A family of four needs roughly 2.9 million calories to eat for a year — about 8,000 a day. Almost every “survival food list” online skips that number, which is exactly how people end up with three buckets of rice and a dangerously false sense of security.
We’ve built and eaten from food storage in our own home, and the list below reflects what actually holds up. Stocking a real year’s supply is a two-front job: putting away food your family will actually eat, and knowing how to cook it. The second part trips up more people than the first.
We’ve watched folks proudly point to 200 pounds of dried beans they’ve never once soaked, ground, or simmered. The night the power’s out and the kids are hungry is the worst possible time to learn. So before you stack a single bucket, collect a handful of recipes you’ve actually made — start with our rice and bean survival soup (or its scrappier cousin, garbage soup) — so a bucket of beans isn’t some mystery you crack open in a crisis.
How Much Food a Family of 4 Actually Needs for a Year
Anchor your plan to real numbers before you buy a single can. Utah State University Extension — one of the most trusted names in home food storage — recommends about 300 pounds of grains per person for a one-year supply, of which 25 to 60 pounds should be rice (USU Extension, Storing White Rice). For a family of four, that’s 1,000 to 1,200 pounds of grain as your calorie base — plus legumes, fats, and the extras below.
The piece nearly every “rice and beans” plan forgets is fat. A pound of cooking oil carries about 4,000 calories; a pound of rice, about 1,650. Oil is the cheapest dense calories you can store, and without enough of it your stored food falls short and your meals feel thin. Plan on 80 to 100 pounds of oil, shortening, or lard for a family of four for the year.
Here’s a realistic one-year target for four people:
| Category | Annual amount (family of 4) | Rough bulk cost |
|---|---|---|
| Grains (rice, wheat, oats, pasta) | 1,000–1,200 lbs | $500–$700 |
| Legumes (beans, lentils, split peas) | 200–250 lbs | $250–$375 |
| Fats / oils | 80–100 lbs | $250–$400 |
| Sugar / honey | 60–80 lbs | $60–$120 |
| Powdered milk | 40–60 lbs | $200–$300 |
| Salt, leavening, bouillon, spices | as needed | $50–$100 |
That lands a family of four near the ~2.9 million calories a real year requires, with protein and fat behind the carbs instead of just starch. Done frugally with bulk buys and case-lot sales, a true one-year supply runs roughly $900 to $1,500 — not the $300 you’ll see promised in the famous rice-and-bean bucket plan. That plan is a fine starting layer (it covers about five weeks of full calories for four), but we’d rather you know the honest number up front than discover the gap when it matters.
You don’t buy it all at once. Build in layers, cheapest-calories-first, a paycheck at a time. The full list below is your menu of options for each layer.
The Complete Survival Food Storage List for 1 Year
This is the full long-term food storage list to build your one-year supply, organized so you can work down it by category. Notes on shelf life, quantities, and how we actually use each group follow below the list.
- Waffle/Pancake Mixes
- Stovetop Meals and Stuffing
- Macaroni and Cheese
- Potatoes Au Gratin
- Canned Spaghetti, Ravioli and similar products (think Chef Boyardee)
- Bulk Pastas and Noodles — spaghetti, macaroni, fettuccine, linguini
- Couscous
- Bulk Instant Potatoes
- Cereals: in particular, think shredded wheat (some decent nutritional value)
- Oatmeal
- Instant Rice Mixes
- Canned Beans — much cheaper in dry bulk, but dry beans need a long cook. Keep at least a small supply of canned, ready to open and eat: Black Beans, Refried Beans, Pinto Beans, Garbanzo Beans (chickpeas), Baked Beans, White Beans, Kidney Beans, Butter Beans
- Peanut Butter and other nut butters: Almond Butter, Cashew Butter, Sunbutter (sunflower seed), Dehydrated Peanut Butter (longer shelf life)
- Protein Bars
- Protein Powder and Shake Mixes
- Canned Beef
- Canned Turkey
- Canned Chicken
- Tuna
- Salmon
- Spam
- Vienna Sausages
- Hot Dogs and Cured Sausages
- Dehydrated Eggs
- Boxed Tofu
- Canned Soups
- Dried Soup Mixes
- Make your own Rice and Bean Survival Soups (or “Garbage Soup“)
- Ramen Noodles
- Canned Chili
- Stews
- Chowders
- Dried Fruits and Fruit Leathers: Apricots, Raisins, Cranberries, Banana Chips, Mixed Fruit
- Canned Fruits: Peaches, Pears, Applesauce, Pineapple, Mixed Fruit
- Jams, Jellies, and Preserves: Strawberry, Blackberry, Raspberry, Blueberry, Orange Marmalade, Apricot, Peach, Cherry
- V8 and similar vegetable juices
- Canned Tomatoes
- Canned Pumpkin
- Carrots
- Green Beans
- Corn
- Beets
- Peas
- Asparagus
- Mixed Vegetables
- Potatoes
- Salad Dressings
- BBQ Sauce
- Ketchup
- Mustard
- Mayonnaise
- Relish
- Soy Sauce
- Tabasco
- Olive Oil
- Coconut Oil
- Lard
- Organic Shortening
- Syrup
- Evaporated Milk or Sweetened Condensed Milk (condensed is usually sweetened)
- Powdered Milk
- Powdered Whey
- Shelf Stable Butter
- Ghee
- Shelf Stable Cheeses: Freeze Dried Cheese, Canned Cheese, Parmesan
- Granola Bars
- Popcorn
- Beef Jerky
- Pemmican
- Crackers
- Cookies
- Trail Mix
- Hard Cheeses Encased in Wax (can keep up to 25 years)
- Pickles (canned varieties carry less risk of glass breakage)
- Hard Candy
- Nuts (the fat content limits shelf life): Almonds, Walnuts, Peanuts, Pecans, Hazelnuts, Mixed Nuts, Sunflower Seeds
- Chocolate or Chocolate Chips — once your bases are covered, stash a little for morale (about a year of shelf life)
- Salsa
- Sports Drinks and Powdered Drink Mixes
- Coffee
- Teas
- Hot Chocolate
- Ovaltine
- Dry Beans: Black Beans, Black Eyed Peas, Garbanzo Beans, Kidney Beans, Lima Beans, Pinto Beans
- Hard Grains (hard shell, storable up to 25 years): Buckwheat, Dry Corn, Kamut, Hard Red Wheat, Millet, Spelt, Flax
- Soft Grains (softer shell, 8+ years stored properly): Quinoa, Rolled Oats, Soft White Wheat, Rye Berries, Oat Groats, Barley
- Legumes: Split Peas, Red Lentils
- Rice — note that brown rice is more nutritious but its oils go rancid fast; white, Basmati, or Jasmine store far longer
- Freeze Dried Fruit (fiber and antioxidants): Apples, Strawberries, Raspberries, Bananas, Blueberries, Blackberries, Mangos, Pineapples
- Freeze Dried Vegetables
- Freeze Dried Meat
- Flour (preferably whole wheat). Storing whole wheat berries is smart if you have a grinder — see bulk staples. More on this in our guide to storing flour long-term
- Cornmeal
- Grits
- Sugar
- Molasses
- Iodized Salt
- Spices and Seasonings: Pepper, Garlic, Chili Powders, Rosemary, Oregano, Mustard, Ginger, Cumin, Dill, Saffron, Vanilla Extract
- Apple Cider Vinegar
- Leavening (what brings dry storage to life for baking): Baking Powder, Baking Soda, Yeast (live culture, harder to store)
- Bread Mixes
- Coconut Milk or Coconut Milk Powder
- Bouillon Cubes
- Vegetable, Beef, or Chicken Stock
- Bread Crumbs
- Cornstarch or Potato Flour — thickening agent, also good for breading
- Honey (local if you can get it; great sugar substitute with antibacterial properties)
- Cocoa Powder
Quick and Easy Meals (see items 1-5 above)
Start your storage with a supply of easy, good-tasting box and can entrees. Soups belong here too. These aren’t health food by any stretch — but they’re quick, foolproof, and they buy you breathing room. When things are falling apart, you don’t want to be soaking black beans for three hours or baking bread from scratch. The job of these meals is simple: fill the family’s stomachs fast so you can regroup and figure out your next move.
Grains and Starches (see items 6-11 above)
Grains and starches are long-lasting and easier to cook than most bulk staples. They’re cheap — bulk white rice runs roughly $0.50 to $0.70 a pound — and they should be the backbone of your storage. They’re carb-heavy and quick energy, but they shine when you pair them with proteins, sauces, and vegetables to round out nutrition and flavor.
Proteins (see items 12-25 above)
Protein rebuilds and repairs. You can get it from beans, nuts, and grains, but the densest sources are animal-based. Canned meats are the workhorse here — cheap, shelf-stable for years, and ready to eat. Jerky is tasty but pricier and shorter-lived, so we treat it as a snack, not a staple. Protein shakes and bars round things out for a quick hit on the go.
Soups (see items 26-32 above)
Soup stretches. Need to feed two more people who showed up at the door? Add water and another handful of rice. It’s been the food of lean times and wartime rations for centuries because it’s easy to make, easy to extend, and usually very shelf-stable. Keep a mix of canned and dry soup mixes, and know how to build one from your own staples.
Fruits (see items 33-35 above)
Fruit makes everything taste better — stir it into oatmeal, snack on it, pair it with protein. It also pulls real weight: vitamin C, potassium, iron, fiber, vitamin A, and antioxidants, though some is lost in preservation. The best setup is your own fruit trees, emergency or not. Short of that, stock canned and dried. Dried fruit doesn’t keep nearly as long as canned, and if you grow your own, drying and canning are two easy ways to put it up — see the preservation supplies below.
Vegetables (see items 36-46 above)
Vegetables bring fiber and micronutrients, and a few bring real calories. Lean on pumpkin, sweet potatoes, and other root crops for the highest energy per can. They’re less familiar to a lot of us at dinner, but with the right seasoning they’re filling and genuinely good. A long-term garden is the upgrade path here — see gardening for survival and the classic Three Sisters planting.
Sauces, Oils, and Condiments (see items 47-59 above)
This group does two jobs: flavor and calories. Don’t skim on the oils — they’re the cheapest dense energy in your whole pantry and essential for baking and cooking. The catch is shelf life. Most cooking oils run about 1 to 2 years before they turn; coconut oil is one of the longer keepers. Label every bottle with its purchase date and rotate. We keep oil at the front of the rotation specifically because it’s the one calorie source you can’t afford to let go rancid.
Shelf Stable Dairy (see items 60-65 above)
If you keep a goat or a cow, you’re set. The rest of us lean on a few staples. Powdered milk drinks fine and bakes even better, and it’s one of the few storage foods that delivers vitamin B12 — the nutrient an all-grain diet leaves out. Evaporated milk, powdered eggs, and whey fill in too. Shelf-stable cheeses sit further out on the luxury end, but powdered Parmesan and wax-encased hard cheeses add real punch, and depending on the cheese and the seal they can keep 10 to 25 years.
Snacks and Luxuries (see items 66-78 above)
Snacks aren’t the nutrition workhorses, but they’re morale, and morale matters when life is grim. Once your real bases are covered, a few comfort items earn their shelf space. One honest warning: skip the “make your own pemmican” course making the rounds. It’s an expensive, complicated DIY product dressed up as essential prepping. Reliable storage is about food that meets your needs, stays affordable, and keeps things simple. Don’t let a marketing funnel pull you off course.
Juices and Other Beverages (see items 79-83 above)
Drinks add variety, a little nutrition, and a lot of comfort. A hot cup of cocoa on a cold, dark night does more for a family’s spirits than its calorie count suggests, and coffee or tea keeps a daily routine intact when everything else is upended. Treat this as a layer you add once the essentials are handled — welcome, but not life-or-death.
Bulk Staples (see items 84-88 above)
Here are the textbook survival foods: rice, beans, hard wheat berries, and grains you’ve never tried to pronounce. They’re the cheapest, longest-lasting calories you can buy. Beans are the standout — high calorie, endlessly versatile, and you can even sprout a handful for fresh greens or the garden.
The tradeoff is cooking. Most dry beans need a soak of several hours and then an hour or more on the stove, and that eats fuel and water you may be rationing. One honest note from experience: beans that have sat a decade get stubbornly hard and resist softening no matter how long you simmer. If yours are pushing that age, grind them into bean flour and use them as a thickener or gravy base.
Here’s roughly how long the core staples keep when sealed in Mylar with oxygen absorbers and stored cool and dark:
| Food | Shelf life (sealed, cool, dark) |
|---|---|
| White rice | 25–30 years |
| White flour, wheat berries | 20–30 years |
| Dried beans (safe; harder to cook over time) | 20–25 years |
| Rolled oats | 8–12 years |
| Brown rice (oils go rancid) | 1–2 years — store white instead |
| Cooking oil | 1–2 years — rotate |
Every 10°F you cut from your storage temperature roughly doubles the life of what’s on the shelf, which is why a cool basement beats a hot garage by years (USU Extension, Packaging Foods).
Freeze Dried Emergency Foods (see items 89-91 above)
Freeze-dried foods are lighter, more compact, and better-tasting than their canned counterparts, and they hold their nutrition for years — sometimes decades. The downsides are cost and prep: you pay a premium, and most need water and a few minutes to reconstitute versus just opening a can. Freeze-dried fruit is the exception worth grabbing — no rehydrating required, just snack it straight from the pouch.
Baking Ingredients (see items 92-108 above)
Baking ingredients sit lower on the priority list, but they unlock your bulk grain. Stored flour, leavening, salt, and a little fat turn 25-year wheat berries into fresh bread — better tasting and far longer-lasting in raw form than anything you’d buy pre-baked. Don’t overlook yeast: it’s the one baking item that’s genuinely tricky to store, so keep it sealed in the freezer.
Vitamins and Supplements
A diet of rice, beans, and canned goods runs short on a few key nutrients, and a cheap bottle of multivitamins is honest insurance against the gaps. Vitamin D and calcium support your immune system; magnesium helps blunt the wear that constant stress puts on your body. None of this replaces real food, but when fresh and living foods are scarce, supplements keep the deficiencies from stacking up. Keep a few months’ worth alongside your stored medications.
Animal and Pet Food Storage
Don’t forget the four-legged members of the household. Costs swing wildly between a house cat, a large dog, and livestock, so budget accordingly. One catch worth planning around: because of their protein and fat content, most cat and dog foods aren’t shelf-stable beyond a few months, so build a rotation rather than a single buy-and-forget stash.
Criteria for Choosing Your Emergency Food Supplies
Easy to Prepare
Weigh how much cooking, fuel, and water each food demands. Can you prepare it without a modern kitchen — on a wood cookstove, a solar oven, or a campfire? This is exactly why canned foods are such stars: open and eat, no fuel, no water, no wait.
Long Shelf Life
Food that spoils before you need it is wasted money. You’ll still rotate your storage, but for it to count as true survival food it should give you years on the shelf — decades, where possible. Use the shelf-life table above as your guide.
Affordable
Food storage isn’t gourmet and it shouldn’t be expensive — its job is to keep your family fed through lean times. Build it cheaply enough that you can accumulate real quantity over months without straining the budget. Some items on the list above matter far more than others; the bulk staples and oils carry your survival, the snacks and beverages are extras. Spend accordingly.
Nutritionally Dense
Think of nutrition as the function and taste as the form. There’s middle ground, but in a real emergency the priority is food that actually fuels your body and keeps you going. Calories first, then protein and fat, then the vitamins and variety that keep you healthy over the long haul.
Storable
Size, weight, and shape matter more than people expect. Avoid glass where you can (canning your own is the obvious exception). Glass breaks, the shards are dangerous to people and pets, and in a flood or hurricane a jar is far easier to contaminate than a can.
Survival Food Storage and Preservation Supplies
A handful of supplies make the difference between food that lasts a few months and food that lasts decades. Here’s what earns its place, and how we use it.
Food Storage Buckets
Buckets must be food-grade so nothing leaches into your food — that part isn’t optional. Beyond that, the more airtight and waterproof you keep them, the longer your storage lasts. Bigger isn’t always better: a brimming 6-gallon bucket gets heavy and awkward fast, so we mostly stick with 5-gallon, and smaller ones where we need to move them. You can often get food-grade buckets free from grocery-store bakeries and restaurants (ask for the frosting and pickle buckets), or buy them new for about $5 to $8 at any hardware store.
Gamma Seal Lids
Gamma seal lids are the best lids for food-grade buckets. They thread on for a waterproof, airtight seal and spin off easily when you need access — far better than prying a standard lid on and off. Expect to pay roughly $8 to $10 each at Lowe’s, Walmart, Home Depot, Costco, or online. We put them on the buckets we open regularly and stick with standard lids on the long-term, seal-and-forget stock.
Mylar Food Storage Bags
This is the piece that actually does the preserving. A plain bucket lets oxygen and light seep in over time; a Mylar bag is essentially impermeable to both. Line your bucket with a Mylar bag (about $1 to $2 each for one-gallon size), fill it, drop in an oxygen absorber, and heat-seal the top — a household iron or even a hair straightener at 375–400°F does the job. Use roughly a 300cc oxygen absorber per gallon of dry goods, and 500cc for beans and pasta, which trap more air. One field-tested tip: freeze your rice or beans for three days before sealing to kill any insect eggs already in the grain (Be Ready Utah, Food).
Dried Long Term Food Storage Containers
Five-gallon buckets are the most common choice for their sturdiness and capacity, with Mylar bags and #10 cans close behind. Past that, you can use almost any container as long as it hits three marks: food-grade, waterproof, and airtight. The closer a container gets to all three, the longer your food keeps — that’s the whole game.
Pressure Canners
If you’re serious about preserving your own food, a pressure canner is a must. Water-bath canning handles high-acid foods like fruit and tomatoes, but only a pressure canner safely puts up low-acid foods like meat, soup, and vegetables. The process takes more care and runs at higher temperatures, but it dramatically widens the range of quality food you can shelf yourself.
Food Dehydrators
A dehydrator pulls the moisture out of food so it keeps for months or years, and it makes a lot of food more portable in the bargain. You’re not throwing a steak in a backpack, but homemade jerky travels fine. Dehydrators shine for jerky and dried fruit; vacuum-seal the results and they last even longer. Later you eat them dry or rehydrate with water for cooking. The Excalibur is the gold standard — not cheap, but seriously well-built and backed by a strong warranty.
Vacuum Sealers
A vacuum sealer pulls the air out and locks food in an airtight package. It’s great for meats and vegetables headed to the freezer, and for dry ingredients that need a tougher seal than their store packaging. The machines look and work a lot like a laminator, and a mid-range model handles everything most households will throw at it.
Wheat Grinders and Grain Mills
If you store whole wheat and other grains, a mill turns them into flour for cooking. There are plenty on the market, but the best we’ve used is the Country Living Grain Mill. We’ve had ours since 2012, and it’s earned its keep. It runs by hand crank or a small motor, and there’s even a belt attachment to drive it from a bicycle — exactly the flexibility you want when the power’s out.
The build is heavy-duty: American-made aircraft aluminum, industrial bearings, high-carbon steel cutters that hold their edge, and FDA-approved food-safe coatings. You can clamp it to a counter temporarily or bolt it down for good. It runs several hundred dollars, which isn’t nothing — but it’s a buy-it-once tool that outlasts generations.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much food does a family of 4 need for a year?
Plan for roughly 2.9 million calories — about 8,000 a day for four people. In practical terms that’s 1,000 to 1,200 pounds of grains, 200 to 250 pounds of legumes, 80 to 100 pounds of fats or oils, plus powdered milk, sugar, salt, and leavening. Bought frugally in bulk, a true one-year supply runs about $900 to $1,500. The popular “$300 for a year” rice-and-bean plan actually covers closer to five weeks of full calories for a family of four, so treat it as a starting layer, not the finish line.
What plans should I make for water on my survival food list?
Water is liquid life — it keeps you alive longer than food, and going without kills you faster than starvation. It’s also the catch that sinks rice-and-bean plans: dry staples need a lot of water just to cook. Ready.gov’s baseline is one gallon per person per day (Ready.gov, Water). Cover three bases: stored water in mixed container sizes, a way to resupply (rain catchment, well, stream, pond), and reliable purification — a LifeStraw or Aquamira Frontier Pro for your bug-out bag and a gravity filter like a Berkey for home. A bathtub bladder like the WaterBob adds about 100 gallons if you get a few minutes’ warning.
How much rice should I have on my food storage list?
Rice is one of the best foods to store — cheap, and good for 25 to 30 years sealed in Mylar with oxygen absorbers. Utah State University Extension recommends storing at least 300 pounds of grains per person for a year, of which 25 to 60 pounds should be rice. That gives you a solid staple base to build the rest of your supply around. Store white, Basmati, or Jasmine; skip brown rice for the long term, since its oils go rancid within a year or two.
How do you store survival food for a disaster?
Long-term food storage should be shelf-stable for years — up to 25 in some cases — and kept in airtight, watertight containers in a cool, dark place. The most reliable setup for bulk staples like rice and grains is Mylar bags with oxygen absorbers, placed inside sealed #10 cans or 5-gallon buckets. Heat and light are the enemies: the warmer and brighter the storage spot, the faster everything breaks down. A cool basement can double the shelf life you’d get in a hot garage.
How do I stock up on food storage without breaking the bank?
Build it a little at a time. Three approaches work together:
- Piece it together gradually, adding cans and bulk staples whenever there’s a case-lot sale or markdown.
- Preserve your own through canning and dehydrating if you’re ambitious.
- Add some commercial freeze-dried meals — convenient and tasty, but the priciest per calorie.
Almost nobody can drop a thousand dollars on storage at once, so the real-world play is buying a little extra each grocery trip and catching sales. We recommend a layered mix: mostly “little by little” grocery-store food, some of your own preservation, and a small set of freeze-dried pouch meals (which double as bug-out-bag food). Printable starter checklists are on our preparedness downloads page.
What are the best canned foods to store for survival?
Canned meats and vegetables top the list, because they’re the hardest nutrition to get any other cheap way. Carbs like rice and pasta store easily in bulk, but meat and vegetables get expensive fast in freeze-dried or dehydrated form, so canned is the value play. Round it out with canned soups and convenience foods — and don’t forget a manual can opener, since none of it helps if you can’t get the lid off.
Ready to Get Going?
Feeding a family is a real responsibility, and the threats to a steady food supply aren’t exotic. Floods, fires, earthquakes, and economic crises disrupt grocery distribution. But the quieter “personal disasters” hit just as hard — a job loss, an injury, an illness, a death in the family. In any of those, even one or two weeks of food on hand eases the pressure. Several months or a year’s worth changes the whole picture.
Aim for a balance across three tiers:
- True emergency food — food bars, MREs, Mountain House meals, and freeze-dried pouches you can eat in under five minutes.
- Short-term regular food — cans, box dinners, and grocery-store items you’d normally eat.
- Long-term bulk storage — rice, beans, and hard wheat berries that hold shelf-stable calories for decades.
There’s no perfect formula for your family but yours, so don’t let the planning paralyze you into doing nothing. Do a little of everything and adjust as you learn. This weekend, buy 40 pounds of white rice, a dozen one-gallon Mylar bags, and a strip of oxygen absorbers — about $35 all in. Seal them, mark each bag with today’s date, and slide them under a bed. That’s layer one on the shelf, and you cook from it next week to make sure you know how.