Wildfire Evacuation When Living Alone

Wildfires can force evacuation in minutes. Solo residents need a clear plan, a packed bag, and an automated check-in to stay safe and accounted for.

Wildfires can move at up to 14 miles per hour in forests and even faster in grasslands. People living alone have no one to share the driving or help them evacuate pets and valuables.

The Challenge

No one to help you load the car, wrangle pets, or make split-second evacuation decisions under stress

Smoke and poor visibility make solo evacuation more dangerous with no passenger to navigate

Family and friends cannot confirm your safety when wildfire smoke disrupts visibility and communications

How I'm Alive Helps

Pre-pack a go-bag and know multiple evacuation routes so you can leave in under ten minutes without help

Set up I'm Alive check-ins during fire season so your contacts always know your status

Register with your county alert system for real-time evacuation orders sent directly to your phone

Preparing to Evacuate Alone

Create a wildfire action plan before fire season begins. Identify at least two evacuation routes from your home and drive them so you know them well. Pack a go-bag with essentials: documents, medications, water, N95 masks, phone charger, cash, and a change of clothes. Keep your car fueled to at least half a tank during fire season. Create a checklist of last-minute actions you can complete in under five minutes: shut windows, turn off gas, grab go-bag, load pet carrier, close garage door. Practice this drill alone so muscle memory takes over when stress hits. As a solo evacuee, simplicity and speed are your greatest assets.

During Wildfire Evacuation

Leave as soon as you receive an evacuation warning -- do not wait for a mandatory order. Drive with headlights on and windows closed. If visibility is near zero from smoke, pull over, stay in the car with windows closed, and call 911. Breathe through an N95 mask or damp cloth. Once you reach safety, check in with your emergency contacts immediately. If communications are disrupted, your I'm Alive scheduled check-in serves as an automated status update. Checking in confirms you are safe; missing the check-in triggers your contacts to seek information and send help if needed.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How quickly should I evacuate during a wildfire?

Leave during the evacuation warning phase, before a mandatory order is issued. Wildfires can overrun areas in minutes. Solo residents should have an even lower threshold for leaving since there is no one to help if roads become blocked or conditions worsen suddenly.

What should I take when evacuating from a wildfire?

Your go-bag with important documents, medications, phone and charger, water, N95 masks, cash, pet supplies, irreplaceable photos or hard drives, and a change of clothes. Everything else can be replaced. Have this bag packed before fire season starts.

How do I protect my home before evacuating?

Close all windows and doors, shut off gas and propane, move flammable furniture away from windows, connect garden hoses, leave exterior lights on for visibility, and close garage doors. But never delay evacuation to protect property -- your life comes first.

How does I'm Alive help during wildfire season?

Daily check-ins during fire season mean your contacts always know your status. If you are evacuating and lose phone service, a missed check-in automatically alerts your emergency contacts. They can then track evacuation routes and shelters to locate you or send help.

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