The question isn’t “Can I tough it out?” The question is whether your home has stopped being shelter and started becoming a hazard. Some damage is cosmetic. Other damage silently turns into fire, collapse, toxic air, or entrapment risk.
This page gives practical thresholds: leave-now hazards, leave-soon conditions, and “stay but monitor” damage — plus what to do if you’re forced to shelter temporarily.
Leave Immediately Leave Soon Monitor If You Can’t Leave FAQA home is “safe shelter” only if it protects you from the outside environment without creating new hazards inside. The highest-risk damage categories are: fire/smoke, gas/CO, water + electricity, structural instability, and toxic air.
If any of these are true, leaving is the correct decision if you have a movement window. If you don’t, jump to If You Can’t Leave →
Natural gas odor, CO alarm, dizziness/headache/nausea that improves outside, or soot/backdraft signs. This can incapacitate you before you realize it.
Fire in/near structure, heavy smoke infiltration, electrical burning smell, or rapidly worsening visibility. Fire outruns problem-solving.
Sagging roof, major cracking, shifting/leaning elements, compromised supports, collapse noises, or impact damage that makes the building unreliable.
Rising water into home, uncontrolled leaks saturating ceilings/walls, or fast-moving water near exits. Water + electricity + entrapment is a bad combo.
Sparking outlets/panels, burning plastic smell, water in electrical areas, or repeated breaker trips with heat. Fire risk is immediate.
External release infiltrating home (strong chemical odor, irritation, breathing difficulty). If indoors doesn’t protect you, shelter is no longer shelter.
These aren’t always instant-death hazards, but they remove your margin. If the event is escalating, utilities are unreliable, or you expect weather exposure, these become “leave before you’re forced.”
| Condition | Why it matters | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Roof damage / active leaks | Leaks become electrical hazards, mold, ceiling collapse, and loss of thermal protection. | Stage exit plan; protect critical areas; leave if leak is spreading or structure softening. |
| Broken windows / blown doors | Loss of weather barrier; increased intrusion risk; hypothermia/heat risk. | Temporary seal if safe; relocate if weather or security risk is rising. |
| Partial structural compromise | “Standing” isn’t “stable.” Wind/rain aftershocks can finish the job. | Do not sleep under compromised zones; leave if movement/settling continues. |
| Sanitation failure you can’t contain | Waste exposure becomes illness risk fast in multi-day events. | Contain if possible; if not, relocate before sickness spreads. |
| Water contamination advisory | Dehydration/illness compounds quickly if you can’t reliably treat/store. | Use stored water; treat if capable; consider leaving if you can’t maintain intake safely. |
This category is “stay if your home remains protective.” The mistake is assuming nothing changes. If the event extends, these can escalate into leave-soon or leave-now.
Cracked drywall, broken cabinets, superficial exterior damage. These matter for comfort—not immediate survivability—unless they expose wiring/gas/water.
Power loss isn’t automatically a reason to leave. It becomes a reason when it creates medical/heat/cooling failure or pushes you into high-visibility behavior.
If you can shut off water and contain it, it’s not instantly forcing. If you can’t, water turns into structural/electrical risk.
Fence, shed, carport damage isn’t necessarily a leave trigger unless it creates hazards (falling debris, wires, access blockage).
Sometimes the hazard is obvious but movement isn’t possible. In that case, the goal is short-term harm reduction until you can move.
Most “bad outcomes” happen when people ignore silent hazards (gas/CO, water + electricity, structural instability), or wait until their movement window closes. Use the thresholds above and re-check as conditions change.
← Back to hub | Decision framework page →Not by itself. It becomes a leave reason when it creates medical risk, heat/cooling failure, sanitation failure, or forces you into high-visibility behavior that increases targeting.
Gas/CO risk, water interacting with electrical systems, and partial structural compromise. These can become fatal before they “look dramatic.”
Treat uncertainty as risk. If you see sagging, shifting, major cracks, or hear movement, don’t sleep under compromised areas. If conditions are worsening, leaving earlier is safer than waiting for confirmation.
Reduce visible power use, control noise and cooking smells, manage waste output, and don’t broadcast competence or supplies. Start here: How people accidentally signal supplies →