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

SuccorWare 90 Pieces First Aid Refill Kit, Wound Care Kit Review (2026)

Is the SuccorWare 90-Piece First Aid Refill Kit worth it for wound care top-ups?

Short answer: Yes โ€” for the specific job it's built for. At $12.99, the SuccorWare 90 Pieces First Aid Refill Kit is a wound-care-only top-up: bandages, gauze, dressings, and antiseptic-type items in a 90-piece pack, priced at the bottom of our refill lineup. It is not an ANSI-classed compliance refill and it does not restock medications โ€” it restocks the bandage drawer. If you need a full ANSI Z308.1 Class A restock for a workplace cabinet, look at the Urgent First Aid ANSI Class A Refill Kit instead.

Most first aid kits don't run dry all at once โ€” the bandages and gauze go first, weeks or months before the antiseptic wipes or the shears. The SuccorWare 90 Pieces First Aid Refill Kit, Wound Care Kit exists for that exact gap: a low-cost, wound-care-focused refill for home kits, vehicle kits, and personal or outdoor kits from the Outdoor and Personal First Aid Kits collection that are burning through bandages faster than anything else. This review covers where it fits in the First Aid Kit Refills collection, how it stacks up against the other budget-tier refills on our shelf, and when a full compliance refill is the smarter buy instead.

Editorial verdict: 4.0/5. At $12.99, the SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill is a solid, low-cost way to top up the wound-care side of a home, vehicle, or personal kit โ€” but it is not a substitute for a full ANSI-classed workplace refill, and buyers should not expect medications or trauma supplies in the box.

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Pros

  • 90 pieces of bandages, gauze, dressings, and antiseptic-type wound-care items in one low-cost pack
  • Lowest price point in our refill lineup besides the Homestockplus pack
  • Restocks exactly what a kit burns through first โ€” no bulk you don't need
  • Works across brands: restocks any home, vehicle, or personal kit, not just SuccorWare boxes
  • Easy, low-commitment way to keep a bandage drawer stocked between full refills

Cons

  • No stated ANSI class โ€” not a substitute for a Class A or Class B compliance refill
  • Wound care only: no medications, no OTC drugs, no trauma or bleeding-control items
  • Not sized or labeled for a specific person count, unlike the ANSI-classed refills
  • Won't bring a workplace cabinet up to an inspection-ready fill on its own

Who the SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill is for

  • Home and vehicle kit owners whose bandages and gauze run out long before anything else in the box.
  • Outdoor and personal kit owners restocking a bag from the Outdoor and Personal First Aid Kits collection after a camping trip or a season of minor scrapes.
  • Anyone stocking a wound-care drawer or cabinet shelf from the Bandages and Wound Care collection without needing a full compliance-graded kit.
  • Budget-conscious buyers who want a low-cost top-up rather than a full-priced refill and are comfortable pairing it with other single-item buys as needed.

What the SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill does well

It restocks the items that actually run out first

Nearly every first aid kit depletes unevenly โ€” bandages, gauze pads, and dressings disappear within the first few uses, while antiseptic wipes, tweezers, and shears often outlast the box itself. A 90-piece wound-care pack targets exactly that imbalance instead of forcing a buyer to purchase a full assorted refill just to replace bandages. It is a direct, efficient fix for the most common depletion pattern in a home or vehicle kit.

Priced at the bottom of the field

At $12.99, this sits near the cheapest end of our refill shelf, just above the Homestockplus First Aid Kit Refill at $11.89. For buyers who just want the bandage drawer topped off without spending $25 or more on a full ANSI-classed pack, this is the cost-efficient choice.

Brand-agnostic restocking

Wound-care basics are not proprietary. This refill works in any home kit, vehicle kit, or soft-case personal kit โ€” it isn't locked to SuccorWare-branded containers. It pairs equally well with a contractor's First Aid Only 9302-25M 25-Person Contractor First Aid Kit as it does with a generic drugstore kit at home.

Low-friction way to formalize a restock habit

Because it's cheap and narrowly scoped, this pack is an easy first step toward a restock routine for buyers who have never systematized it: check the bandage drawer twice a year, reorder when it's thin. It won't cover a full compliance audit, but it removes the most common reason a home kit goes empty.

Where the SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill falls short

No ANSI class means no workplace compliance claim

This pack does not carry a stated ANSI Z308.1 class, so it cannot be used to bring a workplace kit or cabinet back to a documented Class A or Class B fill. It is stocked for OSHA/ANSI first aid programs as a wound-care supplement, not as the compliance refill itself. For that job, the Urgent First Aid ANSI Class A Refill Kit is the right pack โ€” see our first aid kit buyer's guide for the Class A vs Class B decision.

No medications or OTC drugs

This is a wound-care-only refill: bandages, gauze, dressings, and antiseptic-type items. It does not include pain relievers, antihistamines, or other OTC medications. If your program needs a medication reload, the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit is built for exactly that, and it sells at a nearly identical price point.

Not a trauma or bleeding-control substitute

Wound-care basics stop a scrape or a minor cut from getting worse; they are not a bleeding-control kit. Sites or households that need tourniquet-level supplies should look at a dedicated IFAK pack instead.

SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill vs the budget-tier competitive set

Refill Focus Piece count Price Amazon
SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill, Wound Care (this review) Wound care only 90 $12.99 Check price
Homestockplus First Aid Kit Refill General loose pack Assorted $11.89 Check price
General Medi 160-Piece Refill Bag General assorted 160 $11.93 Check price
MFASCO Burn Care Refill Pack Burn care only Assorted $9.99 Check price
First Aid Only FAE-3100 Bandage Refill Bandages only Single item $8.19 Check price

Against the field: this pack sits between the single-item First Aid Only bandage-only refill and the broader assorted packs. It's narrower than the Homestockplus refill or General Medi bag, but that narrowness is the point โ€” it's the wound-care specialist of the budget tier, not a generalist.

SuccorWare vs Homestockplus vs General Medi: which budget refill to buy

Spec SuccorWare Refill Homestockplus Refill General Medi Refill
Focus Wound care only General loose pack General assorted
Piece count 90 Assorted 160
ANSI class None stated None stated None stated
Best fit Bandage-heavy usage Loose-pack top-up Bulk assorted top-up
Price $12.99 $11.89 $11.93
  • Buy the SuccorWare refill if your kit's bandages, gauze, and dressings run out well before everything else, and you want a wound-care-focused pack instead of a mixed bag.
  • Buy the Homestockplus refill if you want the cheapest possible general loose-pack top-up and don't need wound-care-specific focus.
  • Buy the General Medi bag if you want the largest raw piece count in the budget tier for a broad assortment.

Shop budget-tier refills on Amazon โ†’ SuccorWare 90-Piece Homestockplus General Medi 160-Piece

Which kits this refill restocks

The natural pairings on our shelves: a home or vehicle kit with no formal ANSI rating, an outdoor or personal kit after a camping season, or a contractor's First Aid Only 9302-25M 25-Person Contractor First Aid Kit that's burning through bandages faster than anything else on the truck. It also works as a wound-care top-up alongside a personal-scale ANSI kit like the ProHeal 10-Person ANSI Class A First Aid Kit or the Ever Ready First Aid 10-Person ANSI Class A First Aid Kit, and as a between-cycles bandage top-up for a larger cabinet like the Medique 712MTM 3-Shelf First Aid Cabinet โ€” though it should not be treated as that cabinet's full compliance refill. For a fuller survey of workplace-rated containers, see our best workplace first aid kits guide and best first aid cabinets and wall-mount stations guide.

Kits and cabinets this refill pairs with, on Amazon โ†’ First Aid Only 91248 RHINO RESCUE IFAK Kit

Category context: wound-care refills inside a first aid program

OSHA's 29 CFR 1910.151 requires adequate first aid supplies to be "readily available," and the ANSI Z308.1 standard defines the fill classes an employer measures against. A wound-care-only refill like this one is not, on its own, a way to satisfy that class requirement โ€” it is stocked for OSHA/ANSI first aid programs as a supplement, restocking the wound-care shelf between full compliance refills. Our OSHA first aid kit requirements explained reference breaks down what a compliant fill actually requires; component-level top-ups outside a formal program come from the Bandages and Wound Care collection.

Total cost of ownership

For a home or vehicle kit with no compliance requirement, wound care is the dominant recurring cost โ€” bandages and gauze wear out with use, not with a shelf-life clock, so the spend scales with how often the kit actually gets opened. At $12.99, one SuccorWare refill per year comfortably covers a household kit's bandage turnover, with the option to add single items like Curad Alcohol Prep Pads or Healqu Island Dressing 4 x 4 Inch as needed. Compare that to the $24.95 Urgent First Aid Class A refill, which is the right spend only once a formal ANSI class requirement is in play.

Final verdict: 4.0/5

The SuccorWare 90-Piece First Aid Refill Kit does one job well: it restocks the wound-care basics that run out first, at the lowest price in our lineup outside the Homestockplus pack. Buy this for home, vehicle, outdoor, and personal kits that need a bandage-and-gauze top-up. Buy the Urgent First Aid Class A refill instead if your container carries a formal ANSI class requirement, the General Medi bag if you want the highest raw piece count in the budget tier, or the CPR Savers medication refill if your gap is OTC medications rather than bandages.

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SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill โ€” FAQ

Is the SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill ANSI Z308.1 compliant?

No โ€” this pack does not carry a stated ANSI class. It's a wound-care-focused refill (bandages, gauze, dressings, antiseptic-type items), stocked for OSHA/ANSI first aid programs as a supplement rather than a certified Class A or Class B fill. For a documented compliance refill, see the Urgent First Aid ANSI Class A Refill Kit and our OSHA first aid kit requirements reference.

Does this refill include medications or OTC drugs?

No. This is a wound-care-only pack โ€” no pain relievers, antihistamines, or other OTC medications. If your kit needs a medication top-up, the CPR Savers Deluxe Medication Packet Refill Kit is built specifically for that.

What's the difference between the SuccorWare refill and a full ANSI Class A refill?

The SuccorWare pack restocks wound-care basics only and carries no ANSI class. The Urgent First Aid Class A refill is a documented 78-piece ANSI Z308.1 Class A fill for a 25-person kit. Use the SuccorWare pack for a home or personal kit; use the Class A refill for a workplace container with a compliance requirement.

SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill vs Homestockplus refill โ€” which should I buy?

Both sit near the same price point. The Homestockplus refill is a general loose pack across several supply types; the SuccorWare pack concentrates its 90 pieces on wound care specifically. Choose SuccorWare if bandages and gauze are your kit's fastest-depleting items; choose Homestockplus for a broader general top-up.

SuccorWare vs General Medi 160-piece refill โ€” which has more value?

The General Medi bag has a higher raw piece count at a similar price, spread across a general assortment. The SuccorWare pack has fewer total pieces but concentrates them on wound care, which matters more if bandages are what your kit actually runs out of.

Does the SuccorWare refill satisfy OSHA workplace requirements?

Not on its own. OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 points to ANSI Z308.1 class fills for workplace compliance, and this pack carries no stated class. It's stocked for OSHA/ANSI first aid programs as a wound-care supplement โ€” pair it with a proper Class A or Class B refill for the compliance portion of a workplace kit. See our OSHA first aid kit requirements reference.

Is this refill good for a home or vehicle kit?

Yes โ€” this is its strongest use case. Home and vehicle kits have no formal ANSI requirement and burn through bandages and gauze faster than anything else in the box, which is exactly what this pack restocks.

Is this refill good for an outdoor or personal kit?

Yes. It pairs well with kits in our Outdoor and Personal First Aid Kits collection that see frequent minor cuts, blisters, and scrapes rather than workplace-scale incidents.

Will this refill work for a workplace kit?

It can supplement one, but it should not be the sole refill for a workplace kit that carries a formal ANSI class rating. Use it to top up the wound-care shelf between full compliance refills, not as a replacement for one.

What kinds of injuries does this refill cover?

Minor cuts, scrapes, and abrasions โ€” the injuries bandages, gauze, and dressings are built for. It is not built for burns, trauma, or bleeding-control scenarios.

Does this refill include burn care items?

No โ€” this pack is wound-care focused, not burn-specific. If burn care is the gap, the MFASCO Burn Care Refill Pack is built for that need at a similar budget price point.

Is there a trauma or bleeding-control equivalent?

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

How often should a wound-care refill be restocked?

Check the bandage and gauze supply every few months for an actively used home or vehicle kit, and reorder whenever it's running thin. There's no fixed schedule since usage-driven items deplete based on how often the kit gets opened, not a shelf-life clock.

Do wound-care refill contents expire?

Bandages, gauze, and dressings keep well as long as packaging stays sealed and clean, but any antiseptic-type items in the pack should be checked for a printed expiration date before use.

Should I buy this or buy individual bandage/gauze items separately?

A pack like this is more efficient for a full top-up. For targeted needs โ€” say, more blue detectable bandages for food handling, or a specific dressing size โ€” individual items from the Bandages and Wound Care collection fill in the gaps between full refills.

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

Start with the container decision in the which first aid kit do you need guide, choose a kit or cabinet from the First Aid Kits collection that matches your setting, and add this refill to the reorder rotation specifically for the wound-care side of the fill.

Why trust this SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill review? WC Safety operates as an independent industrial 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 households alike. This review is authored by our editorial desk, not by SuccorWare or any paid third party. Framing around wound care versus compliance fills 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 facility restocking programs.
Last reviewed: ยท Sources reviewed: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021, SuccorWare product listing and labeling.
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.
How this refill review was researched. We evaluated the SuccorWare 90-Piece Refill as a curation and comparison exercise: mapping its stated wound-care-focused, 90-piece composition against the ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 class definitions, OSHA's 29 CFR 1910.151 supply expectations, and the competing budget-tier refill packs stocked in our own catalog. No first-person durability testing is claimed. Reviewed quarterly and 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 4.0/5 rating reflects fit-for-purpose, price against the competitive set, and honest scope (wound care only) 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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