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If you're new to prepping and on a tight budget, you should take a look at this list. The survival items listed here aren't just inexpensive, they could be very useful in a disaster scenario.
Tarps, for instance, have at least 25 survival uses such as building shelter, patching leaks, collecting rainwater, and so forth. Duct tape has even more uses. You can use it to fix worn-out shoes, patch a leak in your tent, make a butterfly bandage, and more.
By stockpiling multipurpose items, you won't have to spend as much money on things that only have one function. This will save you some cash and make you more prepared. Here are some more useful and inexpensive items you should stockpile now.
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Aluminum Foil
Depression-era families saved aluminum foil because they knew its many uses. It can be folded into a small pot for boiling water, used as reflective signaling material, fashioned into improvised fishing lures, used to patch small holes, or wrapped around electronics as a basic Faraday cage to protect them from an EMP.
Baby Wipes
Whether or not you have a baby at home, baby wipes belong in your stockpile. When running water isn't available, they're the next best thing to a shower. They can be used to clean your hands, wipe down your body after working outside, clean wounds, and maintain basic hygiene during an extended emergency.
Baking Soda
Baking soda is one of the most underestimated multi-use items you can stockpile, and a large box costs less than a dollar. It can be used as a cleaning agent, a deodorizer, a mild abrasive for scrubbing, a fire extinguisher for small grease fires, a toothpaste substitute, a treatment for minor skin irritation and insect stings, and many other things.
Bar Soap
Bar soap is one of the most underrated stockpile items out there. It's cheap, lasts a long time, takes up very little space, and can be stretched even further by shaving it down to make a soapy solution for washing clothes or surfaces. Dollar stores usually carry it. If you've never used it because you prefer liquid soap, toss a few bars in your supplies anyway.
Batteries
Even if you have hand-crank or solar-powered devices, a solid supply of batteries is still a smart backup. The key tip here: standardize. Pick one or two battery sizes and stick to them across all your devices. Energizer lithium batteries are a great investment for long shelf life and high performance, but standard dollar store batteries work perfectly well for flashlights and radios.
Candles
Candles are one of the cheapest and most practical forms of emergency lighting you can stockpile. You can find them at dollar stores, yard sales, and flea markets for almost nothing, and a shoebox can hold dozens of them. Taper candles and pillar candles are both fine, but wider, low-center-of-gravity candles are safer since they're less likely to tip over.
Coffee Filters
Coffee filters have a surprising number of uses beyond the coffee maker. They work excellently as a pre-filter to remove sediment from water before running it through your main filter, which extends the life of your filter considerably. They can also be used as fire starters, food wrappers, makeshift funnels, and strainers. They're stackable, lightweight, and thousands of them fit into a small container.
Cooking Oil
Cooking oil is a basic necessity for preparing most meals, and it's easy to overlook until you don't have it. Vegetable oil and olive oil are needed for frying, baking, and sautéing, meaning a huge portion of your food storage will be less usable without it. Buy a few extra bottles whenever you shop, and it'll add up quickly without breaking the bank.
Disinfectants
Sanitation becomes critical fast when normal infrastructure breaks down. Hand sanitizer and alcohol wipes are cheap, easy to store, and can prevent serious illness in unsanitary conditions. Liquid bleach is also useful for disinfecting water, but keep in mind it has a short shelf life. After about a year it can lose up to 50% of its effectiveness, especially if stored in heat.
Duct Tape
The uses for duct tape in an emergency are nearly limitless: patching gear, making first-aid splints and slings, improvising rope, repairing clothing and shoes, sealing drafts, and much more. Don't cheap out here; bargain-bin duct tape often barely sticks.
Gorilla tape is worth the extra few dollars. For sealing windows and rooms against airborne hazards, metal plumber's tape (also called foil tape) is actually superior since it forms an airtight seal against surfaces where duct tape may not fully adhere.
Face Masks
After 9/11, people in New York City were paying $50 or more for a single face mask because supplies ran out instantly. At normal times, they cost almost nothing. N95 masks offer solid protection against airborne particles, smoke, dust, and illness, but even standard surgical masks are worth stocking in quantity. They're useful during pandemics, wildfires, debris cleanup, or any situation where air quality is compromised.
Gloves
You'll want more than one type. Heavy-duty leather work gloves are great for physical labor, but don't overlook vinyl or latex disposable gloves. A box of these runs about $4–$5 and they're invaluable for treating wounds, sorting through debris, handling contaminated materials, or doing anything where you'd rather not have direct skin contact.
Matches and Lighters
Fire-starting is a fundamental survival skill, and matches and lighters are the easiest, most reliable way to do it. Boxes of matches are cheap and stackable, and lighters don't cost much more. While it's worth learning to use a Ferro rod as a backup, having a generous supply of matches and lighters means you won't have to rely on skill under stress.
Over-the-Counter Medications
A lot of preppers invest heavily in trauma kits and tactical gear but forget entirely about basic OTC medications. A headache, an upset stomach, an allergic reaction, or diarrhea can be debilitating during a disaster when you're already under stress. Stock pain relievers, antacids, antihistamines, anti-diarrheal medications, and cold medicine. Dollar stores and Walmart carry these inexpensively in smaller quantities.
Paracord
Paracord is one of the most universally useful items you can have in any emergency kit. A 100-foot hank costs just a few dollars and can be used to hang a tarp shelter, lash gear together, create clothesline for drying clothes, build a snare, replace broken shoelaces, or serve as an improvised belt or tourniquet. The inner strands can be separated for even finer uses like fishing line or sutures. It's compact, lightweight, and practically indestructible.
Small Flashlights
You don't need to spend $100+ on a tactical light for your stockpile. Inexpensive LED flashlights in the $1–$10 range are perfectly serviceable for household emergencies, bug-out bags, and barter. The key is having enough of them that you're not scrambling to find the one flashlight in the house when the lights go out. Standardize on one battery size to keep things simple.
Tarps
A basic plastic tarp is one of the most versatile items you can own. Use one to collect rainwater, cover a broken window or a hole in your roof, build a makeshift shelter, or protect gear from the elements. They're lightweight, easy to fold down for storage, reusable, and available at dollar stores for just a few dollars. Keep a couple of different sizes on hand.
Toilet Paper
Few things will feel more like a luxury the moment they're gone. Toilet paper is easy to take for granted, but it belongs in every stockpile. Skip the dollar store on this one. Instead, buy in bulk from warehouse stores like Costco or Sam's Club where you'll get better quality at a lower per-roll price.
Trash Bags
Standard trash bags have obvious uses, but in a survival situation they become much more. They can serve as makeshift rain ponchos, ground covers under a tarp, carry-alls, or temporary patches for windows and roofs. For heavy-duty applications, look for compactor bags rather than contractor bags. They're made from significantly thicker plastic and are far more versatile.
Zip Ties
Zip ties are one of those items you won't think to stockpile until you desperately need one. They're dirt cheap, store in almost no space, and can serve as makeshift shoelaces, attachment points for gear on a pack, temporary fence repairs, bundle wraps for blankets and sleeping pads, and countless quick-fix applications.
Final Thoughts
The beauty of this list is that almost none of it requires a major investment. You can walk into a dollar store with $20 and come home with a meaningful haul that covers several of these categories. Start with whatever gaps you have, buy a little extra each week, and you'll be surprised how quickly your preparedness level improves.
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