Overview
Disaster Kit Pro is an educational preparedness website designed to make household emergency planning feel manageable. It combines plain-English guidance with practical planning tools for common hazards and disruptions. The site emphasizes calm, incremental preparation rather than fear-based messaging, and it repeatedly directs readers to official agencies and qualified professionals for active emergencies or situation-specific advice.
What you can explore
The main preparedness guides cover hurricanes, flooding, wildfires, winter storms, power outages, heat waves, emergency kits, and family communication plans. Readers can also use printable checklists for household supplies, go-bags, pets, important documents, insurance records, home inventories, sheltering in place, and hazard-specific preparation.
Educational sections explain disaster science, weather radar, insurance basics, and lessons from historical disasters. The site also includes a preparedness blog, news cards, state-level guides, and an emergency management agency directory that points visitors toward official federal and state resources. Its weather radar page provides recent radar imagery for educational context, while warning users to prioritize official alerts and instructions.
Who it is for
The site is intended for individuals and households that want a clear starting point for preparedness or a simpler way to maintain existing plans. It is especially suited to readers who prefer short, practical steps, printable materials, and background explanations that avoid technical or alarmist language.
Disaster Kit Pro is not an emergency service and does not present its content as medical, legal, engineering, insurance, financial, or other professional advice. For urgent danger, evacuation decisions, local conditions, outages, claims, repairs, or health concerns, the site advises following emergency services, public officials, utilities, insurers, and qualified professionals.
AI personas and guides
Morgan Hale is the named preparedness guide associated with the Ask Morgan feature and the site’s blog. Ask Morgan lets visitors submit questions about disasters, risks, emergency kits, family plans, checklists, supplies, and practical next steps. The site’s FAQ states that Ask Morgan uses AI with preparedness-focused guardrails and that some suggested prompts may reuse saved responses.
Morgan’s responses are educational only. The Ask page states that the feature cannot handle emergencies and should not replace official instructions or qualified help for legal, financial, insurance, medical, repair, utility, or professional recovery questions.

