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

THRIAID 430-Piece Waterproof First Aid Kit Review (2026)

Is the THRIAID 430-Piece Waterproof First Aid Kit the right high-count kit for your truck or base camp?

Short answer: Yes โ€” if you want the deepest piece count in our vehicle lineup with mounting straps included. The THRIAID 430-Piece Waterproof First Aid Kit is the count leader of our vehicle first aid kits collection at $52.99, with MOLLE straps and organized trays the listing builds its case on. Buyers tighter on cab space should compare the smaller THRIAID 330-Piece Waterproof First Aid Kit, and buyers optimizing pure price-per-piece should look at the Gevoke 410-Piece Waterproof Hard-Shell First Aid Kit at $39.99.

WC Safety stocks vehicle-oriented kits from THRIAID, Gevoke, MFASCO, KeepGoing, and RHINO RESCUE inside the parent first aid kits collection. This review pins the THRIAID 430-piece against that set: what the listing commits to, what a 430-piece count does and does not tell you, how the MOLLE-strap mounting changes vehicle staging, and which sibling wins each scenario. For the broader kit-type decision โ€” vehicle kit versus workplace kit versus trauma pouch โ€” start at the which first aid kit do you need buyer's guide.

Editorial verdict: 4.3 / 5. The THRIAID 430-Piece Waterproof First Aid Kit pairs the highest piece count in our vehicle lineup with the two features that matter for truck and base-camp staging: MOLLE straps for mounting and organized trays so the 430 pieces stay findable. At $52.99 it costs $13 more than the higher-piece-per-dollar Gevoke; the trays and straps are what you are paying for. No ANSI class is claimed โ€” treat it as a vehicle and camp kit, not workplace compliance.

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

  • 430 pieces โ€” the highest count in our vehicle kit lineup
  • Organized trays โ€” count depth without the rummage problem loose-fill kits have
  • MOLLE straps โ€” mounts to seat backs, roll bars, and pack panels instead of sliding around the trunk
  • Waterproof construction โ€” stated on the listing; suits truck beds and camp duty
  • Dual-role sizing โ€” one kit serves the vehicle on the road and the base camp at the destination

Cons

  • No ANSI class claimed โ€” piece count is not workplace compliance
  • Piece counts inflate โ€” high totals lean on small consumables; the listing does not itemize
  • $13 over the Gevoke โ€” the 410-piece hard-shell wins raw pieces per dollar
  • No trauma-grade gear claimed โ€” severe-bleeding response still needs a dedicated IFAK

Who the THRIAID 430-Piece kit is for

  • Work trucks and overland rigs that want one strapped-in kit covering driver, crew, and passengers
  • Base camps and job trailers where a high-count kit serves several people for days
  • Families running one kit for the vehicle, campsite, and cabin rather than three small ones
  • Crews pairing layers โ€” this beside a trauma pouch like the RHINO RESCUE Vehicle IFAK Trauma Kit covers both everyday and severe injuries
  • Buyers who value organization โ€” the tray layout is the difference between a kit and a bag of supplies

What the THRIAID 430-Piece kit does well

Count depth that matches multi-person, multi-day use

A 430-piece fill is not about treating one injury better โ€” it is about treating the twentieth minor injury without running out. Vehicles that carry crews, and camps that host groups, burn through bandages, wipes, and tape at a rate that empties a 100-piece glovebox kit in a season. Count depth is this kit's core argument, and it holds the top of our vehicle first aid kits table on that axis.

The trays make the count usable

High-count kits fail in practice when the contents live as a compressed brick of baggies. THRIAID's organized-tray interior โ€” the listing's second headline feature โ€” means the burn supplies, bandages, and tools hold separate stations, so the person opening it under stress finds the right item without unpacking the rest. Organization is worth more than an extra fifty pieces.

MOLLE straps solve vehicle mounting

A kit that slides under the seat during braking is a kit nobody finds in the moment. The MOLLE straps mount this kit to a seat back, cargo panel, or roll bar the same way the trauma-kit category mounts pouches โ€” the approach our RHINO RESCUE Vehicle IFAK review credits as the single biggest vehicle-staging upgrade.

Waterproofing suits real vehicle life

The listing's waterproof claim is the right spec for the environment: truck beds, wet tailgates, camp tables, and humidity cycles. Sterile supplies that ride in a vehicle for years need the shell to do the preservation work.

One kit, two stations

The road-plus-camp positioning is honest about how these kits get used: strapped in the rig all week, carried to the picnic table or job trailer on arrival. Buyers otherwise shopping a vehicle kit plus a separate camp kit from the outdoor and personal first aid kits collection can often consolidate into this one purchase.

Where the THRIAID 430-Piece kit falls short

Piece count is not a compliance claim

THRIAID claims no ANSI class and no OSHA compliance, and we will not invent one. Workplaces needing a compliant kit buy from the workplace first aid kits collection, where Class A and B fills are the point โ€” our OSHA first aid kit requirements explained reference decodes what those classes require. Fleet vehicles under DOT-adjacent policies should look at the MFASCO Vehicle First Aid Kit, DOT/ANSI/OSHA Compliant Metal Case instead.

The count is not itemized

Like most high-count kits, the listing gives the total without a full manifest, and totals in this category lean on small consumables โ€” swabs, tape strips, safety pins. Judge the kit as "deep general fill," not as 430 distinct capabilities, and inventory it on arrival if you document contents.

Severe bleeding still needs its own layer

Nothing in the listing claims trauma-grade equipment โ€” no tourniquet, no chest seal. That is normal for this category and the reason our two-layer advice stands: pair any general kit with a bleeding-control pouch from the trauma kits and bleeding control collection.

THRIAID 430-Piece vs the vehicle kits we stock

Kit Pieces Case Price
THRIAID 430-Piece Waterproof First Aid Kit 430 Waterproof, MOLLE straps, trays $52.99 Check price
THRIAID 330-Piece Waterproof First Aid Kit 330 Waterproof, mid-size $45.99 Check price
Gevoke 410-Piece Waterproof Hard-Shell First Aid Kit 410 Waterproof hard shell $39.99 Check price
MFASCO Vehicle First Aid Kit, Metal Case Not count-marketed Metal, DOT/ANSI/OSHA compliant $55.95 Check price
KeepGoing Travel First Aid Kit Not count-marketed Soft travel case $41.95 Check price

Scenario reads: THRIAID 430 for maximum depth with mounting, Gevoke for pieces-per-dollar (see the Gevoke 410-Piece hard-shell kit review), MFASCO when fleet policy needs the compliance stamp (the MFASCO vehicle first aid kit review covers it), and KeepGoing for car-plus-carry-on portability (the KeepGoing travel first aid kit review makes that case). The full field is ranked in the best vehicle and truck first aid kits guide.

THRIAID 430 vs THRIAID 330 โ€” the in-brand decision

The honest differences are exactly two: 100 pieces and $7. The 430 (SKU TA-BFAK-RED02) is the bigger fill with MOLLE straps and tray organization pitched at trucks and base camps; the 330 (SKU TA-MFAK-RED) is the mid-size build the listing positions for cars and light trucks where cab space is the constraint. Same brand, same waterproof construction claim.

Shop both THRIAID sizes on Amazon โ†’ 430-Piece 330-Piece

What pairs with the THRIAID 430

The 430-piece fill handles everyday injuries; the gaps are severe bleeding and restock. Stage a RHINO RESCUE Vehicle IFAK Trauma Kit or the pouch-format RHINO RESCUE IFAK Trauma Kit beside it for the trauma layer, and draw consumable top-offs from the first aid kit refills collection or the bandages and wound care collection as the trays thin out.

Complete the vehicle setup on Amazon โ†’ THRIAID 430 Rhino Vehicle IFAK

Where a vehicle kit fits in a first aid program

Vehicle kits are convenience-layer coverage: right supplies, right place, no compliance claim. Workplaces answer to OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 and ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 through their facility kits โ€” the split our OSHA first aid kit requirements explained reference lays out โ€” while work vehicles typically carry a kit like this by policy rather than regulation. Contractors running mixed fleets can borrow the staging pattern from our construction site PPE hub: compliant kit at the site, high-count kit in the truck, trauma pouch beside both.

Total cost of ownership

The $52.99 buy-in is most of the lifetime cost. After that: consumable top-offs as high-turnover items (bandages, wipes, tape) deplete, and date-driven replacement of sterile items on the printed schedule. The tray layout makes quarterly checks fast โ€” empty stations are visible at a glance. Refill economics favor buying components from the first aid kit refills collection over replacing the kit; the shell and trays are the durable asset.

Final verdict: 4.3 / 5

The THRIAID 430-Piece Waterproof First Aid Kit is the depth-plus-organization pick of our vehicle first aid kits lineup โ€” the biggest fill we stock, made usable by trays and mountable by MOLLE. Buy this for trucks, rigs, and base camps serving groups. Buy the THRIAID 330-Piece kit when cab space rules, and buy the MFASCO metal vehicle kit when fleet policy demands the DOT/ANSI/OSHA stamp.

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THRIAID 430-Piece kit โ€” frequently asked questions

What does 430 pieces actually mean?

It is the total item count across all categories, and โ€” as in every high-count kit โ€” small consumables like swabs and tape strips carry much of the total. The listing does not itemize the fill, so read it as a deep general-purpose supply, and inventory on arrival if you document contents.

THRIAID 430 vs THRIAID 330 โ€” which should I buy?

The 430 adds 100 pieces, tray organization, and MOLLE straps for $7 more; the THRIAID 330-Piece kit is the smaller-footprint build for cars and light trucks. Group use and mounting space favor the 430; sedan trunks favor the 330.

THRIAID 430 vs Gevoke 410 โ€” which is the better value?

Raw pieces per dollar, the Gevoke 410-Piece hard-shell kit at $39.99 wins. The THRIAID's $13 premium buys the MOLLE mounting and tray organization; our Gevoke 410 review argues the hard-shell case.

Is the THRIAID 430 kit OSHA-compliant or ANSI-classed?

No โ€” the listing claims neither, and we will not fabricate a class. For compliance-driven purchases, shop the workplace first aid kits collection and read the OSHA first aid kit requirements reference first.

Can the THRIAID 430 be a work truck kit?

Yes, as the practical layer โ€” many fleets stock it for coverage while the facility kit satisfies compliance. Fleets whose policy names DOT/ANSI/OSHA compliance for the vehicle itself should choose the MFASCO Vehicle First Aid Kit instead.

How do the MOLLE straps mount in a vehicle?

The strap field ties to seat-back panels, headrest posts, cargo-area tie-downs, or roll bars โ€” the same webbing approach the Rhino Vehicle IFAK review covers for trauma pouches. Mounted kits stay findable; loose kits migrate under seats.

Is the THRIAID 430 waterproof enough for a truck bed?

The listing claims waterproof construction, which is the right spec for bed boxes, tailgates, and camp weather. As with any sealed kit, closing it properly after each use is what maintains the protection.

Does the THRIAID 430 include a tourniquet or trauma gear?

The listing does not claim trauma-grade equipment, and high-count general kits should not be assumed to include it. Stage a dedicated kit from the trauma kits collection โ€” the pairing logic is in the best trauma kits and IFAKs guide.

How many people can this kit support?

There is no person-rating on the listing, so we will not assign one. Directionally, it is the deepest fill in our vehicle lineup โ€” sized for crews and groups rather than a solo commuter, which is exactly the 430-versus-330 dividing line.

Is this kit good for camping and overlanding?

Yes โ€” road-plus-base-camp is the listing's own positioning, and the waterproof shell suits it. Solo hikers wanting weight savings should look at the packs in the outdoor and personal first aid kits collection and the best hiking and outdoor first aid kits guide.

How often should I check the kit?

Quarterly for depletion and annually for dates is the fleet-standard cadence. The tray layout makes the quarterly check a two-minute visual scan โ€” a genuine operational advantage over brick-packed kits.

What refills the kit as supplies run down?

Component top-offs from the first aid kit refills collection and everyday consumables from bandages and wound care. Replacing consumables, not the kit, is the economical path.

Does the THRIAID 430 fit in a sedan trunk?

The listing positions it for vehicles and base camps but publishes no dimensions, so we will not guess fit. Sedan-first buyers are the exact audience THRIAID built the 330 for โ€” start with our THRIAID 330 review.

THRIAID 430 vs KeepGoing travel kit โ€” which for road trips?

The KeepGoing Travel First Aid Kit optimizes portability across car, luggage, and day bag; the THRIAID 430 optimizes staying power at one station. Frequent flyers lean KeepGoing; road-trippers with a fixed rig lean THRIAID.

What rating did the THRIAID 430-Piece kit earn?

4.3 out of 5 โ€” top of our vehicle lineup for count depth, tray organization, and MOLLE mounting, with deductions for the non-itemized manifest and the absence of any compliance class at a price above the Gevoke.

Why trust this THRIAID 430-Piece kit review? WC Safety is an independent industrial PPE and safety-supply retailer โ€” we stock this kit and its competitors from Gevoke, MFASCO, KeepGoing, and RHINO RESCUE for fleet managers, overlanders, and site buyers. This review comes from our editorial desk, not from THRIAID or paid reviewers. The kit is described from the manufacturer listing; regulatory context maps to OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 and ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021. Disclosed: WC Safety stocks this product and earns Amazon affiliate commissions on outbound clicks; neither influences the rating.
By Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial โ€” First aid and emergency-response desk ยท specialization: workplace first aid programs, vehicle and site kit staging, and ANSI Z308.1 kit compliance.
Last reviewed: ยท Sources reviewed: THRIAID product listing (SKU TA-BFAK-RED02), OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021, DOT-adjacent fleet kit conventions, Gevoke/MFASCO/KeepGoing product documentation for the comparison set.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Contents described strictly from the manufacturer listing โ€” no invented piece manifests, dimensions, or compliance claims.
How this vehicle kit review was researched. We compared the manufacturer's published description against the vehicle and travel kits we stock (THRIAID 330, Gevoke, MFASCO, KeepGoing, RHINO RESCUE), and mapped the compliance boundary to OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 and ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 so the kit is judged as what it claims to be โ€” a vehicle and camp kit, not a workplace compliance product. No first-person testing is claimed. Reviewed quarterly and on any change to the listing or cited guidance.
Disclosure. WC Safety participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program and earns from qualifying purchases made through links on this page. WC Safety also stocks this product. The 4.3/5 rating reflects listed piece count, organization, mounting, and value against the competitive set โ€” not sponsorship; we accept none. This review is not medical, legal, or regulatory advice. Consult your safety officer for workplace and fleet program requirements.
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