Drought is a slow-onset disaster with cascading effects — municipal rationing, well failures, crop failures, and wildfire risk all worsen as drought persists. The American West is currently experiencing the most severe long-term drought in recorded history; Lake Mead and Lake Powell, which supply water to over 40 million people, have dropped to record-low levels. But drought preparedness is relevant everywhere water tables are dropping, aquifer depletion is accelerating, or infrastructure ages. This guide covers the household-level response to both drought warnings and actual water supply disruption.

Understanding Drought Severity

The US Drought Monitor (drought.unl.edu) rates drought conditions weekly on a five-category scale:

CategoryLabelTypical household impact
D0Abnormally DryOutdoor watering restrictions may begin; fire risk elevated
D1Moderate DroughtWatering schedule limits; well levels beginning to drop
D2Severe DroughtMandatory outdoor watering bans; some shallow wells failing
D3Extreme DroughtSignificant water rationing; agricultural impacts severe; deeper wells affected
D4Exceptional DroughtWater emergency declarations; rationing may limit indoor use; reservoir-dependent systems under severe pressure

Municipal Rationing: What It Means and How to Prepare

Most municipal utilities implement graduated rationing with defined stages:

  • Stage 1 (Voluntary Conservation): Recommended 10–15% reduction. Water twice per week maximum. Wash vehicles at commercial wash stations only.
  • Stage 2 (Mandatory Restrictions): No outdoor watering except specific hours/days. No irrigation of ornamental plants. No filling of pools or fountains.
  • Stage 3 (Critical Shortage): Outdoor use banned. Water budgets enforced with fines for overuse. Significant daily allotment per household.
  • Stage 4 (Emergency): Water use limited to indoor essential use only. Commercial landscaping prohibited. In severe cases, alternate-day service.

The average American household uses 80–100 gallons of water per person per day. The minimum for survival (drinking, cooking, basic sanitation) is approximately 3 gallons per person per day. The gap between current use and survival minimum is enormous — most households could sustain life on less than 5% of their typical water use.

Household Water Conservation: The High-Impact Changes

Use categoryTypical daily gallonsReduction approachReduced gallons
Toilet flushing24 gpd (5–7 flushes × 4 gal)Low-flow retrofit ($20–50); reduce flush frequency6–12 gpd
Shower/bath15–30 gpdLow-flow showerhead ($15); shorten to 5 min8–12 gpd
Laundry15–20 gpdOnly full loads; cold water; reduce frequency5–8 gpd
Outdoor watering50–100+ gpd (seasonal)Stop entirely; mulch for moisture retention0 gpd
Dishwashing6–10 gpdFull dishwasher loads (more efficient than hand wash)4–5 gpd

The single highest-impact action: Stop all outdoor watering. In most households, landscape irrigation accounts for 30–60% of total water use in summer months. Converting lawn to drought-tolerant landscaping (xeriscaping) eliminates this demand entirely and typically qualifies for rebates from utilities in drought-affected areas.

Rainwater Harvesting

Rainwater collection from roof runoff provides a significant supplemental water source where legal and feasible:

  • Legal status: Most US states allow residential rainwater collection; Colorado has historically restricted it (limited to 110 gallons per household as of 2016 law); check your state’s current regulations before installing a large system. Texas, Arizona, and most Western states actively encourage collection and may provide rebates.
  • Collection math: 1 inch of rainfall on a 1,000 square foot roof yields approximately 600 gallons of water (accounting for collection efficiency losses). A metal roof with a properly screened gutter system and a 500-gallon storage tank fills after approximately 1 inch of rain.
  • Water quality: Collected rainwater is not potable without treatment. Use for irrigation and toilet flushing without treatment; use for drinking and cooking only after filtration and purification (ceramic filter + UV treatment or boiling). A Sawyer Squeeze filter plus chemical treatment (Aquatabs) handles drinking water from rainwater collection.
  • First flush diverter: The first 1/32 inch of rainfall per 1,000 square feet washes roof debris, bird droppings, and pollutants into a diverter and away from storage. Critical for any system where water might be used for anything other than irrigation.

Greywater Reuse

Greywater is wastewater from sinks, showers, and laundry (not toilet waste, which is “blackwater”). Greywater can be reused for irrigation in most states:

  • Laundry-to-landscape systems: The simplest greywater system — divert washing machine discharge directly to mulched garden areas. California’s 3-year laundry-to-landscape permit exemption (requires no permit for systems under 250 gpd) has been adopted by several other Western states.
  • Shower water for toilet flushing: Manual bucket method during severe restrictions — collect shower and sink water in a bucket and use it to manually fill the toilet tank. No plumbing required.
  • Important restrictions: Do not use greywater on edible parts of food plants. Do not allow pooling. Do not use water from kitchen sinks (food particles create health hazards). Do not store greywater for more than 24 hours (bacterial growth).

Emergency Water Storage for Drought Supply Interruption

Municipal supply disruptions during extreme drought can occur with limited warning. A pre-positioned water storage supply provides a critical buffer:

  • Minimum practical storage: 30 gallons per person (10-day supply at 3 gallons/day). A 55-gallon food-grade drum costs $40–60 and holds a 13-day supply for 4 people.
  • 350-gallon storage tank: Provides a 29-day supply for a family of 4. Fits in most garages. IBC (intermediate bulk container) tanks (275–330 gallons) can be found used for $50–150.
  • Well pump backup: Households on private wells need a generator or solar-powered well pump during drought — aquifer levels drop and may require pump adjustment or replacement. Know your static water level and pump depth before a drought emergency.

Full water storage setup — tank sizing, rotation schedule, and chemical treatment to maintain potability — is in long-term water storage: tank sizing, rotation protocol, and chemical treatment.

Where to Go Next

Water filtration and purification methods for treating collected rainwater and other non-tap sources are in water filter comparison: gravity filters, pump filters, and UV purifiers. Wildfire risk — significantly elevated during drought — is in wildfire evacuation: defensible space, go/no-go decision, and evacuation kit.

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