Most families have critical documents scattered across drawers, folders, email attachments, and filing cabinets. When an emergency happens, you shouldn't have to search.
Natural disasters, medical emergencies, unexpected hospitalizations, house fires, car accidents — stressful moments don't wait for you to get organized. When they happen, you need insurance policy numbers, medication lists, emergency contacts, and identification documents immediately. Not eventually. Not after searching through three drawers and an old email thread.
The goal of a family emergency binder is simple: one place where anyone who needs it — a spouse, a caregiver, a family member, an emergency room doctor — can find the critical information they need without calling you or guessing where to look.
Start with the basics. Your emergency binder should include copies or digital records of identification documents for every person in your household.
Driver's licenses, state ID cards, passports, and passport cards. Include expiration dates so you can renew before they lapse.
Birth certificates, Social Security cards, marriage certificates, and adoption records. These are often required by insurance companies, hospitals, and government agencies.
Military IDs, immigration documents, green cards, naturalization certificates, and any legal name-change documentation.
During an emergency, you need policy numbers, group IDs, and claim phone numbers fast. Organize every active policy in one place so you or a family member can access them without digging through files.
Health insurance cards, policy numbers, group IDs, member services numbers, dental insurance, and vision coverage. Include the name of the policyholder and who is covered.
Homeowner's or renter's insurance policy numbers, auto insurance cards, umbrella policy details, and agent contact information. Include claim phone numbers for each provider.
Life insurance policies with beneficiary information, pet insurance policy numbers, and any supplemental or disability insurance. Note the issuing company and agent for each.
Medical information is often the most time-sensitive part of an emergency binder. If someone else needs to communicate your family member's medical history to a doctor — allergies, current medications, chronic conditions — they need it organized and accessible.
A current list of every prescription and over-the-counter medication, including dosages and frequency. Document drug allergies, food allergies, and environmental allergies with severity and known reactions.
Chronic conditions, blood type, surgical history, vaccination records, and any implanted devices. Include dates where possible — emergency physicians need context, not just a list.
Primary care physician, specialists, pharmacy, and therapist contact information. If applicable, include advance directives, power of attorney for healthcare, and DNR documentation.
Your emergency binder should include more than family phone numbers. Think about every person or organization someone might need to reach during a crisis.
Immediate family members, an out-of-area emergency contact, and trusted neighbors. Include cell phones, home phones, and email addresses. An out-of-area contact is important when local phone networks are overwhelmed.
Doctors, veterinarian, insurance agents, attorney, financial advisor, accountant, and employer HR departments. These are the people you'll need to reach within the first 24 to 48 hours of most emergencies.
School front office, after-school program, daycare, coaches, and carpool contacts. Include the pickup authorization list so a caregiver or family member can retrieve your children if needed.
You don't need to store full account credentials in your emergency binder. But having the basic details organized means a spouse or family member can contact the right institution quickly if something happens.
Bank names, account types, and the last four digits of account numbers. Credit card issuers and their emergency lost/stolen phone numbers. Include joint account holders and authorized users.
Mortgage company, loan number, monthly payment amount, and customer service number. For renters, include the landlord's contact information and lease details.
Retirement account providers, financial advisor contact information, and the location of estate planning documents like wills and trusts.
After a natural disaster or accident, you may need to prove ownership, file a claim, or locate important records quickly. Having property and vehicle information in your emergency binder saves time when it matters most.
Pets are family members, and they need their own section in your emergency binder. If someone else needs to care for your pet — during an evacuation, a hospitalization, or a family emergency — they need to know what your pet requires.
Vaccination records, current medications, known allergies, veterinarian name and phone number, and any chronic conditions. Include the pet's microchip number and registration service.
Feeding instructions, dietary restrictions, medication schedules, and behavioral notes. Include the brand and type of food, feeding times, and portion sizes.
Pet insurance policy information, emergency boarding facility contacts, and trusted friends or neighbors who could take your pet on short notice.
If you're the parent who manages everything — school paperwork, medical forms, activity schedules — your emergency binder should include the details someone else would need to step in and handle your children's daily logistics.
A physical binder is a good start. But physical binders can burn in a house fire, get damaged in a flood, or simply be left behind when you evacuate in a hurry. Paper doesn't update itself, and you can't text a three-ring binder to your spouse from an emergency room.
A digital emergency binder travels with you. It's on your phone when you need it. You can search it instantly, update a medication or policy number in seconds, and share specific sections with a family member, a caregiver, or an ER doctor through a clean PDF — by text, email, or AirDrop.
LifeVault was built for exactly this. It organizes medical records, insurance policies, identification documents, emergency contacts, and caregiver instructions for your entire household — people and pets — in one private app on your phone. No account required. No cloud uploads. Your data stays on your device, and you control what gets shared and with whom.
Review your emergency binder at least twice a year — once in the spring and once in the fall. Update it immediately whenever something changes: a new prescription, a new insurance policy, a change in emergency contacts, or an updated school pickup list. With a digital binder like LifeVault, updates take seconds and every future share reflects the latest information.
Yes. Share relevant sections with your spouse or partner, a trusted family member, and anyone who might need to step in during an emergency — a caregiver, a neighbor, or an out-of-area contact. You don't need to share everything with everyone. With LifeVault, you can generate a PDF with only the sections a specific person needs.
If you have already shared a PDF with a spouse, family member, or caregiver, they still have access to the information you shared. LifeVault stores data on your device, so restoring from a backup will bring your records back. This is also why sharing key sections with a trusted contact ahead of time is important — it creates a secondary copy of the information that matters most.
Be selective about what you include. You may want to record the last four digits of a Social Security number rather than the full number, or keep certain details in a separate secure location. With LifeVault, your data stays on your device — it is never uploaded to a server. You control what to include, what to share, and with whom.
LifeVault organizes records, documents, and emergency information for your whole household — people and pets. Free beta on iOS.