The four things that actually matter
- ICC 500 test report for the exact configuration shipped to your site
- NSSA producer listing confirming the production line matches the test
- Documented anchoring schedule: bolt size, embed, epoxy, spacing
- Door tested with the wall, not a heavy-looking door sold separately
What to expect from quotes in Texas
Quotes vary widely. The pattern we see: shelters between $3,500 and $9,500 installed in Texas for a 4 to 8 person above-ground unit. Quotes well below that range almost always come from producers without complete ICC 500 documentation. Quotes above that range should come with a documented reason (custom size, premium door, difficult access).
Red flags in marketing language
- "F5 rated" without an ICC 500 test report
- "Designed to ICC 500" instead of "tested to ICC 500"
- "FEMA approved" — FEMA does not approve individual shelters
- No anchoring schedule on the quote
- Door specified by weight only, no impact test reference
Frequently Asked Questions
Which brands are good in Texas?+
We do not rank brands. The defensible question is whether a specific producer holds current ICC 500 testing for the configuration you are buying and appears on the NSSA producer member list. That filter eliminates most of the noise.
Are above-ground or underground shelters better?+
Equal performance under ICC 500. Above-ground avoids access and debris-blockage concerns and is now the default new install. Underground works when garage space is limited and the homeowner can keep the hatch clear.
Will a quality shelter qualify for the Texas rebate?+
No statewide rebate. Counties periodically receive FEMA Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP) funding for safe rooms after presidential disaster declarations. Make sure the documentation references FEMA P-320, not just ICC 500.
See also the broader Texas storm shelter overview.