Emergency Roadside Kit for Saskatchewan Winters: What to Pack
Quick Answer: Every vehicle driving in Saskatchewan — especially in and around Regina — between October and April should carry an emergency winter kit. Car roadside assistance takes 20 to 60 minutes to reach you after a breakdown, and in that window your kit keeps you safe. The essentials: a warm blanket or sleeping bag, flashlight with extra batteries, portable phone charger, booster cables or a jump pack, a small shovel, traction aids (sand or kitty litter), a first-aid kit, high-visibility vest, non-perishable snacks, and bottled water. In a worst-case scenario on a rural highway, this kit can keep you alive overnight while waiting for roadside assistance.
❄️ Stranded right now? Call (639) 477-9924 for immediate car roadside assistance.
Why a Winter Roadside Kit Is Not Optional in Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan is not southern Ontario. When your car breaks down at −35°C on a highway between Regina and Moose Jaw at 7 PM on a January evening, you are facing genuine danger. Frostbite begins in minutes on exposed skin. Hypothermia can set in within 30 minutes if you are not dressed for the conditions. Cell service may be spotty. And help — even fast roadside assistance like ours — takes time to reach you.
At Regina Towing, we respond to winter breakdowns every day from November through March. Our roadside assistance team gets there as fast as possible — typically 20 to 40 minutes within the city. But on rural highways, in blizzard conditions, or during peak-demand cold snaps, response times can extend to 45 to 90 minutes. Your emergency kit fills that gap between “car stopped” and “help arrived.”
This guide gives you a complete, Saskatchewan-specific packing list — not a generic “winter kit” designed for Vancouver or Toronto. Every item is chosen for the conditions you actually face on Regina roads and Saskatchewan highways. For vehicle-specific winter maintenance, see our winter vehicle preparation guide.
The Complete Saskatchewan Winter Roadside Kit Checklist
We have organized this list into three tiers. Start with the essentials and build up from there:
💡 Storage Tip: Pack your kit in a durable duffel bag or plastic tote. Store it in the back seat or rear footwell — not the trunk. In an emergency, you want to access everything without going outside into −30°C wind. The sleeping bag and phone charger should always be within arm’s reach from the driver’s seat.
What Makes Saskatchewan Different From Other Winter Driving Regions
Generic winter kit guides are written for places like Toronto or Vancouver. Saskatchewan’s conditions demand specific considerations that those guides miss:
The SGI winter driving handbook recommends carrying an emergency kit — but does not provide the level of detail Saskatchewan conditions demand. Consider this guide a Saskatchewan-upgraded version of that recommendation.
Your Kit Keeps You Safe. We Get You Moving.
24/7 roadside assistance across Regina and Saskatchewan highways.
What NOT to Pack in Your Winter Roadside Kit
Some commonly recommended items are actually ineffective or dangerous in Saskatchewan conditions:
- Space blankets (Mylar). The thin reflective “emergency blankets” sold at dollar stores provide almost no insulation in extreme cold. They are better than nothing, but a real sleeping bag rated to −20°C is what you need at −35°C. If you carry a space blanket, use it as a supplement, not a replacement.
- Full-size spare tire (for kit purposes). Your vehicle should already carry a spare or repair kit. This is vehicle equipment, not an emergency kit item. What you should carry: the knowledge of how to use your spare — or our phone number so we can provide a tire change safely.
- Excessive amounts of antifreeze or coolant. A small jug is fine for topping up. But if your cooling system has a significant leak at −30°C, adding coolant will not save you — you need a tow. Carrying multiple litres of antifreeze wastes space better used for warmth and food.
- Glass-breaking tool (as primary plan). Some kits include window-breaker hammers. These are for escaping a submerged or trapped vehicle — not for getting back inside after a lockout. Breaking your own window costs $200 to $500 and exposes the interior to weather. Call us instead.
- Alcohol. Despite the popular myth, alcohol does not warm you up. It dilates blood vessels and accelerates heat loss from your core — the opposite of what you need in extreme cold. It also impairs judgment when you need to make smart decisions about whether to stay or seek help.
When to Check and Refresh Your Kit
An emergency kit that has not been checked in two years is a kit full of dead batteries, stale granola bars, and frozen water bottles with cracked lids. Follow this simple schedule:
October (before first freeze): Complete kit audit. Replace batteries in flashlight. Charge the power bank and jump pack to 100%. Replace food and water. Verify the sleeping bag is accessible. Add fresh lock de-icer to your coat pocket. Ensure windshield washer fluid is topped up with −40°C rated fluid.
January (mid-winter check): Quick check — is the phone charger still charged? Have you used any food or first-aid items that need replacing? Is the flashlight working?
April (end of winter): You can remove the heavier items (sleeping bag, extra clothing) for summer, but keep the core kit — flashlight, first-aid, phone charger, water, snacks, high-vis vest — in the vehicle year-round. Summer breakdowns happen too. For seasonal reminders, Transport Canada’s road safety page provides seasonal driving guidance.
When Your Kit Is Not Enough — Call for Professional Help
An emergency kit keeps you safe while waiting. It does not fix the vehicle. For that, you need vehicle roadside assistance from a professional service. Here is what we handle on-site across Regina:
- Battery boost — Dead from cold? Running in minutes.
- Tire change — Flat tire in a blizzard? Spare installed safely.
- Fuel delivery — Ran out of gas on Highway 1? Fuel brought to you.
- Car unlocking — Keys locked inside while warming up? Opened fast.
- Winch-out recovery — Stuck in a snowbank or ditch? Pulled out safely.
- Breakdown towing — Mechanical failure? Towed to a mechanic.
- Flatbed towing — AWD vehicle disabled? All four wheels off the road.
Our 24-hour service covers every neighbourhood in Regina — Downtown, Harbour Landing, Albert Park, Normanview, University Park, and all surrounding highways. View our full service area. For tow pricing, see our affordable towing rates.
Building a Saskatchewan Winter Kit on a Budget
You do not need to spend $250 to be prepared. Here is a budget approach that covers the essentials for under $60:
Sleeping bag from a thrift store: $10 to $20. A used sleeping bag rated to −15°C or colder is perfectly adequate. Check the zipper and look for rips — functionality matters more than aesthetics for emergency use.
LED flashlight and batteries: $5 to $10. Dollar stores carry serviceable LED flashlights. Buy lithium batteries — they perform significantly better in extreme cold than alkaline batteries and last years in storage.
Phone charger from any electronics section: $15 to $25. A 10,000 mAh power bank charges a phone three to four times. Keep it at 80% charge and store in the cabin for warmth.
Bag of kitty litter: $5. Non-clumping kitty litter provides traction under spinning wheels. A small bag lasts multiple uses and doubles as weight in the trunk for rear-wheel traction.
Granola bars and a water bottle: $5. Toss in four or five sealed granola bars and a partially filled water bottle (leave room for ice expansion). Replace annually. Total budget kit cost: approximately $40 to $65 — less than a single car roadside assistance call, and it protects you every trip all winter long.
Frequently Asked Questions About Winter Emergency Roadside Kits
How much does a winter emergency kit cost to build?
A basic Tier 1 kit costs $50 to $100 using items from Canadian Tire, Walmart, or Amazon. A complete Tier 3 kit runs $150 to $250. That investment covers multiple winters — most items last 3 to 5 years with basic maintenance. Compare that to a single emergency tow ($100 to $250) and it pays for itself immediately.
Where should I store my emergency kit in the car?
Keep the sleeping bag, phone charger, and snacks in the back seat or rear footwell — accessible from inside the cabin without opening a door. Heavier items like the shovel, traction aids, and washer fluid can go in the trunk. The rule: anything you need in the first five minutes should be reachable from the driver’s seat.
Can I buy a pre-made winter emergency kit?
You can, but most pre-made kits are designed for mild Canadian winters and lack Saskatchewan-specific essentials like a properly rated sleeping bag, heavy-duty traction aids, and lock de-icer. Use a pre-made kit as a starting point, then add the items from our Tier 1 and Tier 2 lists that are missing.
Should I keep jumper cables or a portable jump pack?
A portable lithium-ion jump pack ($80 to $150) is more versatile — it does not require a second vehicle and includes USB ports for charging your phone. However, extreme cold reduces its capacity. Keep it in the cabin, not the trunk, and charge it monthly. Traditional cables work regardless of temperature but require a willing donor vehicle.
How long can I survive in my car during a Saskatchewan blizzard?
With a proper kit — sleeping bag, candle, food, water — you can survive overnight in a stationary vehicle even in extreme cold. Without a kit, hypothermia risk begins within 30 to 60 minutes once the engine stops and the cabin cools. The kit is the difference between discomfort and danger.
Should I run the engine for heat while waiting for help?
Yes — in intervals of 10 to 15 minutes per hour to conserve fuel. BUT: first ensure the exhaust pipe is clear of snow. A blocked exhaust sends carbon monoxide into the cabin, which is odourless and lethal. After every snowfall while waiting, check and clear the tailpipe. Crack a downwind window slightly for ventilation.
Do I still need a kit if I have a CAA or roadside assistance membership?
Absolutely. Roadside assistance — whether from CAA, us, or any other provider — takes time to reach you. During a blizzard on a rural highway, that could be 60 to 90+ minutes. Your kit keeps you warm, fed, visible, and safe during the wait. The membership gets you rescued; the kit keeps you alive until rescue arrives.
Should I leave the car and walk to find help?
Almost never. Your vehicle is a visible, insulated shelter that searchers can spot from a distance. Walking on a Saskatchewan highway in a blizzard exposes you to extreme cold, wind, zero visibility, and traffic you cannot see. People die every year in Canada by leaving their vehicles in winter emergencies. Stay with the car, call for help, and use your kit.
Does a winter kit protect me if my car goes into a ditch?
The kit keeps you warm and visible while waiting for ditch recovery. A high-vis vest, flashlight, and reflective triangles help our driver — and other traffic — find you quickly. The first-aid kit handles minor injuries from the impact. The kit does not get you out of the ditch; our winching service does.
What is the single most important item in a Saskatchewan winter kit?
A warm sleeping bag rated to −20°C or colder. If you can only carry one thing, this is it. Everything else — food, light, phone — is important but secondary to maintaining body temperature. At −35°C with no running engine, a sleeping bag is the difference between an uncomfortable night and a medical emergency.
Pack the Kit. Save the Number. Stay Safe.
Your kit keeps you alive. Our roadside assistance gets you moving.
24/7 across all of Regina and Saskatchewan highways.
