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Evacuation Checklist with Pets — emergencyplanner.com

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Printed: 3/25/2026

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Evacuation Checklist with Pets: Step-by-Step Guide

Evacuating with pets requires planning that most evacuation guides don't cover. Most public emergency shelters won't accept animals. Stressed pets behave unpredictably. And the decision of whether to shelter-in-place or evacuate is harder when leaving means leaving without a plan for your animals. This guide provides a concrete, step-by-step evacuation plan specifically for pet owners.

Last reviewed: 2026-03-01 · Based on Ready.gov, FEMA, ASPCA guidance

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Before an Emergency: Shelter Research

Do this now — you won't have time during an evacuation.

  • Identify 2+ pet-friendly hotels on each evacuation routecritical

    Use BringFido.com or call directly. Pet policies change — recheck annually. Book rooms early when possible; pet-friendly rooms fill first.

    Ready.gov ↗
  • Check if your county has a co-located pet emergency sheltercritical

    Many counties operate pet shelters adjacent to human shelters. Contact your county emergency management office.

  • Identify friends or family outside your likely evacuation area who can shelter petscritical

    Your most reliable option. Establish this agreement now — 'If we ever need to evacuate, can we bring the dog?'

  • Research boarding facilities on your likely evacuation routes

    Some boarding facilities prioritize existing clients during emergencies. Check their emergency policy.

  • Save all shelter contacts in phone and print one copy for your go-bagcritical

Pet Go-Bag: What to Pack

Ready to grab in under 5 minutes.

  • Food: 3-day supply in airtight containercritical

    Label with feeding instructions. Include a manual can opener if packing wet food.

    Ready.gov ↗
  • Water: 1.5 gallons per dog, 0.75 gallons per cat per 3 dayscritical

    Have a separate water supply for pets — don't drain your household supply.

  • Collapsible food and water bowls(1 set per pet)critical
  • Carrier for each cat (hard-sided preferred)critical

    Required at most emergency shelters. Keep carriers accessible, not stored deep in a closet.

  • Leashes: 2 per dog (backup in go-bag)critical

    Panicked dogs run. A second leash means insurance if one breaks or is dropped.

  • Vaccination records (waterproof copy)critical

    Required to enter emergency shelters or boarding facilities.

  • Photo of each pet (printed + digital)critical

    For lost pet flyers and shelter intake forms.

  • Prescription medications: 7-day supplycritical
  • Pet first aid kit
  • Familiar bedding or toy

    Familiar scents reduce stress in shelter environments.

  • Poop bags (dogs: 20+), litter and travel box (cats)critical
  • Muzzle (dogs, even if gentle)

    Panicked dogs may bite. A muzzle is a safety tool for shelters and vet visits during emergencies.

The Evacuation Sequence

  • Put pets in their carriers/harnesses FIRST (before packing anything else)critical

    Stressed pets will hide. Secure them immediately when you decide to evacuate — before they realize what's happening.

    ASPCA ↗
  • Grab pet go-bag (should be pre-packed)critical
  • Call pet-friendly shelter to confirm availability before driving there
  • Secure pets in back seat or cargo area (never loose in car)critical

    An unsecured pet in a vehicle accident is dangerous for both pet and humans. Use a crash-tested crate or harness.

If You Cannot Take Your Pets

Last resort — always try to take pets with you.

  • Keep pets indoors if leaving (never chain outside)critical

    A chained animal in a flood or fire has no escape. Indoor pets have slightly more options.

    ASPCA ↗
  • Leave 5–7 days of food and water in large containerscritical
  • Post a rescue alert sticker on your door or windowcritical

    Include: types and number of animals, their location in the home, your contact number, vet's number. Available from ASPCA as a free sticker kit.

  • Contact local animal rescue groups and neighbors immediatelycritical
  • Return to retrieve pets as soon as it is safecritical
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Detailed Guidance

Why Pets Cause Evacuation Delays — And How to Fix It

Research consistently shows that pet owners delay evacuation, refuse to evacuate, or return early to danger zones because of their animals. This is completely understandable — and preventable with advance planning. The preparation that changes this: 1. Pre-identified shelter: If you already know where you and your pet can go, there's no reason to delay. 2. Pre-packed pet go-bag: If the bag is already assembled, you spend 30 seconds grabbing it rather than 20 minutes assembling supplies. 3. Carriers accessible: Cats especially hide when stressed. If the carrier is out and familiar, capture is faster. 4. Decision made in advance: If you've already decided "we always evacuate with the pets when ordered to," you don't have to make that decision under stress. The time cost of pre-planning: 2–3 hours once. The benefit: You and your pets evacuate faster and safer than anyone who didn't plan. Source: Ready.gov, ASPCA

Keeping Pets Calm During Evacuation

Evacuations are extremely stressful for animals. Common behaviors: - Hiding or bolting (put carriers out early) - Excessive vocalization - Urinating or defecating outside the carrier - Biting or scratching even normally gentle animals Practical steps: - Spray Feliway (cats) or Adaptil (dogs) in carrier 30 minutes before loading - Cover the carrier with a light cloth (reduces visual stimulation) - Don't reassure nervously — calm, matter-of-fact handling is better than anxious attention - Short familiar phrases in a calm voice - Don't feed immediately before travel — motion sickness is common under stress For pets with severe anxiety, discuss pre-event anti-anxiety medications with your vet before you need them. Source: ASPCA

Official Sources

  • Ready.gov — Preparing your pets
  • FEMA — Pet preparedness
  • ASPCA — ASPCA disaster preparedness

Related Resources

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Emergency Kit with Pets

Full pet preparedness supply list and shelter planning.

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Flood Preparedness Checklist

Flood evacuations often require leaving with pets on short notice.

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Wildfire & Smoke Checklist

Wildfire is the most common scenario requiring rapid pet evacuation.

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Checklist

Car Emergency Kit

Vehicle supplies for evacuation with pets.

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Free Printable

Emergency Contact Sheet

Include vet emergency number and microchip number.

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Frequently Asked Questions

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