72 hours is the minimum

Authorities recommend having at least 72 hours of food and water for every household member. After major disasters, supply chains can take days or even weeks to restore. Supermarket shelves empty within hours when panic buying begins. Build your supply before you need it.

Step 1: Choose the right foods

Recommended emergency foods and shelf lives

FoodShelf lifeCalories (approx.)Notes
White rice (sealed)10-30 years360 kcal/100gStore in airtight container with oxygen absorber
Dried pasta2-3 years350 kcal/100gKeep dry and sealed
Tinned fish (tuna, sardines)3-5 years200 kcal/tinHigh protein, no cooking needed
Tinned vegetables2-5 years50-100 kcal/tinDrain liquid, eat cold if needed
Tinned beans/chickpeas3-5 years300 kcal/tinGood protein and fibre source
Crackers/hardtack1-2 years400 kcal/100gVacuum-seal for longer life
Energy/cereal bars6-12 months200-300 kcal/barCompact, ready to eat
Dried fruit and nuts6-12 months400-600 kcal/100gHigh energy, watch for rancidity in nuts
HoneyIndefinite300 kcal/100gNever spoils, natural energy source
Powdered milk1-2 years500 kcal/100gCalcium and protein source
Instant coffee/tea2-5 yearsMinimalMorale and comfort
Salt, sugar, spicesIndefiniteVariesEssential for flavour and preservation

Step 2: Store correctly

Ideal storage conditions

  • Temperature: 10-20°C is ideal. Every 5°C above 20°C roughly halves the shelf life of many foods
  • Humidity: below 60%. High humidity promotes mould and accelerates degradation
  • Light: store in a dark place. UV light degrades vitamins and can cause fats to go rancid
  • Pests: use sealed containers (glass, metal or thick plastic). Bay leaves in grain containers deter weevils
  • Avoid: garages with temperature swings, attics (too hot in summer), under sinks (risk of leaks)

Container options

  • Food-grade plastic buckets (20 L): excellent for bulk rice, pasta, flour. Use with gamma seal lids
  • Mylar bags with oxygen absorbers: extend shelf life of dry goods to 10-25 years
  • Glass jars with rubber seals: reusable, airtight, pest-proof
  • Original packaging: adequate for short-term (6-12 months) storage of tinned goods
  • Vacuum sealing: removes air and extends shelf life 3-5 times for dry goods

Step 3: Rotate stock (FEFO)

First Expired, First Out

FEFO ensures you always consume the oldest items first and nothing goes to waste. It is the professional standard used in food industry logistics.

  • Label everything: write the purchase date and expiry date on each item with a permanent marker
  • New items go to the back: when adding stock, place it behind existing items
  • Monthly check: review dates once a month. Move items expiring within 3 months to your regular kitchen use
  • Replace what you use: when you eat an emergency item, buy a replacement within the week
  • Digital tracking: use our inventory tracker to manage expiry dates automatically
  • Seasonal rotation: schedule a full review every 6 months (e.g. March and September)

Step 4: Power cut food safety

Critical temperature rules

Food safety during power cuts depends on temperature and time. These rules are based on guidelines from ASAE (the Portuguese food safety authority) and the European Food Safety Authority.

Fridge (0-5°C)

  • Stays safe for approximately 4 hours if the door remains closed
  • Each door opening reduces this time significantly
  • Place a thermometer inside to monitor temperature
  • If above 5°C for more than 2 hours, perishable items must be discarded
  • Move essential items to a cool box with ice if the outage is prolonged

Full freezer (-18°C)

  • Stays safe for approximately 48 hours if the door stays closed
  • A half-full freezer: approximately 24 hours
  • Food that still contains ice crystals can be safely refrozen
  • If food has thawed and been above 5°C for over 2 hours, discard
  • Group items tightly together. They keep each other cold longer

The 2-hour rule

  • Perishable food left at room temperature for more than 2 hours is unsafe
  • In hot weather (above 30°C), reduce this to 1 hour
  • This includes meat, dairy, cooked rice, eggs and prepared meals
  • When in doubt, throw it out. Food poisoning can be life-threatening in an emergency when medical services are strained

See our power outages guide and freezer management guide for more details.

Step 5: Check food safety

Signs food is unsafe

  • Swollen or dented tins: may indicate botulism. Never eat from a bulging tin
  • Unusual smell: sour, rancid or "off" odours mean the food has spoiled
  • Colour changes: darkening, unusual spots or mould
  • Fizzing or bubbling when opened (unexpected fermentation)
  • Broken seals or damaged packaging: air exposure leads to contamination
  • "Best before" vs "Use by": "best before" is about quality. "Use by" is about safety. Never consume food past its "use by" date

72-hour shopping list per person

Minimum supply (approximately 2,000 kcal/day)

ItemQuantity (3 days)Approx. cost
Water9 litres (3 x 6L bottles)3-5 EUR
Tinned tuna/sardines4 tins4-6 EUR
Tinned beans or chickpeas2 tins2-3 EUR
Crackers or hardtack2 packets (400g)2-3 EUR
Energy/cereal bars6 bars3-5 EUR
Dried fruit and nuts200g3-4 EUR
Tinned fruit2 tins2-3 EUR
Powdered milk or UHT milk1 litre equivalent1-2 EUR
Instant coffee/tea bagsSmall pack1-2 EUR
Total per person21-33 EUR

Use our water and food calculator to plan exact quantities for your household.

Special dietary needs

Vegetarian and vegan

  • Tinned beans, lentils, chickpeas (protein)
  • Nut butters (high calorie, long shelf life)
  • Dried soya protein or textured vegetable protein
  • Fortified plant-based UHT milk
  • Nutritional yeast (B12 source, long shelf life)

Babies and medical diets

  • Infant formula (always check expiry dates carefully)
  • Baby food jars or pouches (6-12 month shelf life)
  • Gluten-free alternatives: rice, tinned potatoes, gluten-free crackers
  • Diabetic considerations: include low-glycaemic options and glucose tablets
  • Food allergies: label all emergency food clearly with allergens

Build your supply gradually

You do not need to buy everything at once. Add 2-3 extra items to your regular weekly shop. Within a month, you will have a solid 72-hour supply. Integrate emergency food into your normal meals using FEFO rotation, and nothing will go to waste. Start today.