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OFF-GRID LIVING

How Much Water Do You Need for Off-Grid Living?

Water is the first thing that humbles every new off-gridder. When it doesn't come out of a city pipe, you suddenly notice every drop. Here's how to figure out how much you actually need, and how to store and stretch it.

The short answer

A common planning number is about 10 gallons per person per day for a reasonably comfortable off-grid life — drinking, cooking, dishes, hygiene, and a modest amount of cleaning. That's far less than the 80–100 gallons a day the average American home uses on the grid, but a lot more than bare survival.

For pure survival, you can get by on 1–2 gallons per person per day for drinking and basic cooking. Most people settle somewhere in between: a careful off-grid household often runs 5–15 gallons per person per day depending on how much they conserve.

Quick math: a family of four planning for 10 gallons each needs about 40 gallons a day — roughly 1,200 gallons a month before any gardening or animals.

Where off-grid water comes from

Storage: how much should you keep?

Aim to store at least two weeks of water, and ideally a month, in case roads wash out or your vehicle breaks down. Common starter tanks:

Always set tanks on a solid, level base. A full 275-gallon tote weighs over 2,000 pounds, so the ground has to carry it.

Rainwater catchment math

Here's a number worth memorizing: 1 inch of rain on 1,000 square feet of roof yields roughly 600 gallons. So even a modest metal roof can fill a lot of barrels in a single good storm. In monsoon country, catchment can supply a big share of your yearly water if you have the storage to hold it.

Make every drop count

High-desert reminder: insulate or bury your lines and wrap your tanks. A hard freeze will turn your whole water supply into a block of ice overnight.

Start small, measure what your household actually uses for a couple of weeks, and build your storage from there. You'll be surprised how little you really need once you're paying attention to every gallon.

General information based on common off-grid practice and experience, not engineering advice. Follow local codes and consult a professional for well, septic, and large water-system work.

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