The kit to harden a home against ember ignition — the real threat. Ember-resistant vents, a box-fan HEPA filter for indoor air, a rooftop sprinkler and pump, a gel retardant stash, and an ember-proof gutters cleanup setup. Survive the ember storm, not just the flame front.
Plans
Choose a plan that fits your needs and budget
Item List
5Indoor Air
2 itemsHarden the Home
2 itemsLast Resort
1 items| Item | Category | Specs | Qty | Price | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emergency Gear | GelGallon Gutter kitYes Set2 | 1 | $120 | View Shop |
FAQ
Common questions about this kit
Ember-resistant vents?
Yes — embers enter attics and crawlspaces through vents and ignite from inside. 1/16-inch mesh vents ( ember-rated) are the cheapest, highest-impact hardening you can do.
Box-fan HEPA filter?
Yes — a standard 20-inch box fan taped to a MERV-13 filter (the "Corsi-Rosenthal box") cleans smoke from a room far better and cheaper than consumer air purifiers. A proven smoke hack.
Rooftop sprinkler?
In fire country, a rooftop/gutter sprinkler with a pump and a filled trash-can reservoir wets the roof and gutters ahead of the ember storm. It buys time; it is not a guarantee.
Fire-blocking gel?
A last-resort retardant gel sprayed on the home before evacuating can slow ignition. It is messy and temporary, but on the worst day it is one more layer between the embers and the structure.
User Reviews
Wildfire hardening and my power-outage kit share the indoor-air gospel — a box-fan MERV-13 rig is the cheap smoke hack that actually works. Rooftop sprinkler buys time, agreed.