Television footage of mass evacuations sends an unmistakable message: the responsible thing is to leave. Mayors call for it, news anchors echo it, social media performs it. But disaster research has long pushed back on the idea that evacuation is always the safer choice. For many hazards, in many homes, sheltering in place is statistically less dangerous than the evacuation itself.
The framing matters because the wrong decision in a disaster โ going when you should stay, or staying when you should go โ is not symmetric. Both can be deadly, and the obvious answer isn’t always right.
Evacuation kills in ways that don’t make the news
The 2005 Hurricane Rita evacuation from Houston is the cautionary case. As nearly three million people fled, the death toll from the evacuation itself โ primarily heat exhaustion, traffic accidents, and a nursing home bus fire โ exceeded the death toll from the storm in Texas. Roads jammed for 24 hours. Fuel ran out. People sat in stationary traffic in 100-degree heat. Similar dynamics played out during Wilma in Florida and during California wildfire evacuations, where collisions and smoke inhalation on choked roads have repeatedly killed people who might have survived a defensible house. The evacuation isn’t free. It carries its own mortality risk that scales with traffic, heat, and the medical fragility of the population leaving.
Modern construction is sturdier than the orders assume
Building codes in hurricane and tornado zones have improved substantially since the 1990s. Homes built post-2002 in Florida, for example, are designed to withstand sustained Category 3 winds with reinforced roof straps, impact-rated windows, and elevated foundations in flood zones. For storms that aren’t catastrophic, sheltering in a well-built modern home is often safer than putting yourself on a road network that wasn’t designed for everyone leaving at once. The exception, and it’s an important one, is storm surge. Wind you can hide from. Water at speed you can’t.
The “go” call should depend on the hazard, not the headline
Hurricane storm surge zones, wildfire direct paths, and dam failure inundation areas are situations where evacuation is genuinely the right call โ staying is unsurvivable. But for inland hurricane wind, ice storms, most floods that don’t involve fast-moving water, and hazardous materials releases of unknown plume direction, staying inside a sealed structure is frequently safer. Local emergency managers know this, but evacuation orders are often blanket because nuanced messaging is hard to deliver to millions of people in 24 hours. The blanket order errs toward “leave” because the political cost of telling someone to stay who then dies is higher than the cost of unnecessary evacuation deaths, which never get attributed to the order.
How to think about your own situation
Know your specific risk: storm surge zone, wildfire severity zone, floodplain rating. Have a defensible structure or know you don’t. Plan to leave early or not at all โ the dangerous evacuation is the late one.
The takeaway
Evacuation is sometimes mandatory and lifesaving. But it isn’t automatically the safer choice, and treating it as the default has its own body count.
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