinet when your hazard profile sits at Class A and you want managed restocking โ€” our First Aid Only 746000 review covers that path.

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Ever Ready First Aid Class B kit โ€” FAQ

What does ANSI Class B mean on the Ever Ready First Aid kit?

ANSI/ISEA Z308.1 defines Class B as the expanded fill for larger and higher-risk work environments, above the common-injury Class A tier. The Ever Ready kit carries that Class B designation per its listing, wrapped in an OSHA-positioned package. The full class system is decoded in our OSHA first aid kit requirements reference.

Is the Ever Ready Class B kit OSHA compliant?

OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 requires adequate, readily available first aid supplies and points to ANSI Z308.1 as guidance rather than certifying kits. A documented Class B fill is a strong footing for higher-risk sites, but adequacy is always determined by your own hazard assessment.

Can the Ever Ready Class B kit really work as both a wall kit and a portable kit?

Yes โ€” that is the design. The plastic case mounts to the wall as a fixed station and lifts off to travel to an incident. Sites using it this way should mark the wall location clearly so the case returns to the same spot every time.

Which workplaces need Class B instead of Class A?

ANSI aims Class B at larger and higher-risk environments: manufacturing, maintenance shops, warehousing with powered equipment, and any operation whose injury potential exceeds cuts and scrapes. If your hazard assessment hesitates between classes, step up โ€” the cost difference is small against the coverage difference. Our first aid kit decision guide walks the call.

Ever Ready Class B kit vs MFASCO Class B cabinet โ€” which should I buy?

Same class tier, different infrastructure. The Ever Ready kit is $59.95, portable, and plastic; the MFASCO Class B cabinet option is $179.95, fixed, steel, and shelf-organized for industrial restocking โ€” our MFASCO Class B cabinet review details it. Small and mid-size sites start with Ever Ready; high-consumption industrial floors justify the cabinet.

Ever Ready Class B kit vs EVERLIT CARE Class B+ cabinet โ€” what does B+ add?

The EVERLIT CARE Class B+ cabinet pairs a Class B+ fill with a 100-person rating and steel shelving at $138.95. The Ever Ready kit wins on price and portability; the EVERLIT unit wins on scale and cabinet permanence. Pick by headcount and environment abuse level.

How many people does the Ever Ready Class B kit cover?

The listing defines it by class and format rather than publishing a person rating. Deploy it per coverage zone โ€” one unit within quick reach of each work area โ€” and add units rather than stretching one across a large floor. Numbered headcount ratings live in the cabinet tier if your documentation requires one.

What refills keep a Class B kit at Class B?

Class-matched packs โ€” the Urgent First Aid Class B refill pack is our stocked 208-piece option โ€” restore the designated assortment as items are consumed. Generic consumables top up quantity but not class documentation, so keep at least the restock cycle class-matched via the refills range.

Will a plastic first aid case survive an industrial environment?

In clean and moderate environments, comfortably. In high-traffic aisles, wash-down areas, or anywhere equipment contact is routine, steel is the better long bet โ€” that durability gap is most of what the cabinet price premium buys. Judge by what happens to other wall-mounted plastic in the same spot.

Should trauma supplies be added to a Class B station?

Usually yes. Sites whose hazards justify Class B often carry bleeding risk that first aid fills do not fully address; a dedicated kit from the trauma kits range mounted beside the station closes that gap for the cost of the savings versus a cabinet.

Where should the Ever Ready Class B kit be mounted?

On a main circulation route at reach height, visible from the primary work area, unobstructed, and covered in orientation. Because the case is portable, add a shadow-mark or label on the wall so a removed kit is immediately obvious โ€” an empty bracket is its own audit signal.

Is the Ever Ready Class B kit good for a maintenance truck or job trailer?

The portable mode makes it workable for trailer duty, though it lacks the metal-case ruggedness of a dedicated mobile unit like the First Aid Only 9302-25M contractor kit. If vehicle duty dominates, buy the purpose-built kit and keep this one on the wall.

How often should a Class B kit be audited?

Monthly at minimum, and immediately after any incident. Higher-risk sites consume supplies faster and less predictably than offices, so the audit cadence should track your incident log โ€” a quarter with three recordables is a quarter with three restock checks.

Does the Ever Ready Class B kit include burn or eye wash coverage?

Treat those as layers to verify rather than assume. Hot-work sites should add dressings from the burn care range, and chemical or dust exposure calls for irrigation capability per our eyewash guidance. The kit is the core, not the whole station.

Is $59.95 good value for a Class B first aid kit?

It is the lowest-priced documented Class B fill we list โ€” half to a third of the cabinet tier. Value holds as long as your deployment fits the format: modest consumption, moderate environment, one-or-few stations. Past that, cabinet economics take over, as ranked in the best workplace first aid kits ranked list.

Why trust this Ever Ready First Aid Class B kit review? WC Safety operates as an independent industrial PPE retailer โ€” we sell this kit, its Ever Ready siblings, and the competing Class B cabinets to safety managers and facility owners. This review is authored by our editorial desk, not by Ever Ready First Aid or by paid third-party reviewers. Claims are cross-referenced against OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 class definitions, and the manufacturer's published listing, with regulatory depth deferred to our OSHA first aid kit requirements reference guide. Disclosed: WC Safety stocks the Ever Ready Class B wall-mount kit 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: OSHA/ANSI first aid program supplies, kit classification, and station planning.
Last reviewed: ยท Sources reviewed: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, OSHA 29 CFR 1926.50, ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021, Ever Ready First Aid product documentation, WC Safety category records.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Product claims are limited to the manufacturer's published listing and applicable standards.
How this Ever Ready First Aid Class B kit review was researched. This is a buyer's-guide analysis grounded in published standards and manufacturer documentation โ€” not a hands-on test. We mapped the kit's Class B positioning against OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 and ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 from the International Safety Equipment Association, then benchmarked class documentation, format, and price against every Class B and B+ product stocked on WC Safety. Reviewed quarterly and on any change to OSHA or ANSI first aid guidance.
Disclosure. WC Safety participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program and earns commissions from qualifying purchases made through Amazon links on this page. WC Safety also stocks the Ever Ready First Aid Class B wall-mount kit directly. The 4.6/5 rating reflects class-tier value, dual-format flexibility, and durability limits versus steel cabinets. This review is not medical, legal, or regulatory advice โ€” consult a qualified safety professional to match first aid supplies to your workplace hazard assessment.
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