How to Choose a Stocked IFAK
An Individual First Aid Kit (IFAK) is the kit you carry for yourself — designed to treat the injuries most likely to kill before professional help arrives. A stocked IFAK ships ready to use: the carrier and the medical supplies inside, assembled together around life-threatening bleeding and the other preventable causes of trauma death. You open it and treat. No sourcing, no loadout decisions, no guesswork in the moment that matters.
Every kit in this collection is built to CoTCCC-recommended priorities and organized around the MARCH sequence — Massive hemorrhage, Airway, Respiration, Circulation, Head injury/Hypothermia — the order in which trauma kills and therefore the order in which you treat.
What a stocked IFAK contains
Contents scale with the kit's tier, but a complete trauma-focused IFAK is built around the first two letters of MARCH, because hemorrhage and airway compromise are what kill in the first minutes:
| MARCH step | Typical contents | What it treats |
| M — Massive hemorrhage | Limb tourniquet, hemostatic gauze, pressure dressing, compressed gauze | Arterial and major venous bleeding |
| A — Airway | Nasopharyngeal airway, lubricant | Airway obstruction in an unconscious casualty |
| R — Respiration | Vented chest seal(s) | Penetrating chest trauma / sucking chest wound |
| C — Circulation | Additional dressings, casualty documentation | Ongoing assessment and shock awareness |
| H — Head / Hypothermia | Survival blanket, gloves, trauma shears, marker | Heat retention and provider protection |
A tourniquet is the single highest-value item in any IFAK. Applied high and tight on the proximal third of the limb — upper arm near the shoulder, or high on the thigh near the hip, never over a joint — it controls extremity hemorrhage that would otherwise be fatal in minutes.
Match the kit to who carries it
- Civilian / family / vehicle — compact, intuitive kits for the home, range bag, or glovebox. The priority is simplicity under stress: clear contents, fast access, and the bleeding-control essentials. New to this? Start with our free trauma-response brief.
- Workplace / school — kits sized for a public-access bleeding-control response, often paired with signage and wall mounting so anyone can reach them in an emergency.
- Law enforcement / EMS / military — duty-grade kits in MOLLE, belt, ankle, or vehicle configurations, built for one-handed self-application and rapid resupply.
Not sure where to start? If you want bleeding control with zero assembly, a stocked IFAK is the fastest path to readiness. Browse the kits above, or read the
trauma-response brief to understand what you're treating before you buy.
Stocked kit or empty carrier?
If your agency or unit standardizes its own loadout, or you already hold the medical components and just need the platform, you want the carrier on its own. See IFAK Pouches (Empty) — same proven platforms, supplied empty so you build to protocol.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does IFAK stand for, and what's in one?
IFAK stands for Individual First Aid Kit — the kit you carry to treat yourself or one casualty. A trauma-focused IFAK is built around the MARCH sequence and centers on bleeding control: a limb tourniquet, hemostatic gauze, a pressure dressing, a vented chest seal, and an airway adjunct, plus gloves, shears, and a survival blanket.
Are these kits CoTCCC-recommended?
The kits are assembled around components and priorities consistent with Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care (CoTCCC) recommendations. Individual components such as tourniquets and hemostatic dressings should carry their own CoTCCC-recommended status — check the product page for each item.
Do I need training to use an IFAK?
The hardware works best with training. Bleeding-control skills — tourniquet application, wound packing, and chest-seal placement — are simple to learn and dramatically more effective with even a few hours of hands-on instruction. The kit gives you the tools; training gives you the confidence to use them under stress.
Where should a tourniquet be placed?
High and tight on the proximal third of the injured limb — high on the upper arm or high on the thigh — never directly over a joint such as the elbow or knee. If bleeding continues after the first tourniquet, a second is placed just above the first. Speed matters more than precision: a tourniquet applied quickly saves the limb and the life.
What's the difference between a stocked kit and an empty pouch?
A stocked kit ships with the medical supplies already inside — open and treat. An empty pouch is the carrier only, for professionals who load to an agency or unit protocol. If you want turnkey readiness, choose a stocked kit; if you control your own loadout, choose an empty pouch.
Can I mount an IFAK to a plate carrier, belt, or vehicle?
Yes. Kits are offered in MOLLE, belt-mount, ankle, and vehicle-mount configurations. Match the mounting to how you carry: MOLLE for plate carriers and packs, belt or ankle for everyday and duty carry, and headrest or seat-back mounts for vehicles.
How often should I check or replace contents?
Inspect annually and after any use. Tourniquets and chest seals have shelf lives and can degrade with heat and UV exposure — vehicle kits especially. Replace expired or used components promptly; resupply sets make this straightforward.
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