Real 2026 costs, what the safety standards actually mean, the rebate your state will (and won't) pay — and installers we genuinely vet. We don't sell shelters. We help you pick the right one.
No fluff, no upsell. Each guide is built from primary sources and updated as standards and programs change.
Installed price by type, size and material — with the line items that actually move the number.
Read the guide →FEMA P-361, ICC-500, the NSSA seal — and why "FEMA-approved" is a myth.
Understand standards →State-by-state rebates and tax credits, current status, and how to actually apply.
Find your rebate →The checklist, the questions to ask, and the red flags that signal a scam.
Choose with confidence →Most "storm shelter" sites are manufacturers selling their own product or lead marketplaces handing your number to four contractors at once. We're neither. We're a neutral reference that earns its keep only when we connect you to an installer who clears our published bar.
Some states pay up to 75% of your shelter — by lottery, tax credit, or county program. Others pay nothing and route you to FEMA. Here's where each one stands.
Safety, flooding, accessibility and cost — which is right for your home.
Compare →Capacity by FEMA's square-footage rule, in one quick calculator.
Size it →What that claim really means — and why it's the #1 scam signal.
Get the truth →Most installed residential shelters run $3,500–$15,000. Above-ground steel safe rooms are typically $3,000–$12,000; below-ground concrete $3,700–$7,000+; under-garage in-floor units $6,000–$15,000. Size, material, site access and excavation drive the number. See the full cost guide →
No. FEMA does not certify, approve, or endorse any shelter or company — it publishes guidance (P-320, P-361). Shelters are tested to ICC-500 and validated through the NSSA. A "FEMA-certified" claim is a red flag. Read why →
Yes, when built to ICC-500 / FEMA P-361. Texas Tech's National Wind Institute has recorded no failures of properly built above-ground safe rooms. The choice is about accessibility, flooding, space and budget — not safety. Compare both →
They can if poorly sited or sealed — but a properly installed, waterproofed unit on good drainage resists water. Placement and material matter more than the category. We cover siting and drainage in our installer checklist. See the checklist →
Some do. Oklahoma and Mississippi run lottery rebates up to $3,000–$3,500; Alabama gives a tax credit; Texas is county-by-county; many states route you to FEMA instead. Programs open in cycles. Check your state →
Tell us your state and a few details. We'll match you with vetted, ICC-500-focused installers in your area — and show you the rebate you may qualify for.