Submissions     Contact     Advertise     Donate     BlogRoll     Subscribe                         

Sunday, January 18, 2026

30 Things You May Want to Barter in the Future

Spices and Oil

Here are 30 things you may want to barter in the future. In times of economic uncertainty, supply chain disruptions, natural disasters, or long-term emergencies, bartering becomes a powerful tool. When cash loses value or access to stores is limited, useful goods and practical skills often become more valuable than money itself.

Stocking items specifically for barter is a smart preparedness strategy. The best barter items are useful, consumable, hard to replace, and universally needed. Below are 30 of the most valuable things you may want to barter, along with why they matter and how they can help you build security and community resilience. Smart Items to Stock for Trade, Preparedness, and Self-Reliance.

Canned Food on the Countertop

Why Bartering Still Matters Today

Bartering is not just a thing of the past. In modern emergencies, people trade:

  • Goods for food
  • Supplies for services
  • Skills for safety or shelter

Barter systems thrive when:

  • Cash is scarce
  • Banks or payment systems are down
  • Inflation reduces buying power
  • Communities must rely on each other

Preparing now gives you options later.

30 Valuable Items You May Want to Barter

1. Water

Clean drinking water is always valuable. Bottled water, water purification tablets, or filters can quickly become priceless during shortages or emergencies. Please store at least 4 gallons of water per person for each day. This is for cooking, personal hygiene, light laundry chores, and drinking.

WaterBrick with Handle To Carry

2. Canned Food

Shelf-stable foods, such as vegetables, soups, meats, and fruits, are easy to store and widely in demand. Single-serve cans work especially well for bartering.

Canned Foods I Highly Recommend You Store

3. Rice

Rice is affordable, filling, and stores for years when kept properly. It’s a staple food in nearly every culture.

Rice Jasmine

4. Beans

Dry or canned beans are a good source of protein, fiber, and calories. They are excellent barter items due to their nutrition and long shelf life.

5. Flour

Flour allows people to make bread, tortillas, and baked goods. Vacuum-sealed or smaller packages are ideal for trading.

6. Sugar

Sugar is used for cooking, baking, preserving, and morale. It becomes highly valuable when supplies are limited.

7. Salt

Salt is essential for food preservation, seasoning, and health. It never spoils and has historically been used as currency.

8. Cooking Oil

Oils like vegetable, olive, or coconut oil are calorie-dense and essential for cooking. Small bottles are perfect for barter.

Oil Various Types

9. Coffee

Coffee is a morale booster and a highly desired item. Instant coffee stores well and is easy to trade.

Instant Coffee

10. Tea

Tea has a long shelf life and offers comfort, hydration, and health benefits. Herbal teas may be especially appealing.

Tea For Storage

11. Honey

Honey never spoils and can be used as food, medicine, or a sweetener. Small jars or sealed containers work best.

When honey crystallizes, it’s actually a natural and harmless process, not a sign that the honey has gone bad. Here’s what’s happening:

Why Honey Crystallizes

Honey is a supersaturated sugar solution made mostly of glucose and fructose.

  • Glucose tends to come out of solution and form crystals
  • Fructose stays liquid and surrounds those crystals

Over time, the glucose separates into tiny crystals, making honey look thick, grainy, or solid.

Factors That Affect Crystallization

Some honey crystallizes faster than others, depending on:

  • Type of flower source (clover and alfalfa crystallize quickly)
  • Temperature (50–59°F is ideal for crystallization)
  • Glucose-to-fructose ratio
  • Pollen or particles (raw honey crystallizes faster)

Is Crystallized Honey Safe?

Yes! Crystallized honey is:

  • 100% safe to eat
  • Still nutritious
  • Still delicious

In fact, many people prefer it spreadable or spoonable.

How to Decrystallize Honey

If you prefer liquid honey:

  1. Place the jar in warm (not boiling) water
  2. Stir occasionally
  3. Avoid microwaving—it can destroy enzymes and nutrients

What Crystallization Does Not Mean

  • It does not mean the honey is spoiled
  • It does not mean sugar was added
  • It does not reduce quality

Fun Fact

Raw, unfiltered honey almost always crystallizes eventually; it’s a sign of purity, not a flaw.

Honey Creamed and Regular Raw

12. Spices

Basic spices like pepper, salt, garlic powder, cinnamon, and chili powder make bland food enjoyable and valuable.

Spices and Oil

I had to insert cocoa powder here. I need chocolate for so many recipes. I’m also making caramel popcorn today, can you tell? I need Karo syrup. Caramel Popcorn.

Cocoa and Karo Syrup

13. Soap

Bar or liquid soap is compact, long-lasting, and essential for hygiene. Unscented or antibacterial soaps are especially useful. Do you love Dr. Bronner’s Castile Soap as much as I do?

Castile Soap

14. Toothpaste & Toothbrushes

Oral hygiene is often overlooked but extremely important. Individually packaged items are ideal for trade.

Toothbrushes on the Shelf

15. Toilet Paper

Lightweight and always in demand, toilet paper remains one of the most recognizable barter items.

16. Feminine Hygiene Products

Pads, tampons, and liners are essential and often hard to find during emergencies.

17. Diapers

Disposable diapers in various sizes are highly valuable to families with young children.

18. Baby Formula

Infant formula can become critically important during supply disruptions. Always store unopened, unexpired containers.

19. Over-the-Counter Medications

Pain relievers, allergy medicine, antacids, and cold remedies are frequently sought after.

Medicine with First-Aid-Kit

20. First Aid Supplies

Bandages, antiseptics, gauze, gloves, and medical tape are valuable in any emergency. Here’s a link to this post: First Aid Supplies You Need.

First Aid Kit with Supplies

21. Batteries

AA, AAA, and other common batteries are essential for flashlights, radios, and medical devices.

Batteries All Different Sizes

22. Candles

Candles provide light, warmth, and comfort when electricity is unavailable.

23. Matches & Lighters

Fire-starting tools are critical for cooking, warmth, and sanitation.

24. Flashlights

Small, reliable flashlights are useful and easy to trade.

Flashlights and Lanterns

25. Sewing Supplies

Needles, thread, buttons, and fabric allow people to repair clothing rather than replace it.

26. Tools

Basic hand tools like hammers, screwdrivers, pliers, and wrenches are always needed.

27. Gardening Seeds

Non-GMO, heirloom seeds are especially valuable for long-term food production.

28. Animal Feed

Feed for chickens, rabbits, or livestock can be hard to find during shortages and is valuable to homesteaders.

29. Fuel

Firewood, propane canisters, charcoal, or lamp oil are extremely valuable for cooking and heating.

Fuel In Buckets

30. Skills & Services

Bartering isn’t just about items. Skills such as:

  • Cooking
  • Medical knowledge
  • Mechanical repair
  • Gardening
  • Sewing
  • Childcare

These can be just as valuable, sometimes more than physical goods.

Tips for Successful Bartering

  • Store items in smaller tradeable quantities
  • Choose goods with long shelf lives
  • Avoid advertising everything you have
  • Focus on practical, everyday needs
  • Build trust within your community

10 Important Pioneer Skills That We Need

How to Barter with Food and Water

How to Be Prepared Before You Need to Be

Final Word

Bartering is about resilience, adaptability, and cooperation. Preparing barter items now doesn’t mean expecting disaster—it means being ready to help yourself and others if normal systems fail.

By stocking thoughtful, useful goods and learning valuable skills, you create security beyond money and strengthen your ability to thrive no matter what the future holds. Preparedness is not fear; it’s wisdom. May God bless this world, Linda

The post 30 Things You May Want to Barter in the Future appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

No comments:

Post a Comment