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

Gevoke Professional First Aid Kit, 310 Piece HardCase Review (2026)

Is the Gevoke Professional First Aid Kit, 310 Piece HardCase the right first aid kit for a budget-conscious car, RV, or backup stock-up?

Short answer: Yes โ€” if you want the most pieces per dollar in a hard case anywhere in our vehicle first aid kits collection, the Gevoke Professional First Aid Kit, 310 Piece HardCase is the pick, at $21.99 โ€” the cheapest kit in this entire lineup. Anyone who wants more pieces and a waterproof shell should step up to its own sibling, the Gevoke 410-Piece Waterproof Hard-Shell First Aid Kit, and anyone who needs a compliance-framed kit for a fleet vehicle should look at the MFASCO Vehicle First Aid Kit instead.

Gevoke runs two kits in our vehicle lineup, and the 310-piece HardCase is the entry point. Where the 410-piece Gevoke leads with a waterproof hard shell and a bigger published count, the 310 leads with price: a 310-piece, hard-case first aid kit for $21.99 undercuts every other kit in the collection, including the $34.19 General Medi 127-piece roadside kit and the $9.99 Vriexsd 150-piece mini kit that sits below it on price alone. This review covers what that price actually buys, where the 310 gives up ground to its own bigger sibling, and how it stacks up against the rest of the field in our first aid kits range.

Editorial verdict: 4.2/5. The Gevoke Professional First Aid Kit, 310 Piece HardCase is the best pure-value pick in our vehicle first aid lineup: 310 pieces in a hard case for $21.99, with no compliance markup and no roadside-tool filler diluting the kit. The honest tradeoff is that it's the smaller, non-waterproof half of Gevoke's own two-kit range โ€” step up to the Gevoke 410 if you want more pieces and a waterproof shell for $18 more.

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. Full affiliate disclosure.

VIEW ON WC SAFETY โ†’ CHECK PRICE ON AMAZON โ†’

Pros

  • $21.99 โ€” the lowest price of any kit in the vehicle first aid lineup, including combo roadside-tool kits that cost twice as much
  • 310 pieces stated plainly in the title โ€” no guessing at contents like the compliance-framed MFASCO kit, which publishes no count at all
  • Hard case construction protects contents from crushing in a trunk or glovebox better than a soft zipper bag
  • A pure first-aid kit โ€” no jumper cables, tire inflators, or roadside tools eating into the piece count
  • Same-brand upgrade path: the Gevoke 410 is a known step up if you outgrow this one

Cons

Who the Gevoke 310-Piece HardCase is for

  • Budget-conscious drivers who want a real hard-case kit, not a mini kit, without paying for waterproofing or compliance framing they don't need
  • Second- and third-vehicle owners outfitting multiple cars where a $55.95 MFASCO per vehicle isn't in the budget
  • Anyone comparison-shopping on price-per-piece โ€” at $21.99 for 310 pieces this is the sharpest cost-per-item ratio in the collection
  • Buyers building a layered kit stack โ€” one 310 HardCase in the trunk, a separate trauma kit for bleeding control โ€” see the which first aid kit do you need pillar guide for the full staging logic

What the Gevoke 310-Piece HardCase does well

The lowest price for a hard case in the collection

At $21.99 the Gevoke 310 undercuts every other standard kit in the vehicle first aid kits collection, including the $34.19 General Medi 127-piece roadside kit, the $34.99 LIANXIN 142-piece kit, and its own $39.99 sibling, the Gevoke 410. Only the $9.99 Vriexsd 150-piece mini kit costs less, and it's roughly half the piece count in a soft mini case, not a hard case.

A published, comparison-shoppable piece count

"310 Piece" is right in the product title, which means you can weigh it directly against the THRIAID 330 and the Gevoke 410 without guessing. That's a real advantage over kits like the MFASCO Vehicle First Aid Kit, which asks you to buy compliance framing instead of a stated count.

Hard case construction, not a soft bag

A hard case resists crushing under groceries, tools, or cargo in a way a zippered soft kit doesn't. It's a meaningful step up from mini kits like the Vriexsd mini kit, which typically ship in soft pouches, while still costing a fraction of the metal-case MFASCO.

A pure first-aid kit, not a diluted tool kit

Several kits in this batch โ€” the Everlit Survival Car Emergency Kit, the LIANXIN kit with jumper cables, and the Ranallto roadside tool kit โ€” count roadside tools toward their total piece figure. The Gevoke 310 doesn't dilute its count with tools; every one of its 310 pieces is first-aid supply, which matters if medical coverage, not roadside recovery gear, is what you're actually shopping for.

A same-brand upgrade path already exists

If 310 pieces turns out to be too light, Gevoke's own 410-Piece Waterproof Hard-Shell First Aid Kit is a direct, same-brand step up โ€” same case philosophy, more pieces, and a waterproof shell, for $18 more. See our Gevoke 410 review for the full case.

Where the Gevoke 310-Piece HardCase falls short

Fewer pieces than its own sibling

The most direct comparison for this kit isn't a competitor โ€” it's the Gevoke 410, which carries 100 more pieces for $18 more. If your budget can stretch to $39.99, the 410 is the better per-vehicle kit; the 310 earns its place when price is the deciding factor or you're outfitting more than one vehicle.

No stated waterproofing

The 310's title doesn't claim waterproof or water-resistant construction, and we won't assume it. The Gevoke 410, the THRIAID 330, and the CureIT 230-piece kit all lead with waterproof framing on their listings; the 310 doesn't. If the kit rides in an open truck bed, boat, or uncovered trunk that sees rain, one of those is the safer buy.

No compliance framing for fleet or commercial use

Unlike the MFASCO Vehicle First Aid Kit or the USKITS NEMT truck safety kit, the Gevoke 310 doesn't market itself as DOT, ANSI, or OSHA compliant. A fleet or safety manager who needs that language on file should look at those kits instead โ€” our OSHA first aid kit requirements explainer covers what the standard actually calls for.

No hemorrhage-control gear

Like every general-purpose kit in this lineup, the 310 is built around cuts, burns, sprains, and minor injuries โ€” not severe bleeding. There's no tourniquet claim on the listing. Anyone who wants that capability should add a dedicated kit from the trauma kits collection, such as the RHINO RESCUE Vehicle IFAK Trauma Kit.

Gevoke 310 vs the competitive set across WC Safety

Kit Case Pieces (title) Price
Vriexsd Mini, 150 Piece Soft mini 150 $9.99
Gevoke Professional, 310 Piece HardCase 310 $21.99 Check price
CureIT, 230 Piece Waterproof 230 $35.99 Check price
Gevoke 410, Waterproof Waterproof hard shell 410 $39.99 Check price
THRIAID 330, Waterproof Waterproof 330 $45.99 Check price
MFASCO Vehicle Kit Mountable metal Not stated $55.95 Check price

Gevoke 310 vs Gevoke 410: the sibling comparison that matters most

Spec Gevoke 310 Gevoke 410 THRIAID 330
Case type HardCase Waterproof hard shell Waterproof, MOLLE straps
Piece count in title 310 410 330
Waterproof claim โ€” โœ“ โœ“
Same brand as Gevoke 410 Gevoke 310 โ€”
Typical price $21.99 $39.99 $45.99
  • Buy the Gevoke 310 if price-per-vehicle is the deciding factor or you're outfitting more than one car.
  • Buy the Gevoke 410 if you want more pieces and a stated waterproof shell from the same brand for $18 more.
  • Buy the THRIAID 330 if MOLLE strap mounting and organized trays matter more than the lowest price.

Shop the Gevoke lineup on Amazon โ†’ Gevoke 310 Gevoke 410 THRIAID 330

Pairings that round out the Gevoke 310

The Gevoke 310 covers cuts, burns, sprains, and minor injuries; it doesn't cover everything a vehicle might need. Pair it with a dedicated RHINO RESCUE Vehicle IFAK Trauma Kit from the trauma kits collection if the vehicle carries tools or crews where severe bleeding is a real risk. For burn-specific coverage beyond what a general kit stocks, browse the burn care collection, and for CPR-adjacent gear like barrier masks and gloves, the CPR and rescue supplies collection fills the gap. When consumables inside the 310 run low, the first aid kit refills collection and bandages and wound care collection carry the individual items to restock from rather than replacing the whole case.

Top pairings on Amazon โ†’ RHINO Vehicle IFAK Gevoke 410

Category context: where the cheapest hard case fits

Vehicle first aid kits in our lineup split roughly into three tiers: mini kits like the Vriexsd 150-piece at the very bottom, mid-tier waterproof hard-shell kits like the Gevoke 410 and THRIAID 330, and compliance- or fleet-framed kits like the MFASCO and USKITS NEMT kit at the top. The Gevoke 310 sits between the mini kits and the mid-tier waterproof kits โ€” a real hard case with a real piece count, at a price closer to the mini-kit tier. This batch also includes several roadside-tool-plus-first-aid combo kits โ€” the Everlit Survival Car Emergency Kit, the General Medi 127-piece roadside kit, and the Ranallto roadside tool kit โ€” which shoppers sometimes confuse with pure first-aid kits. The Gevoke 310 is not one of those; every counted piece is medical supply. See how the full field stacks up in the best vehicle and truck first aid kits guide, and see where vehicle kits fit against workplace kits and cabinets in the pillar guide.

Total cost of ownership

At $21.99 for 310 pieces, the Gevoke 310 works out to roughly seven cents per piece โ€” the sharpest per-piece price in the collection, ahead of the Gevoke 410's roughly $0.10 per piece and well ahead of the compliance-framed kits that don't publish a count at all. The case itself is a one-time purchase; individual bandages, wipes, and gloves cycle out through use and expiration, and heat inside a parked vehicle shortens that cycle faster than a climate-controlled shelf would. Rather than rebuying the whole case, restock individual consumables from the first aid kit refills collection or bandages and wound care collection as items get used or expire โ€” that keeps the low upfront price low over the life of the kit too.

Final verdict: 4.2/5

The Gevoke Professional First Aid Kit, 310 Piece HardCase is the best pure-value pick in our vehicle first aid kits collection โ€” a real hard case, a published 310-piece count, and the lowest price in the lineup at $21.99. The honest tradeoff is that it's the smaller of Gevoke's two kits and carries no waterproof claim; buyers who want more pieces and a waterproof shell should spend $18 more on the Gevoke 410. For a second vehicle, a budget-limited buyer, or anyone who just wants solid first-aid coverage without paying for features they won't use, the 310 is an easy recommendation.

VIEW ON WC SAFETY โ†’ CHECK PRICE ON AMAZON โ†’

Gevoke Professional First Aid Kit, 310 Piece HardCase โ€” FAQ

Is the Gevoke 310-Piece HardCase actually 310 pieces?

The manufacturer states 310 pieces directly in the product title, and we take listed piece counts at face value rather than inventing our own tally. If you want a second published count to compare against, the THRIAID 330 and Gevoke 410 both list their own counts too.

Gevoke 310 vs Gevoke 410 โ€” which one should I buy?

Buy the 310 if price is the deciding factor or you're outfitting more than one vehicle at $21.99 each; buy the Gevoke 410 if you want 100 more pieces and a stated waterproof shell for $18 more. Our Gevoke 410 review covers the bigger kit in full.

Is the Gevoke 310 waterproof?

No โ€” the listing doesn't claim waterproof or water-resistant construction, unlike the Gevoke 410, the THRIAID 330, and the CureIT 230-piece kit. If the kit will sit in an open truck bed or an uncovered trunk that gets wet, one of those three is the safer choice.

Is this the cheapest kit in the vehicle first aid collection?

Among hard-case kits, yes. Only the $9.99 Vriexsd Mini First Aid Kit, 150 Piece costs less, and it carries roughly half the piece count in a soft mini case rather than a hard case.

Gevoke 310 vs MFASCO Vehicle Kit โ€” which is better for a work truck?

Neither is the right pick for a compliance-driven fleet program. The MFASCO Vehicle First Aid Kit markets DOT/ANSI/OSHA compliance framing in a mountable metal case for $55.95; the Gevoke 310 is a budget consumer hard case with no compliance claims. Our MFASCO review covers the compliance-framed option.

Does the Gevoke 310 include a tourniquet or bleeding-control gear?

No. Like most general-purpose kits in this collection, it's built for cuts, burns, sprains, and minor injuries. For hemorrhage control, pair it with the RHINO RESCUE Vehicle IFAK Trauma Kit or another option from the trauma kits collection.

Is the Gevoke 310 a roadside emergency kit or a first aid kit?

It's a pure first aid kit โ€” no jumper cables, tire inflator, or recovery tools counted toward the 310 pieces. If you want roadside tools bundled in, the Everlit Survival Car Emergency Kit or LIANXIN 142-piece kit with jumper cables are the combo options in this batch.

How does the Gevoke 310 compare to the General Medi 127-piece kit?

The General Medi 127-Piece Roadside Car Emergency Kit bundles a mini first aid kit inside a broader roadside emergency kit and costs $34.19; the Gevoke 310 is a pure first-aid kit with well over twice the piece count for $12 less. If roadside tools aren't the priority, the Gevoke 310 wins on both price and medical-supply count.

Is a hard case better than a soft-sided first aid kit?

For vehicle storage, generally yes โ€” a hard case resists crushing under cargo and tools better than a soft zippered bag, though soft kits like the KeepGoing Travel First Aid Kit pack flatter and move more easily between car, home, and trail.

What's the difference between the Gevoke 310 and the CureIT 230-piece kit?

The CureIT First Aid Kit, 230 Piece, Waterproof carries fewer pieces than the Gevoke 310 but adds a stated waterproof claim for $14 more. Choose CureIT if waterproofing matters more than raw piece count; choose the Gevoke 310 if piece count and price matter more.

Should I buy the Gevoke 310 or the USKITS NEMT kit for a commercial vehicle?

The USKITS NEMT DOT OSHA Compliant All-in-One Truck Safety Kit is built for professional/fleet compliance at $154.95; the Gevoke 310 is a personal-vehicle budget kit at $21.99. They serve completely different buyers โ€” commercial NEMT and trucking operations need the USKITS kit's compliance framing, not the Gevoke.

Does the Gevoke 310 come with a refill option?

Gevoke does not publish a dedicated refill pack for this kit on its listing, so we won't claim one exists. Restock individual consumables โ€” bandages, wipes, gloves โ€” from the first aid kit refills collection or bandages and wound care collection instead.

Is 310 pieces enough for a family car?

For everyday minor injuries, yes โ€” 310 pieces covers cuts, scrapes, burns, and sprains for a typical family vehicle. If you want more headroom or a waterproof shell for a family that road-trips into wet or dusty conditions, the Gevoke 410 gives more margin for the same brand.

Gevoke 310 vs Ranallto roadside tool kit โ€” which should I buy?

The Ranallto Car Emergency Roadside Tool Kit is a roadside/recovery tool kit that also includes first aid supplies, not a dedicated medical kit; the Gevoke 310 is 100% first-aid supply. Buy the Gevoke 310 if medical coverage is the priority, and add a separate roadside tool kit if you also want recovery gear.

Where does the Gevoke 310 rank against the rest of the vehicle first aid lineup?

It's our top pure-value pick โ€” the best combination of price and piece count in the collection. See how it and its sibling kits compare against the ranked field in the best vehicle and truck first aid kits guide.

Can I use the Gevoke 310 for outdoor or hiking trips instead of just a car?

It's built and marketed as a vehicle/general-purpose kit rather than an ultralight hiking kit, but a hard case with 310 pieces works fine for car camping or short day trips. For a pack built specifically for backcountry weight and size, see the best hiking first aid kits guide.

Why trust this Gevoke Professional First Aid Kit, 310 Piece HardCase review? WC Safety operates as an independent industrial and consumer PPE retailer โ€” we stock the Gevoke 310, its sibling the Gevoke 410, and the rest of the field in the vehicle first aid kits collection for safety-conscious drivers and fleet buyers alike. This review is authored by our editorial desk, not by Gevoke or paid third-party reviewers. Claims are limited to the manufacturer's published listing โ€” we do not invent piece counts, waterproofing, or compliance claims the listing doesn't make โ€” and are mapped against OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 and ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 where relevant. Disclosed: WC Safety stocks this kit and earns Amazon affiliate commissions on outbound clicks; neither factor influences the rating.
By Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial โ€” First aid and emergency preparedness desk ยท specialization: ANSI Z308.1 kit classification, vehicle first aid staging, and value-tier comparison shopping.
Last reviewed: ยท Sources reviewed: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 (incl. Appendix A), ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021, Gevoke product listing and published specifications, competitive listings for the Gevoke 410, THRIAID 330, CureIT 230, and Vriexsd Mini kits.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Specifications limited to the manufacturer's published listing; no fabricated contents, certifications, or waterproofing claims.
How this vehicle first aid kit review was researched. We evaluated the Gevoke Professional First Aid Kit, 310 Piece HardCase against the manufacturer's published listing, OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 kit classifications, and the competitive set of vehicle first aid kits stocked on WC Safety, comparing piece count, case construction, waterproofing claims, and price per piece. No first-person product testing is claimed. Reviewed quarterly and on any change to the manufacturer listing or OSHA/ANSI guidance.
Disclosure. WC Safety participates in the Amazon Associates program and earns from qualifying purchases made through Amazon links on this page. WC Safety also stocks the products discussed. The 4.2/5 rating reflects price, piece count, case construction, and value against the competitive set โ€” not sponsorship; we accept none. This review is not medical, legal, or regulatory advice; consult a qualified safety professional to configure first aid coverage for a commercial fleet or workplace program.
Previous article Homestockplus First Aid Kit Refill, Extra Replacement Supplies, Loose Pack Review (2026)
Next article General Medi 127-Piece Roadside Car Emergency Kit with Mini First Aid Kit Review (2026)

Leave a comment

* Required fields