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Protect your home from earthquake damage with this room-by-room guide to securing furniture, appliances, and structural weak points.
Kitchen: Securing Cabinets, Appliances, and Gas Lines
The kitchen is the most hazardous room in most homes during an earthquake because it combines heavy objects at height (overhead cabinets), gas connections, and hard flooring that makes falls dangerous. Begin your earthquake-proofing assessment here and use the Building Safety Checker to generate a risk score before purchasing hardware.
Install positive-latch child-safety latches on all overhead cabinets. Standard magnetic latches are adequate for lightweight dishware, but cabinets storing cast iron cookware, heavy mixers, or canned goods require hardware with higher load ratings. The test is simple: place your palm flat on the closed cabinet door and apply lateral force — if the door opens, the latch is inadequate for earthquake conditions. Replace any latch that fails this test before the next seismic event.
Secure the refrigerator to the wall with anti-tip straps rated for appliance weight. A standard refrigerator weighs 200 to 400 pounds; when it topples, it blocks evacuation routes and can injure occupants. Strap it to a stud rather than drywall alone, and confirm the strap angle allows for the appliance's center of mass. Slide a non-slip mat under the refrigerator feet to dampen sliding before tipping initiates.
Gas line connections to stoves and ovens are among the most critical post-earthquake safety concerns. All California building codes since 1998 require flexible stainless-steel connectors for gas appliances, and most jurisdictions have adopted equivalent requirements. Inspect your gas connections annually — a rigid black iron pipe directly connected to a stove indicates a pre-code installation that should be upgraded. Flexible corrugated stainless-steel tubing (CSST) or an approved flexible connector absorbs movement without fracturing.
Living Room: TV, Bookshelves, and Heavy Objects
Flat-panel televisions are among the most commonly tipped items in living rooms and are a significant source of pediatric earthquake injuries. Mount wall-mount brackets into studs, not just drywall, and verify that the bracket's VESA rating exceeds the TV's weight. For TVs on stands, anti-tip straps that attach both to the TV and to the furniture piece it sits on are a low-cost solution. If the furniture itself is not anchored, the system provides no benefit.
Bookshelves taller than four feet must be anchored to studs with L-brackets or furniture straps. Arrange the heaviest books on the lowest shelves to lower the center of mass and reduce toppling torque. Use bookends on open shelves to prevent books from cascading outward during lateral shaking. A bookshelf falling into an evacuation path can make the difference between a clean escape and a trapped household.
Aquariums present a unique Secondary Earthquake HazardsHazards triggered by earthquake shaking rather than the shaking itself — including tsunamis, landslides, liquefaction, fires, dam failures, and chemical releases. Often cause more damage than shaking. challenge: they are extremely heavy when full (approximately 10 pounds per gallon), and they are filled with water that becomes a flood hazard when spilled onto wood floors and electrical outlets. Secure aquariums with positive straps on furniture and consider relocation to a ground floor in homes with structural concerns. At minimum, keep the aquarium below the center height of the stand it rests on.
Bedroom: Safe Sleep Positioning and Overhead Hazards
The bedroom is where most people are during nighttime earthquakes, which historically account for some of the highest casualty counts because sleeping occupants have no warning and reduced reaction capacity. The first Earthquake PreparednessThe ongoing process of planning and preparation to minimize earthquake impact, including securing furniture, creating communication plans, maintaining emergency supplies, and practicing drills. step is repositioning beds: move them away from windows, exterior walls, and any overhead hanging objects such as ceiling fans, heavy light fixtures, or large framed artwork.
Secure the headboard to the wall if it is tall enough to fall onto a sleeping person. A headboard that is merely leaning against the wall will become a projectile during strong shaking. Use furniture straps or L-brackets at the top of the headboard secured to studs. Place nightstand items — lamps, books, water glasses — on non-slip mats and avoid storing breakables at head height above the sleeping surface.
Keep shoes and a flashlight within reach of the bed, ideally in a mesh bag hanging from the bedframe. Post-earthquake floors are commonly covered in broken glass, and the shock and disorientation of nighttime shaking makes barefoot navigation extremely dangerous. Slippers or closed-toe shoes stored beside the bed eliminate the need to search during stress and low-light conditions.
Bathroom: Water Heater and Mirror Safety
The water heater is the most significant Seismic RetrofitStrengthening an existing building to improve its earthquake resistance. Common methods include adding steel bracing, reinforcing foundations, and bolting structures to foundations. priority in bathrooms and utility spaces. An unstrapped water heater weighing 150 to 400 pounds can topple during moderate shaking, rupturing the gas connection and water supply simultaneously. California requires water heater strapping to studs, with dual straps at one-third and two-thirds height. Follow the local code and use steel plumber's tape or purpose-designed water heater straps with backing plates.
Mirrors are a major source of lacerations in post-earthquake bathrooms. Large bathroom mirrors should be secured with mirror clips at the corners in addition to the adhesive mounting common in builder-grade installations. Frameless mirrors are the highest risk; frame them or replace them with beveled glass mirrors secured with perimeter clips and safety-backed glass film that holds shards in place after fracture.
Medicine cabinet doors should have positive latches, and medicine cabinet contents should be organized so that the heaviest items are on the lowest shelves. Glass bottles of medications and supplements that shatter on tile floors create both a chemical and laceration hazard in a room where bare feet are common.
Garage and Utility: Structural Bracing Priorities
Garages in wood-frame homes are structurally vulnerable because the large opening for the garage door removes a significant portion of the shear wall on the building's front elevation. A Soft StoryA building story (usually ground floor) that is significantly weaker than the floors above, often due to large openings like garages or storefronts. Soft stories are the most common collapse mechanism. configuration — where the garage occupies the ground floor beneath living space — is one of the highest-risk residential configurations in earthquake country. Have a licensed structural engineer assess any garage-below-living-space configuration and consider a steel moment frame or shear wall addition if you are in a high-seismic zone.
Utility shelving in garages commonly stores heavy paint cans, automotive fluids, and power tools. Anchor shelving units to studs and add front lips or bungee cords to prevent items from sliding off during shaking. Store hazardous fluids in secondary containment bins to prevent spills from spreading if containers break. Keep a fire extinguisher in the garage and mount it near the door for quick access.
The electrical panel is a critical utility item that should be accessible and clearly labeled. Know how to shut off the main breaker in the event of post-earthquake electrical hazards such as sparking wires or a compromised meter box. If your panel has not been inspected in more than 15 years, schedule a service visit; older panels with Federal Pacific or Zinsco breakers are known fire risks independent of earthquake damage.
Assessing Your Building with the Building Safety Checker
Use the Building Safety Checker to assess your dwelling's overall seismic risk profile. Input your building type (wood frame, unreinforced masonry, concrete moment frame, etc.), year of construction, number of stories, and location. The tool cross-references your inputs with Building Code (Seismic)A set of legal requirements governing the design and construction of buildings to ensure minimum levels of earthquake safety. Updated after major earthquakes reveal new vulnerabilities. adoption history in your jurisdiction and Seismic Hazard MapA map showing the probability of earthquake shaking exceeding specified levels over a given time period. Used by engineers, planners, and insurers to assess earthquake risk. data to produce a risk score and prioritized retrofit recommendations.
Buildings constructed before 1980 in most U.S. jurisdictions predate modern seismic design provisions and carry significantly elevated risk for structural damage in moderate to large earthquakes. Unreinforced Masonry (URM)Brick or block construction without steel reinforcement, which is extremely vulnerable to earthquake shaking. URM buildings account for the majority of earthquake fatalities worldwide. buildings — brick, stone, or concrete block without internal steel reinforcement — are the highest-risk common building type and are the subject of mandatory retrofit programs in many California cities. If your assessment identifies high structural risk, consult a licensed structural engineer before the next earthquake rather than after it.