How much toilet paper does one person actually need when SHTF (Shtuff Hits The Fan)? It seems that toilet paper is one of the hottest commodities due to the catatonic state of fear one falls into thinking “What if we run out of TOILET PAPER?!” This thought is often followed by a pail flushing of blood from the face, a glazing over of the eyes and the sheer terror of trying to figure out if leaves and twigs would really do the job when SHTF.
Let’s face it. After the outhouse came in, we’ve become far more accustomed to quilted, cushioned softness than our ancestors. But this is a disposable commodity, so we need to plan if suddenly it was not as readily available. In future posts, we may explore other options that are a bit more eccentric, yet none-the-less still quite effective for the more daring of derrieres. For this post, however, we will look at how to effectively figure for the stocking up of TP from a ‘trying to live life as normal’ scenario.
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First, we would like to offer a painless way to figure out how much is necessary to stock up for your selected amount of storage time. For sake of argument for this portion of the exercise, we are going to assume that you are using this method of planning for when you have adequate plumbing and a flushing toilet. So, for the ‘life as normal’ type of planning, we want to share an easy way to take the guess-work out of figuring just how many rolls of the treasured tissue on a tube are needed on hand in your home if the trucks just suddenly stopped delivering to the stores indefinitely. Please don’t faint at the thought.
Behold…simple math is our friend. We’ll just use it in an unorthodox way.
Easy Steps: Select the one bathroom that is most frequented in your home, a new roll of toilet paper, a post-it and a pen or marker. Upon starting the new roll of toilet paper, put the date on the post-it and then on the wall. When the roll is at an end, mark the date on the roll.
See the images below for the start and finish:
If you’ll notice then the number of days between the start and the finish (in this case it was 6 days).
Now here comes the math.
We figure this one bathroom as if it’s used by only one person (even if there were guests) and round days up a full day to make the weeks easier to figure.
1 bathroom = 1 person
used 1 roll
in 7 days
.
So in this case, if there was only one person in the home, this person would need to store 4 rolls for 4 weeks, 8 rolls for 8 weeks…and so on. If the goal is a year’s supply of toilet paper on hand then one person needs 52 rolls for one year. Then simply multiply by the number of individuals who will be sharing the home/bathroom.
Here are a few scenarios:
- 4 people storing for 4 months would be 4 (rolls) X 16 (weeks) = 64 rolls of toilet paper at a minimum for this household.
- 4 people storing for a full year would be 4 X 52 = 208 rolls of toilet paper is the minimum amount needed for a household of this size for a full year.
Another option is to run this ‘tally’ in each bathroom of the home. Provided people are home most of the time this will give you an adequate estimate for how fast TP gets used by your household. For example: if there are 3 bathrooms and 6 people and it takes 3 days to go through 3 rolls for all 6 people you can figure that this way:
3 days = 3 rolls. Multiply by 2.5 to get the week’s worth of TP for your household (plus a little bit more for padding…). This home goes through 7.5 rolls of TP a week. Then simply multiply by the number of weeks you want to have on hand.
- 7.5 rolls x 4 weeks of storage = 30 rolls of TP
- 7.5 rolls x 52 weeks of storage = 390 rolls of TP
Each household’s results will vary depending upon the methodology of using TP. Do you crumple or fold? Do you count squares or rotations of the roll? Do you use it in place of facial tissue or to stop shaving nicks and cuts? The roll of toilet paper (pun intended) is more important than it’s end result.
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There are two factors, however, that cannot be accounted for when planning for how much toilet paper to stock up. They are in fact immune to your stress over being without and will indeed take full advantage of an opportunity to help you become unraveled once you think you’ve gotten it all figured out. We’ve caught them in the act and yet, even as scared as one might be about running out of TP we can’t help but realize they really don’t care and might be able to teach us a thing or two about ‘where to go’ when we have to do without. You see, there’s really just no planning for this kind of attack. Your best-laid plans are useless against their cuteness.
6 months is 24 weeks
Thanks for checking the typo (now changed)! It was meant as a 4 month (16 week) plan. You are correct. The math now works accurately. 🙂
6 months is 26weeks……………52 /2=26
You know Bruce, that’s also quite viable. Given that some months are 31 days and Feb as low as 28. To be on the safe side, I like your math! But then again, large poplar leaves, white maple and other ‘natural TP’ is always an option in a pinch. 🙂
Use wipes. Small and compact and with a few drops of water they expand.
What is the problem? A national crisis because there is no more TP to be found at Kroger? Why can’t a single wash rag work? Better job of cleaning, too. Then wash it out for the next use. Learn to wash your hands thoroughly after cleaning your wash rag. Every mom, with every baby born, has first-hand knowledge .. and a few dads, I guess. Get over your squeamishness.
TP takes up a lot of storage space, and you have to worry about bugs getting into your stock. Someone once suggested to me getting a plastic pail with a lid (think ice cream bucket) and a cheap stack of wash clothes from a dollar store or Sams. Assign each family member a pail/lid and x number of wash clothes. Then once a week each family member washes their wash clothes using Pool Shock. Takes up a whole lot less space and is reusable.
Our plan does not involve mass amounts of TP. Like Austin said above – it takes up a lot of room and plus mice tend to prefer it for nest building. And no matter how well you store it – they find it!
Having used cloth diapers for our kids back in the day, we don’t see the big deal. We have about 30-40 white terry cloth wash clothes and a ‘diaper pail’ of sorts at the ready by the side of the toilet.
Not saying we live this way now – but we’ve got the plan that is sustainable rather than stocking tons of TP.
She’ll change it sure, but really wish she’d put it on the holder right. NEVER ever happens. (Pick your battles, Dudes) And the answer to the seat up/down BS Because for some reason, women won’t LOOK before they sit down I ALWAYS close the LID. Problem solved and she ALWAYS has to look first, lest she go all over the toilet. (And when there’s a toddler around, it’s good to not have an open bowl of water as an enticing target for toy tossing.
I lived in research camping conditions with a baby for one year. Diapers are easily ‘washed’ by hanging on bushes in the rain or in the sun. First, shake off the shakable, then just throw them flat over any bush or branch. Same should apply to rags. What the shaking doesn’t take, flies will finish, and a day in the sun is a great sterilizer. My babe never had diaper rash using this method. I used no soap ever. But you have to stop worrying about stains and the softness of the cotton.
Haaaa this was useful information in 2020, was it not?