The Family Power & Light Setup Guide

A practical blackout preparedness guide covering emergency lighting, battery storage, phone charging, power banks, generator safety, and a room-by-room power outage plan.

What's Inside

Backup Lighting, Charging, Batteries & Blackout Planning for Families


The Simple Blackout Rule

Your first goal is:

Light every key room. Charge every key device—but power only what actually matters.

In a blackout, most families do not require full-home luxury. They actually require:

  • Safe lighting
  • Charged phones
  • Weather alerts
  • Basic communication
  • Medical device planning, if needed
  • Food safety awareness
  • A way to avoid panic
  • A way to avoid dangerous shortcuts

Ready.gov recommends keeping freezers and refrigerators closed during outages and using generators only outdoors, away from windows.


Adopt these Power & Light Standards

Good

Flashlights, lanterns, extra batteries, and charged phones.

Better

Room-by-room lighting, power banks, rechargeable batteries, a weather radio, and a charging station.

Best

A complete blackout plan with lighting zones, backup charging, battery inventory, solar charging option, safe generator plan, carbon monoxide detectors, and printed instructions. Start with good, build toward better, and aim for the best.


The Three-Layer Blackout System

A strong family blackout setup has three layers.

Layer 1: Emergency Lighting

This is your immediate safety layer.

Best for:

  • First 10 minutes of an outage
  • Moving safely through the house
  • Kids and seniors
  • Bathrooms
  • Stairways
  • Storm nights
  • Evacuation

Good options:

  • LED flashlights
  • Headlamps
  • LED lanterns
  • Sensor-activated lights
  • Battery-powered night lights
  • Rechargeable work lights
  • Glow sticks for kids.
  • Clip-on lights

Your first rule:

Every person should have access to a personal light.

That means each adult and child should know where a flashlight, headlamp, or lantern is stored.


Layer 2: Device Charging

This keeps communication alive.

Best for:

  • Phones
  • Weather alerts
  • Emergency calls
  • Text updates
  • Battery-powered radios
  • Tablets for children
  • Small USB fans
  • Rechargeable lights

Good options:

  • USB power banks
  • Larger portable power stations
  • Car chargers
  • Solar chargers
  • Rechargeable AA/AAA batteries
  • USB-C cables
  • Lightning cables
  • Multi-tip charging cables

Do not wait until the outage to find the one cable everyone shares. That cable always seems to disappear right when you need it most.


Layer 3: Backup Power

This supports higher-priority household needs.

Best for:

  • Medical devices
  • Refrigerator or freezer support
  • Internet/router backup
  • Fans
  • Small appliances
  • Work-from-home needs
  • Longer outages

Good options:

  • Portable power station
  • Solar panel paired with a power station.
  • Gas generator
  • Dual-fuel generator
  • Whole-home standby generator
  • Battery backup for router/modem
  • UPS backup for electronics

This layer requires more planning because safety matters, and generator misuse can be deadly. The CDC says generators should be kept outside at least 20 feet from doors, windows, and vents.


What to Buy First

Start with lighting and charging before you worry about big power.

A $30 lighting setup beats a $1,500 generator you do not know how to use safely.

First $25–$50

Buy:

  • 2 LED flashlights
  • 1 LED lantern
  • Extra batteries
  • 1 pack of glow sticks
  • 1 permanent marker
  • 1 small storage bin

Do this:

  • Put everything in one easy-to-reach location.
  • Label it “Blackout Kit”
  • Test every light
  • Teach the household where it is

Next $100–$150

Buy:

  • 2 to 4 LED lanterns
  • 2 headlamps
  • Extra batteries
  • 1 or 2 USB power banks
  • Extra charging cables
  • Battery-powered or hand-crank weather radio
  • Small storage bin

Do this:

  • Put one light source in each key room.
  • Charge power banks
  • Label cables
  • Create a charging station.

Strong Family Setup

Buy:

  • Flashlight for each person
  • Headlamp for each adult
  • Lantern for each major room
  • USB power banks
  • Rechargeable batteries
  • Battery charger
  • Weather radio
  • Portable power station
  • Solar charging option
  • Carbon monoxide detectors
  • Heavy-duty extension cords, if using a generator
  • Printed blackout plan

Do this:

  • Create room-by-room lighting zones.
  • Create a device charging priority list.
  • Test the system before storm season.
  • Review generator safety if applicable

Room-by-Room Lighting Plan

A good blackout lighting plan is not “flashlights somewhere in the house.” That is not a real plan. It just leads to people bumping into furniture while searching in the dark.

Use zones:

Kitchen

Keep:

  • 1 lantern
  • 1 flashlight
  • Batteries
  • Headlamp
  • Printed food safety note

Purpose:

Food prep, water access, family gathering point.


Living Room or Main Room

Keep:

  • 1 lantern
  • 1 rechargeable light
  • Power bank
  • Charging cables
  • Weather radio

Purpose:

Main family command center.


Bedrooms

Keep:

  • Flashlight or headlamp for each person
  • Small lantern or night light
  • Glow stick for children.
  • Water bottle nearby

Purpose:

Safe nighttime movement.


Bathroom

Keep:

  • Small flashlight
  • Battery night light
  • Wipes
  • Hand sanitizer

Purpose:

Prevent dark bathroom chaos. Highly underrated.


Hallways and Stairs

Keep:

  • Motion-sensor battery lights
  • Glow sticks
  • Small lantern nearby

Purpose:

Prevent trips and falls.


Garage or Utility Area

Keep:

  • Work light
  • Flashlight
  • Batteries
  • Extension cords
  • Generator supplies, if applicable

Purpose:

Access to tools, panels, and supplies.


Lighting Types and Best Uses

Flashlights

Best for:

  • Walking
  • Checking outside
  • Searching closets
  • Emergency tasks

Recommended:

  • One per person
  • Keep extra batteries nearby.

Headlamps

Best for:

  • Cooking
  • Repairs
  • Carrying kids
  • Moving supplies
  • Hands-free tasks

Recommended:

  • One per adult
  • One extra if possible

Headlamps make being prepared much easier. Once you use a headlamp in a blackout, you will wonder why you ever tried to hold a flashlight in your mouth.

Best for:

  • Lighting rooms
  • Family gathering areas
  • Eating
  • Card games
  • Calming kids

Recommended:

  • One per main room
  • Avoid ultra-bright settings in small rooms.

Glow Sticks

Best for:

  • Kids
  • Hallways
  • Bathrooms
  • Marking bags or doors
  • Low-stress light

Recommended:

  • Keep a few in each blackout kit.

Glow sticks should not be your main lighting plan, but they do help kids feel safer and prevent people from bumping into things. Use with caution.

Additionally, candles can pose a fire risk, especially around children, pets, curtains, and sleeping areas.

Better choices:

  • LED candles
  • Battery lanterns
  • Rechargeable lights

If you use candles:

  • Never leave unattended
  • Keep away from children and pets.
  • Keep away from curtains and paper.
  • Use sturdy holders
  • Extinguish before sleeping

Battery Inventory Plan

Do not rely on “I think we have batteries.”  Many families have been caught off guard by that assumption.

Battery TypeUsed ForQuantity Needed
AAFlashlights, radios, toys_______
AAASmall lights, remotes_______
CLanterns_______
DLarger lanterns/radios_______
9VSmoke/CO alarms_______
USB RechargeableFlashlights, lanterns_______
Power BanksPhones/devices_______

Battery Rules

  • Standardize your devices when possible.
  • Avoid having six lights, each using a different battery.
  • Store batteries in a cool, dry place
  • Keep batteries in the original packaging or a battery organizer.
  • Look for corrosion every 6 months.
  • Recharge power banks every 3 to 6 months.

Charging Priority Plan

When power is limited, not everything gets charged first. Use this order:

Priority 1: Safety and Communication

  • Phones
  • Weather radio
  • Medical devices
  • Emergency lights

Priority 2: Household Function

  • Small fans
  • Router/modem if the internet is available
  • Tablet for children
  • Rechargeable lanterns

Priority 3: Comfort

  • Entertainment devices
  • Bluetooth speakers
  • Extra tablets
  • Non-essential electronics

Household Charging List

Device: __________________ Priority: _______

Device: __________________ Priority: _______

Device: __________________ Priority: _______

Device: __________________ Priority: _______

Device: __________________ Priority: _______


Power Bank Planning

A small power bank can recharge a phone. A larger power station can support multiple devices and small appliances.

Small Power Banks

Best for:

  • Phones
  • Tablets
  • Headphones
  • Small USB lights

Good household target:

  • One power bank per adult
  • One shared family backup.

Portable Power Stations

Best for:

  • Multiple phones
  • Laptop
  • Router/modem
  • Small fan
  • Rechargeable lights
  • Some medical devices, depending on power needs

Before buying, check:

  • Watt-hours
  • Output ports
  • AC outlets
  • USB-C output
  • Recharge time
  • Solar compatibility
  • Weight
  • Warranty
  • Whether it supports your specific device

Important

For medical devices, do not guess. Check the device’s power requirements and discuss backup power options with the manufacturer or medical provider.


Solar Charging Plan

Solar charging can help during longer outages, but it is not magic. Solar works best when:

  • You have direct sunlight.
  • You understand your device’s needs.
  • You test it before an emergency.
  • You pair panels with a battery or power station.

Solar works poorly when:

  • It is cloudy
  • Panels are shaded
  • You are trying to charge too many devices.
  • You bought a tiny panel, expecting it to power a refrigerator.

Good uses:

  • Recharging power banks
  • Charging phones
  • Supporting a portable power station
  • Charging rechargeable lights

Not-so-good uses:

  • Last-minute emergency miracle machine
  • Running heavy appliances without planning
  • Replacing all other preparations

Generator Safety Basics

Generators are useful, but they are not casual gadgets. They create three major risks:

  • Carbon monoxide poisoning
  • Fire
  • Electrical shock

The CDC warns that carbon monoxide poisoning can happen during outages and advises calling 911 or Poison Control if someone shows signs of CO poisoning.

Generator Rules

[ ] Use generators outdoors only
[ ] Keep generators at least 20 feet from doors, windows, and vents
[ ] Point the exhaust away from the home
[ ] Never use a generator in a garage
[ ] Never use a generator on a porch
[ ] Never use a generator indoors
[ ] Keep generator dry and properly ventilated
[ ] Use properly rated outdoor extension cords
[ ] Do not overload the generator
[ ] Let the generator cool before refueling
[ ] Store fuel safely
[ ] Install battery-powered carbon monoxide detectors
[ ] Follow manufacturer instructions
[ ] Use a transfer switch if connecting to home circuits

Very Important

Never “backfeed” a home by plugging a generator into a wall outlet. That can injure or kill utility workers and damage your home’s electrical system.

If you want generator power connected to household circuits, talk to a licensed electrician about a transfer switch.


Carbon Monoxide Safety

Carbon monoxide is invisible, odorless, and dangerous.

You need working CO detectors if you use:

  • Generator
  • Gas stove
  • Gas heater
  • Fireplace
  • Charcoal grill
  • Fuel-burning equipment
  • Attached garage

CO Safety Checklist

[ ] CO detectors installed
[ ] Batteries checked
[ ] Generator kept outside
[ ] Generator 20+ feet from openings
[ ] Exhaust pointed away
[ ] Family knows symptoms
[ ] Emergency numbers available

Possible CO poisoning signs can include headache, dizziness, weakness, nausea, vomiting, chest pain, and confusion. The CDC advises immediate emergency help if CO poisoning is suspected.


Refrigerator and Freezer Power Decisions

During outages, food safety becomes part of your power plan. Ready.gov says a refrigerator will keep food cold for about 4 hours if the door stays closed, and a full freezer can hold its temperature for about 48 hours.

Power Priority Question

Is it worth using backup power for the fridge or freezer? Maybe.

Consider:

  • How long the outage may last
  • How much food is inside
  • Whether you have a generator or a power station large enough
  • Whether you have fuel or a solar recharge
  • Whether it is safer to leave it closed
  • Whether you have coolers and ice

Simple Rule

Do not keep opening the fridge “just to check.” Every opening lets cold air escape, so put a reminder on the fridge that says:

“KEEP CLOSED”

Simple but effective.


Internet and Communication Backup

During an outage, the internet may or may not work.  Plan for both.

If the Internet Still Works

Power these:

  • Modem
  • Router
  • Phone
  • Laptop if needed

Tools:

  • UPS battery backup
  • Small power station
  • Power bank
  • Hotspot

If the Internet Does Not Work

Use:

  • Phone texts
  • Battery radio
  • Weather radio
  • Local emergency alerts
  • Pre-written family contact plan
  • Printed phone numbers

Do not make your emergency plan completely dependent on Wi-Fi. Wi-Fi is great, but it is not always reliable during an outage.

Medical Power Planning

This section matters.

Plan for:

  • CPAP machines
  • Oxygen concentrators
  • Refrigerated medications
  • Mobility devices
  • Powered beds
  • Medical monitors
  • Nebulizers
  • Insulin storage
  • Elder care equipment

Medical Power Checklist

[ ] List medical devices
[ ] Record wattage/power needs
[ ] Contact device manufacturer
[ ] Ask the medical provider about backup options
[ ] Keep backup batteries charged
[ ] Know medication temperature requirements
[ ] Register with the local utility medical needs program if available
[ ] Have an evacuation plan if a power loss becomes unsafe

For medical needs, backup power is not a gadget decision. It is a care plan.


The Family Blackout Station

Create one central blackout station.

Include:

  • Lantern
  • Flashlights
  • Headlamps
  • Batteries
  • Power banks
  • Charging cables
  • Weather radio
  • Glow sticks
  • Printed contact list
  • Printed blackout plan
  • First aid kit
  • Hand sanitizer
  • Notepad and pen
  • Small cash envelope
  • Deck of cards or a kids’ activity

Best location:

  • Easy to reach
  • Known by everyone
  • Not hidden in garage clutter
  • Away from heat and moisture
  • Accessible in the dark

Label it:

“FAMILY BLACKOUT KIT”


First 10 Minutes After the Power Goes Out

  1. Pause and stay calm.
  2. Check if the outage is only at your house or in the neighborhood.
  3. Grab the blackout kit.
  4. Turn on one lantern in the main room.
  5. Give each person a light source.
  6. Keep the refrigerator and freezer closed.
  7. Check local outage alerts.
  8. Put phones on low-power mode.
  9. Stop unnecessary device use.
  10. Keep candles unlit unless necessary.

Your first job is not to solve the entire outage, but to stabilize the house.


The First Hour Blackout Plan

After the house is stable:

[ ] Check outage map if available
[ ] Text key family members
[ ] Confirm everyone’s phone battery level
[ ] Set up charging station
[ ] Move kids/seniors/pets to a safe, lit area
[ ] Check flashlights and lanterns
[ ] Avoid opening fridge/freezer
[ ] Check weather alerts
[ ] Decide whether backup power is needed
[ ] Review generator safety if using one


Nighttime Blackout Routine

Before bedtime during an outage:

[ ] Place a flashlight next to each bed
[ ] Put lantern in hallway or bathroom
[ ] Keep shoes near the bed
[ ] Keep phones on low-power mode
[ ] Keep water nearby
[ ] Turn off unnecessary lights
[ ] Keep children’s comfort item nearby
[ ] Confirm doors/windows are secure
[ ] Keep pets contained or easy to find
[ ] Do not sleep with candles burning

This routine matters because blackouts are most stressful at night. A dark house can feel more cramped, noisier, and even a little unnerving at night.


Apartment Power & Light Plan

Apartment-friendly options:

  • LED lanterns
  • Power banks
  • Small portable power station
  • Solar charger for balcony/window use, if practical
  • Battery-powered fans
  • Rechargeable lights
  • Weather radio
  • No generator unless explicitly allowed and safely used outdoors according to rules

Apartment caution: Never run a fuel-burning generator indoors, on a balcony, in a hallway, or near windows. That is not preparedness, but a serious safety risk.


Common Power & Light Mistakes

Avoid these:

  • Having flashlights but no batteries
  • Having batteries but no matching devices
  • Depending on candles
  • Keeping all lights in one drawer
  • Forgetting headlamps
  • Forgetting phone cables
  • Forgetting elderly family members
  • Forgetting medical devices
  • Buying a generator without a safety plan
  • Running generators too close to the house
  • Opening the fridge/freezer repeatedly
  • Not testing gear before storm season.
  • Not recharging power banks
  • Assuming solar will solve everything
  • Using indoor cooking or heating shortcuts that create a CO risk

The blackout plan should be boring, visible, and practiced. Boring is underrated, but boring also gets results.


Your 30-Minute Power & Light Setup

Use this to start today.

Minute 1–5: Count

Number of people: _______

Bedrooms: _______

Bathrooms: _______

Key rooms: _______

Phones/devices: _______

Medical devices: _______

Minute 5–10: Gather

Find what you already have:

[ ] Flashlights
[ ] Lanterns
[ ] Headlamps
[ ] Batteries
[ ] Power banks
[ ] Charging cables
[ ] Weather radio
[ ] Extension cords
[ ] CO detectors

Minute 10–20: Organize

Create your blackout station.

Label:

[ ] Flashlights
[ ] Batteries
[ ] Charging cables
[ ] Power banks
[ ] Weather radio
[ ] Emergency instructions

Minute 20–30: Assign

Place lights in:

[ ] Kitchen
[ ] Main room
[ ] Bedrooms
[ ] Bathrooms
[ ] Hallways/stairs
[ ] Garage/utility area


Shopping List

Basic Starter List

  • LED flashlights
  • LED lantern
  • Extra batteries
  • Glow sticks
  • Power bank
  • Charging cables
  • Storage bin
  • Permanent marker

Strong Family Setup

  • Flashlight for each person
  • Headlamp for each adult
  • Lantern for each major room
  • Motion-sensor battery lights
  • Rechargeable batteries
  • Battery charger
  • USB power banks
  • Portable power station
  • Solar panel, if appropriate
  • Weather radio
  • UPS backup for router/modem
  • Carbon monoxide detectors
  • Heavy-duty outdoor extension cords
  • Generator, if appropriate
  • Transfer switch, if professionally installed
  • Printed blackout plan

Power & Light Checklist

Lighting

[ ] Flashlight for each person
[ ] Headlamp for each adult
[ ] Lantern for kitchen
[ ] Lantern for main room
[ ] Light for each bedroom
[ ] Light for bathroom
[ ] Hallway/stair lighting
[ ] Glow sticks for kids
[ ] Backup batteries

Charging

[ ] Power banks charged
[ ] Phone cables labeled
[ ] USB-C cable
[ ] Lightning cable
[ ] Multi-tip cable
[ ] Car charger
[ ] Portable power station
[ ] Solar charger tested
[ ] Router/modem backup considered

Safety

[ ] CO detectors installed
[ ] Smoke alarms working
[ ] Generator used outdoors only
[ ] Generator 20+ feet from openings
[ ] Fuel stored safely
[ ] Extension cords rated properly
[ ] No backfeeding
[ ] Candles avoided or used carefully
[ ] Fridge/freezer kept closed

Communication

[ ] Weather radio
[ ] Emergency contacts printed
[ ] Family text plan
[ ] Local alerts enabled
[ ] Battery radio tested
[ ] Phones on low-power mode

Medical

[ ] Medical devices listed
[ ] Power needs recorded
[ ] Backup batteries charged
[ ] Medication storage plan
[ ] Utility/medical program checked
[ ] Evacuation trigger identified

Review

[ ] Test lights every 6 months
[ ] Recharge power banks every 3–6 months
[ ] Check batteries for corrosion
[ ] Review generator plan before storm season
[ ] Update device list
[ ] Replace broken gear


Final Family Power & Light Plan

Household members: _______

Key rooms needing light: _______

Primary blackout kit location: __________________________

Backup lighting location: __________________________

Battery storage location: __________________________

Power bank location: __________________________

Weather radio location: __________________________

Generator location, if applicable: __________________________

Fuel storage location, if applicable: __________________________

CO detector locations: __________________________

Medical power needs: __________________________

Fridge/freezer plan: __________________________

Internet backup plan: __________________________

Rotation/check date: __________________________

Person responsible for checking supplies: __________________________


Closing Note

Power outage preparedness is not about powering everything, but is about protecting what matters.

Light the rooms. Charge the phones. Keep the fridge closed. Avoid dangerous shortcuts. Use generators safely, and keep the family calm. Because a good blackout plan does not make the outage disappear, it makes your household harder to unsettle, which is the whole idea.

Not sure where to start?

Start with the free checklist, then work through the six core areas at your own pace.