What's actually in my apartment go-bag — not what Reddit told me to pack
I started with a Reddit-prepper checklist and cut it in half. What an honest 72-hour emergency go bag actually contains for someone who lives in a city apartment, not a survival cabin.
The first version of my bag weighed 18 kg. I'd checked everything off a list someone posted on a preparedness subreddit: a multi-day water filter, a tarp, paracord, two knives, an entrenching tool, a hand-crank radio with a USB output, three days of freeze-dried food. The bag was almost too heavy to carry on a flat sidewalk.
The realistic question is: what am I actually preparing for? In an apartment in a city, the likely emergencies are a power outage lasting a few days, a building evacuation (gas leak, fire), a winter storm where the heat goes out, or a need to walk somewhere because transit is down. I'm not preparing for the forest. I removed everything that was forest-adjacent.
What stayed
- A high-capacity power bank kept charged. Not a hand-crank radio. A 20,000mAh power bank charges a phone six times. Six phone charges is two days of useful information during a blackout.
- A small first-aid kit — the trauma first aid kit kind with a tourniquet and pressure bandages, plus the boring stuff: pain reliever, antihistamines, bandaids, a few days of any prescription medication in original packaging.
- Cash. $200 in small bills in an envelope. ATMs fail. Card readers fail. A taxi driver doesn't care about your e-transfer in a storm.
- Copies of documents. Driver's license, passport, lease, insurance card — printed and in a sealed bag. If the building has to be evacuated for a week, this saves a lot of phone calls.
- A change of clothes — warm layer, socks, underwear. Not full survival kit. Not a tarp. Clothes I'd be comfortable sleeping in at a hotel or a shelter.
- Two liters of water in collapsible bottles, plus a small water purification tablets kit. Not a backpacking filter. Tablets.
- One day of food — granola bars, a few packets of nut butter, a small bag of trail mix. Not three days of freeze-dried meals.
- A flashlight with spare batteries. A real one, not a phone light. LED flashlight.
- A small Bluetooth radio or AM/FM. Pocket-sized. Just for emergency broadcasts when cell networks are choked.
- A multitool. One Leatherman style multitool. Not three knives. The multitool covers 95% of what knives are for in an urban setting.
What I cut
Tarp. Paracord. Entrenching tool. Compass. Fire starters. A second knife. A solar charger. A water filter that filters river water. The big freeze-dried food kit. A wool blanket that took up half the bag.
None of those are wrong items. They're the right items for a different emergency. If I lived rurally, or in a region with hurricane risk where I might be sheltering in place for a week, the list would be different. For 'apartment in a city, things might go sideways for 72 hours,' the heavy stuff is a costume.
The weight test
The current bag is about 4.5 kg. I can carry it for an hour without thinking about it. That matters more than the contents — a bag I won't carry is a bag I won't bring. A perfect bag in a closet I can't lift is a worse bag than a 'good enough' bag I'll actually pick up.
The principle, if there is one: prep for what's likely, not what's dramatic. The Reddit list is built for the most extreme scenario it can imagine. Most lives will never see that scenario. Build for yours.
Ready to shop? Compare preparedness across stores →