Do This Right Now
Identify your tornado shelter location in your home or workplace before you finish reading this page. Not "I'll figure it out when a tornado is coming." A designated shelter + a helmet or bike helmet for head protection are the two things that most reliably improve tornado survival outcomes. Everything else is secondary.
Watch vs. Warning: The Critical Difference
Confusing these two terms is one of the most dangerous knowledge gaps in tornado preparedness. They are not interchangeable, and the appropriate response to each is completely different.
Tornado WATCH
Conditions are favorable for tornadoes to form. A watch typically covers a large area (hundreds of square miles) for several hours. No tornado has been confirmed yet. Your action: review your shelter plan, monitor NOAA weather radio and local alerts, and be ready to act. You do not need to shelter during a watch — but you need to be aware and prepared.
Tornado WARNING
A tornado has been confirmed by radar rotation or visual sighting. This is imminent danger. A warning covers a specific area for a short time (typically 30–60 minutes). Your action: shelter immediately. Do not wait to see the tornado. Many tornadoes are invisible (rain-wrapped), especially at night. Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) on your phone will sound a loud alarm — this means NOW.
Where to Shelter: A Ranked Guide
Your shelter choice determines survival odds more than any other factor. Identify your best available option for each location where you spend significant time — home, workplace, school, and on your commute route.
Underground Shelter or Storm Cellar
The only truly safe shelter from a violent tornado (EF4–EF5). If you live in Tornado Alley and your home lacks one, consider a residential in-ground or garage shelter (see product picks).
FEMA-Compliant Safe Room
Steel-reinforced above-ground room designed to withstand EF5 winds. More accessible than underground shelters. FEMA provides installation grants in high-risk areas through the BRIC program.
Interior Room, Lowest Floor, No Windows
A bathroom, closet, or hallway in the center of the lowest level of a sturdy building. Get under a heavy table or mattress for additional head protection. Away from exterior walls.
Bathtub in Interior Bathroom
The bathtub is often the sturdiest single fixture in a home. Lie in it and cover yourself with a mattress. Not as good as a cellar, but significantly better than an interior hallway alone.
Highway Overpass
Widely believed to be safe — it is not. Wind speeds increase under overpasses (venturi effect) and flying debris funnels through the opening. Only shelter here as an absolute last resort if you cannot reach a building.
Mobile Homes — Leave Always
Never shelter in a mobile or manufactured home during a tornado warning. They offer no protection regardless of age, construction, or whether they're anchored. Leave for a nearby solid building whenever a watch is issued.
Build Your Tornado Safe Room Kit
Keep these items in your designated shelter location:
- Helmets (most important): Head injuries cause the majority of tornado fatalities and serious injuries. Any rigid helmet — bicycle, motorcycle, ski, construction hard hat — provides meaningful protection. Keep one for every household member in your shelter location.
- Sturdy shoes: Post-tornado environments are covered in debris, broken glass, and nails. Have shoes in the shelter space.
- Heavy blankets or mattress: Cover yourself to protect against flying debris and broken glass.
- NOAA weather radio: Keep a battery or hand-crank radio in your shelter. Cell service often fails during and immediately after tornadoes.
- Charged phone or backup battery: For emergency calls and alerts after the storm.
- Flashlight: Power outages are immediate. Keep a flashlight with fresh batteries in your shelter space.
- First aid kit: Injuries from glass and debris are the most common post-tornado medical need.
- Whistle: If trapped under debris, a whistle can signal rescuers far more effectively than shouting.
- 3 days of water and food: Major tornadoes disrupt utilities for days. Your shelter should have a small supply if you're sealed in by debris.
What to Do If You're Caught Outside or Driving
If driving
A car provides almost no structural protection from a tornado. Options in order of preference:
- Drive away from the tornado at right angles — tornadoes typically move NE at 30–45 mph. Drive south or north to exit the path rather than trying to outrun it going east.
- Find a solid building and get to an interior room immediately. A gas station, restaurant, or concrete building is far better than your car.
- If no building is available and driving away is impossible: Park away from trees and large signs, stay in the car with your seatbelt on, cover your head with your hands, and stay below window level. A car is better than a ditch only if the tornado is large or the ditch is near a road.
- If caught in the open: Lie flat in a ditch or low-lying area, protect your head with your hands, and stay away from trees and vehicles that can fall on you.
If at school or work
Most schools and workplaces have designated tornado shelter areas. Know where these are before a warning is issued. Schools in tornado-prone states practice tornado drills — ask your children where their school's designated shelter rooms are, and verify that the answer is "an interior hallway" and not "the gymnasium" (large open-span structures are dangerous in tornadoes).
After the Tornado
- Stay in shelter until the warning expires and official all-clear is given — additional tornado cells can follow the first.
- Wear sturdy closed-toe shoes before stepping outside — debris fields are dense and dangerous.
- Check for gas leaks before using any open flame or turning on lights (sparks from switches can ignite gas).
- Stay away from downed power lines — assume they are live.
- Document structural damage with photos before any cleanup for insurance purposes.
- Check on neighbors, especially elderly residents who may be trapped.
- Boil water if your county issues a boil water advisory — water mains are often damaged in the aftermath.
High-Risk Seasons and Regions
Tornado Alley (TX, OK, KS, NE, SD, ND): peak season March–June. Tornadoes here tend to be larger, longer-tracked, and more intense.
Dixie Alley (MS, AL, AR, TN, GA): peak season March–May and again November–December. These tornadoes are often more deadly because they occur at night, move faster, and occur in more heavily wooded terrain that obscures visibility.
Great Plains extension (IA, MO, IL, IN, OH): May–June peak. More populated areas mean more vulnerable infrastructure and populated areas in tornado paths.
Official Resources
- FEMA Ready.gov — Tornadoes
- NOAA Tornado Safety
- NOAA Storm Prediction Center — Real-time watches and warnings
Also see our Know Your Risk by Region guide for your FEMA tornado risk score, and our Emergency Kits guide for full 72-hour supply lists.
Tornado Safety Gear
Bell Qualifier Motorcycle Helmet
Full-face protection from flying debris. Any hard helmet helps — but a motorcycle or football helmet provides the most coverage. Buy one per household member and store it in your shelter location.
Get It for ~$75 on Amazon →Midland WR400 Programmable NOAA Radio
Programmable by county — only alerts for your specific county, eliminating false alarms from neighboring counties. Wake-up alarm for nighttime warnings. Critical for Dixie Alley residents where overnight tornadoes are common.
Get It for ~$65 on Amazon →Streamlight 88850 ProTac HL USB Flashlight
1,000 lumens. Rechargeable. Crush-resistant. Keep one in your shelter location with a battery bank to recharge it. Navigating debris fields and structural damage in the dark without a flashlight is dangerous.
Get It for ~$50 on Amazon →Survive-A-Storm Products Underground Shelter
FEMA-compliant in-ground shelter. Holds 4–8 people. FEMA BRIC grants cover up to $4,000 for qualifying homeowners in high-risk areas. The most important home investment for Tornado Alley residents.
Check Price on Amazon →Anker PowerCore 26800 Power Bank
Charges phones 6–7 times per charge. Keep it fully charged in your shelter kit. After a major tornado, cell towers are often damaged and you may need to communicate for days on battery power only.
Get It for ~$65 on Amazon →Shoreline Marine Survival Whistle
Pealess whistle audible at 100+ decibels. If trapped under debris, signaling with a whistle conserves energy and is audible far further than shouting. Keep one on a lanyard in your shelter kit.
Get It for ~$8 on Amazon →Frequently Asked Questions
Are apartments and high-rise buildings safe during tornadoes?
In low-rise apartments (2–3 stories), follow the standard rule: go to the lowest floor, interior room, no windows. In high-rises, get to the lowest floor you can reach quickly — do not use elevators during a tornado warning. Interior stairwells are your best bet. Upper floors experience significantly higher wind speeds and more debris penetration. If you can't reach a low floor in time, shelter in an interior hallway or bathroom away from windows on your current floor. Never shelter near exterior glass walls or in rooms with large windows.
How do I prepare for nighttime tornadoes?
Nighttime tornadoes are disproportionately deadly because people are asleep and can't see the funnel. A NOAA Weather Radio with SAME county coding is essential — it activates a loud alarm for your specific county even while you sleep. Enable Wireless Emergency Alerts on your phone and keep it charged by your bed. Sleep with shoes and a flashlight within arm's reach during active severe weather seasons. If you live in Dixie Alley (MS, AL, AR, TN, GA), where nocturnal tornadoes are more common, consider keeping helmets in the bedroom during peak season.
Can my house be retrofitted to be more tornado-resistant?
Yes, several retrofits meaningfully improve survivability. Hurricane clips or Simpson Strong-Ties connecting your roof to walls (about $5–$10 per connection point) prevent roof loss, which is often the first structural failure. A FEMA-compliant safe room can be built inside an existing home for $3,000–$8,000. Impact-resistant garage doors prevent the pressure breach that leads to roof failure. Reinforcing the master closet with steel sheathing creates a shelter-in-place option. FEMA's BRIC program offers grants up to 75% of the cost for qualifying homeowners in high-risk areas.
What's the biggest mistake people make during tornado warnings?
Opening windows. The old myth that equalizing pressure prevents structural damage is completely false — tornadoes destroy buildings through wind force and debris, not pressure differential. Opening windows wastes critical seconds you need for reaching shelter and actually increases interior damage by letting wind and debris inside. Other common mistakes: trying to shelter under a highway overpass, attempting to outrun a tornado in a car instead of seeking a sturdy building, and staying in a mobile home instead of evacuating to a permanent structure when a watch is issued.
Should I buy tornado insurance separately?
Standard homeowners insurance typically covers tornado damage under the windstorm/hail provision — you don't usually need a separate tornado policy. However, check your deductible: many policies in tornado-prone states have a separate wind/hail deductible that's a percentage of your home's value (often 1–5%) rather than a flat dollar amount. A 2% deductible on a $300,000 home means you pay the first $6,000 out of pocket. Review your policy now, before tornado season. Renters insurance covers personal property damage from tornadoes and is typically $15–$25/month.
The Midland ER310 wakes you up even when the power is out
NOAA Weather Radio with hand-crank + solar backup. Activates automatically on your county's tornado alerts — no app, no cell service needed. Rated #1 by emergency managers for severe weather preparedness.