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How much does a storm shelter cost?

The honest 2026 numbers — by type, size and material — plus the line items that quietly move your quote, and a calculator to size your own.

Most homeowners pay $3,500 to $15,000 for an installed residential storm shelter, with a national average near $7,600. Where you land depends on four things: the type, the size, the material, and how hard your site is to work with.

The short answer
Above-ground steel safe room: $3,000–$12,000. Below-ground concrete: $3,700–$7,000+. Under-garage in-floor unit: $6,000–$15,000. Add excavation, soil reports, premium doors and difficult access on top.

Cost by shelter type (installed)

These are installed ranges aggregated from 2026 cost data (HomeGuide, HomeAdvisor, NerdWallet) and current manufacturer quotes. They include typical labor; they exclude excavation surprises and add-ons covered below.

Shelter typeInstalled priceNotes
Above-ground steel safe room$3,000–$12,000No excavation; bolts to a slab; easiest to retrofit
Below-ground concrete$3,700–$7,000+Often the most affordable below-ground option
Garage in-floor / under-garage$6,000–$15,000Saves yard space; popular in tornado country
Underground (backyard)$4,000–$20,000+Most 4–6 person units land near $6,000–$8,000
Fiberglass (in-ground)$4,700–$10,000+Light and water-resistant; can crack with ground shift
Modular / panelized steel (basement)$4,000–$10,000Bolt-together; built for retrofit inside a home
Under-bed / compact unit$3,500–$5,500Cheapest entry point; holds 2–3 people

Cost by capacity

Bigger shelters cost more, but not linearly — the door, ventilation and anchoring are largely fixed costs spread over more square footage.

CapacityTypical installed price
2 person$2,800–$4,500
4 person$3,500–$7,000
6 person$3,800–$7,800
8 person$4,500–$8,500
10 person$5,000–$9,000
12–16 person$5,500–$20,000+

Estimate your cost & size

A quick starting point — not a quote. It applies FEMA's per-person floor-area rule and the installed ranges above.

$3,500–$7,000
Estimated installed range

Estimate only. FEMA P-361 requires ≥3 ft² per person (tornado) in a 1–2 family dwelling; we use 5 ft² for comfort. Get firm quotes from a vetted installer.

What actually moves the price

  • Site access & soil. Rocky ground or a tight backyard raises excavation cost; a geotechnical/soil report can run $1,000–$5,000 on larger jobs.
  • The door. A tornado-rated steel door alone is $500–$2,500+. It's the part that gets debris-tested — don't let anyone cut corners here.
  • Excavation & slab. Excavation runs roughly $2.50–$15 per cubic yard or $100–$300/hour; a new concrete slab is $5–$10 per square foot.
  • Delivery distance. Outside an installer's service area, expect $2–$10 per mile, especially for heavy concrete units.
  • Anchoring & engineering. Anchor fees $200–$350; a structural engineer (for custom work) $100–$220/hour.
Don't forget the rebate
Several states pay 50–75% of your cost. Oklahoma and Mississippi run rebates up to $3,000–$3,500; Alabama offers a tax credit; Texas runs county programs. Check your state in the rebate navigator →

Does a storm shelter add home value?

In tornado- and hurricane-prone markets, yes. Research associated with economist Kevin Simmons found homes with shelters sold for roughly 3.5% more, and they can sell faster in high-risk areas. Treat it as a safety purchase first and a modest resale bonus second.

Permits & timeline

A prefab unit often installs in 3–8 hours. A new slab or underground excavation usually needs a permit (about 2–4 weeks); anchoring to an existing slab frequently doesn't. A full new build with excavation and curing can take 6–12 weeks end to end — concrete needs ~28 days to reach rated strength.