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

Quakehold! Ready America The Survival Box, 1-Person, 3-Day Emergency Kit Review (2026)

Is the Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box the right budget kit for one person?

Short answer: Yes, as a stopgap โ€” for around $11, the Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box is the cheapest entry point in the 72 hour kits collection, covering basic food, water, and warmth for one person for three days. It is not a substitute for a full kit: it ships with no first aid kit and no backpack, only a compact box. Anyone who wants a complete kit with medical supplies should buy the Ready America 70280 instead.

Sold under the Quakehold! brand but manufactured by Ready America (model 3000, "The Survival Box"), this is the most stripped-down kit in the family โ€” food, water, and a blanket in a small plastic box, nothing else. This review positions it against its own 72 hour kits collection siblings, against comparably priced items like YIWUBAI Survival Fire Starter Kit, and covers exactly what it is missing before you rely on it.

Editorial verdict: 4.0 / 5. The Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box does exactly what its $11 price promises โ€” food, water, and a blanket for one person for three days โ€” and nothing more. It is a smart add-on for a glovebox, desk drawer, or kid's backpack, but it is not a substitute for a real 72-hour kit with a first aid kit and backpack, which is why it scores a full point below the Ready America 70280.

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.

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Pros

  • Lowest price of any kit in the 72 hour kits collection
  • US Coast Guard approved food and water, per the manufacturer's listing
  • 5-year shelf life on both food and water
  • Compact box fits a glovebox, desk drawer, or backpack pocket
  • Bilingual packaging (English/Spanish) for household accessibility

Cons

  • No first aid kit included at all
  • No backpack โ€” it is a small box, not a carry bag
  • No light, tools, or signaling gear of any kind
  • One person only โ€” cannot stretch to cover a household

Who the Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box is for

  • Buyers who want a cheap, compact food-and-water stopgap for a glovebox or desk
  • Parents adding a minimal supply to a child's school backpack or car seat area
  • Households layering multiple small kits across cars, offices, and bags rather than one central kit
  • Buyers comparing the true entry price point across the 72 hour kits collection before upgrading to a full kit
  • Buyers starting from our pillar guide, which first aid kit do you need, to understand why a full kit still matters even after buying this box

What the Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box does well

It is genuinely inexpensive

At around $11, this is less than a third of the price of the next-cheapest kit in the family, the Ready America 70280. That price makes it easy to buy several and distribute them across cars, bags, and desks without a real budget conversation.

Coast Guard-approved food and water

Per the manufacturer's listing, the included food bar and water pouches are US Coast Guard approved, with a 5-year shelf life from date of manufacture โ€” the same baseline quality standard used in marine survival supplies, not a generic snack bar repackaged as "survival food."

A blanket that does double duty

The included survival blanket is rated to retain roughly 90% of body heat and can double as a rain poncho or improvised shelter, per the manufacturer's listing โ€” genuinely useful multi-purpose gear in a box this small.

Small enough to actually carry everywhere

At 6.25 x 3.75 x 10.75 inches and about 1.46 kilograms, the box is small enough to live in a glovebox, backpack side pocket, or desk drawer without anyone noticing it is there โ€” which means it is more likely to actually be present when needed.

Where the Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box falls short

No first aid kit, period

Unlike every other kit in the Ready America family, this box includes zero first aid supplies. If a minor cut or scrape happens during the emergency this box is meant for, you have nothing to treat it with. Buyers who want a first aid kit alongside food and water need the Ready America 70280 at minimum.

It is a box, not a bag

There is no backpack or carry strap โ€” you are carrying a rigid plastic box by hand or stashing it, not slinging it over a shoulder during an evacuation. That is a real limitation if you need to move on foot with your supplies.

No light, signaling, or tools

No flashlight, light stick, whistle, or multi-tool ships with this box. Every other kit in the 72 hour kits collection includes at least basic lighting and signaling gear; this one does not.

Quakehold! Survival Box vs the competitive set

Kit Sized for First aid kit Typical price Amazon
Quakehold! Survival Box 1 person, 3 days None $11.01 Check price
YIWUBAI Fire Starter Kit Accessory None $13.99 Check price
Ready America 70280 2 people, 3 days 33-piece $39.44 Check price

Compared against another sub-$15 accessory like the YIWUBAI fire starter kit, the Survival Box wins on covering the food-and-water basics rather than a single survival skill. But against a full kit like the 70280, it is clearly a supplement, not a replacement.

The Ready America family ladder: where the Survival Box sits

Spec Survival Box 70280 Deluxe 1-Person Deluxe 4-Person
People 1 2 1 4
Case Box Backpack Backpack Backpack
First aid kit โ€” 33-piece Included 107-piece
Typical price $11.01 $39.44 $56.87 $139.49
  • Buy the Survival Box only as a supplement โ€” glovebox, desk, or kid's backpack, never a household's sole kit.
  • Buy the 70280 for a real kit with a first aid kit and backpack at a still-affordable price.
  • Buy the Deluxe 1-Person if you want tools and a headlamp on top of the basics.
  • Buy the Deluxe 4-Person for a full family kit โ€” see the Deluxe 4-Person review.

Shop the Ready America ladder on Amazon โ†’ 70280 Deluxe 1-Person Deluxe 4-Person

What to add to the Survival Box

The Survival Box needs almost everything a real kit has. At minimum, add a compact first aid kit โ€” even the Ready America 70280's bundled 33-piece kit purchased separately covers the gap. A North American Rescue Flat ETD 6-Inch Emergency Trauma Dressing is compact enough to sit next to the box in a glovebox. A RunningSnail Emergency Hand Crank Radio with LED Flashlight adds the light and communication this box completely lacks.

Top add-ons on Amazon โ†’ NAR Flat ETD RunningSnail hand-crank radio YIWUBAI fire starter kit

Category context: stopgap vs full kit vs workplace kit

The Survival Box is a supplement, not a category-defining kit โ€” it belongs in the same conversation as glovebox and school-backpack stashes, not a household's primary emergency plan. A real household kit like the Ready America 70280 or Deluxe 4-Person kit should anchor the plan; see our pillar guide which first aid kit do you need. Workplaces need entirely different, ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-compliant kits under OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 โ€” see our OSHA first aid kit requirements explained reference and the workplace first aid kits collection โ€” the Survival Box does not meet that use case at all.

Total cost of ownership

At $11.01, the Survival Box is close to disposable โ€” the food and water carry a 5-year shelf life from date of manufacture, so most buyers will simply replace the whole box rather than restock individual components. That makes it easy to keep several on hand (car, office, kid's bag) without significant ongoing cost. Compare that to a full kit's consumable restock discussed in our Ready America 70280 review.

Final verdict: 4.0 / 5

The Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box is honest about what it is โ€” a cheap, compact food-and-water stopgap, not a full 72-hour kit. It earns a solid 4.0/5 for delivering exactly what its price promises, but it loses a full point versus the Ready America 70280 for missing a first aid kit, backpack, and any light or signaling gear entirely. Buy it as a supplement to a real kit, never as your only preparedness purchase.

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Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box โ€” FAQ

How many people does the Quakehold! Survival Box cover?

One person for 72 hours (3 days), per Ready America's published rating. It cannot be split across multiple people without running short.

Does the Survival Box include a first aid kit?

No. Unlike every other kit in the Ready America family, this box ships with no first aid supplies. Buy the Ready America 70280 if a first aid kit matters to you.

Is the Survival Box a backpack?

No โ€” it is a compact plastic box measuring 6.25 x 3.75 x 10.75 inches, not a wearable bag. It is meant to be stored, not carried on your back during an evacuation.

Quakehold! Survival Box vs Ready America 70280 โ€” which should I buy?

Buy the Survival Box only as a cheap supplement โ€” glovebox or desk drawer. Buy the Ready America 70280 โ€” see our Ready America 70280 review โ€” for a real household kit with a first aid kit and backpack.

How long does the food and water in the Survival Box last?

Both the food bar and water pouches carry a 5-year shelf life from date of manufacture, per the manufacturer's listing.

Is the survival blanket in the box useful?

Yes โ€” per the manufacturer's listing it retains roughly 90% of body heat and can double as a rain poncho or improvised shelter, a genuinely multi-purpose item for its size.

What model number is the Survival Box?

Ready America lists it as model 3000, "The Survival Box," sold under the Quakehold! brand name, per the manufacturer's product description.

Does the Survival Box include any light or signaling gear?

No โ€” no flashlight, light stick, or whistle is included. Add a RunningSnail Emergency Hand Crank Radio with LED Flashlight to cover that gap.

Is the Survival Box's food and water Coast Guard approved?

Yes, per the manufacturer's listing โ€” both the food bar and water pouches are described as US Coast Guard approved.

Can the Survival Box replace a full 72-hour kit?

No. It covers only food, water, and warmth for one person. A full kit like the Ready America 70280 adds a first aid kit, backpack, and signaling gear the Survival Box does not include.

What is the Survival Box's UPC and GTIN?

Ready America's listing shows UPC 753962030003 and GTIN 00753962030003 for this product.

Is the Survival Box packaging bilingual?

Yes โ€” per the manufacturer's listing the box is printed in both English and Spanish.

How much does the Survival Box weigh?

Approximately 1.46 kilograms (about 3.2 lbs), per Ready America's published item weight.

Should I buy several Survival Boxes instead of one full kit?

Buy several as a supplement โ€” one for the car, one for a desk, one for a kid's backpack โ€” but keep a real household kit like the Ready America 70280 or Deluxe 4-Person kit as your primary plan.

Is the Quakehold! Survival Box the same as a Ready America kit?

Yes โ€” it is manufactured by Ready America and sold under the Quakehold! brand name (model 3000), the same company behind the Ready America 70280 and the Deluxe line.

Why trust this Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box review? WC Safety operates as an independent PPE and safety-supply retailer โ€” we stock the Survival Box and its Ready America siblings for households building layered disaster-preparedness plans. This review is authored by our editorial desk, not by Ready America, Quakehold!, or paid third-party reviewers. Contents and shelf-life claims come from the manufacturer's published product listing (model 3000, UPC 753962030003), cross-referenced against FEMA's Ready.gov 72-hour kit guidance and the competitive set in our own catalog. 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€” First aid and emergency preparedness desk ยท specialization: workplace, vehicle, trauma, and household disaster-preparedness kit selection.
Last reviewed: ยท Sources reviewed: Ready America 3000 The Survival Box product listing (UPC 753962030003), FEMA Ready.gov 72-hour emergency kit guidance, ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021, OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, WC Safety catalog comparison data.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Contents and shelf-life claims are taken from the manufacturer's published listing โ€” nothing is invented.
How this Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box review was researched
We evaluated the box on its manufacturer-published contents list, shelf-life ratings, and pricing, and positioned it against every kit in the 72 hour kits collection on price, first aid kit depth, and included gear. Household preparedness guidance was cross-checked against FEMA's Ready.gov baseline recommendations. No first-person field testing is claimed. Reviewed quarterly and on any change to the manufacturer listing or applicable guidance.
Disclosure. WC Safety is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program and earns from qualifying purchases made through Amazon links on this page. WC Safety also stocks the Quakehold! Ready America Survival Box in its own catalog. No manufacturer sponsored, reviewed, or influenced this content. The 4.0/5 rating reflects genuine value at its price point, offset by the absence of a first aid kit, backpack, and signaling gear. This article is not medical, legal, or regulatory advice โ€” consult a qualified professional for workplace first aid program requirements and your local emergency management agency for household disaster planning.
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