Need to know more?

Frequently Asked Questions

Don't see your question below? Jump over to our contact form and send us your question. We will get back to you promptly.

Yes. We currently do free estimates. Give us a call or fill in the contact form to get more information on estimates on the services you are searching for.
We service a variety of locations across the United States. We are based here in Oklahoma and are currently servicing areas across the midwest including, Texas, Kansas, Missouri, and Arkansas. We have done installations in Virginia and Tennessee as well, so if you don’t see your state listed under ‘Areas We Serve’ on our website, fill out a contact form and the owner will contact you to let you know if we can do an installation in your area.

People choose us because we offer a very competitive price, are professional, and have decades of experience. We also have cleaner steelwork than our competitors and can install a safe room in around 45 minutes. We take pride in every unit we build as if it was going to our own house to protect our family. All of our products meet FEMA requirements and we offer custom installations at no additional cost, where permitted. We take pride in each safe room we build to ensure your safety against any storm, tornado, or home invasion.

Being able to meet our customers’ needs at any opportunity is very important to us here at Survival Zone Safe Rooms. We are able to craft custom safe rooms, where permitted, that will fit into your desired location at no additional cost. We can even custom build a safe room to fit underneath the staircase of a new home being constructed. Unlike other companies, our custom safe rooms do not cost extra for the customer, because our goal is to give people a truly affordable solution to being protected from the elements and outside threats. Check out the gallery on our products’ pages for more examples of unique installations.
The installation of our safe rooms is typically started and completed in just under an hour’s time and our scheduling revolves around our customers’ schedules.
Yes. Our models have been tested at Texas Tech’s Debris Impact Facility. The Debris Impact Test Facility is an internationally acclaimed test laboratory for debris impact testing of storm shelters. At the facility, there is a pneumatic cannon capable of firing objects propelled by high wind speeds during a tornado and/or hurricane. This cannon is crucial in testing effective tornado shelters for use in homes and other structures.
While most safe room companies weld angle around the bottom of their safe rooms to bolt into, Survival Zone Saferooms bends a lip around the bottoms making it stronger. We use 3/4 Wej-it brand anchor bolts to bolt down and secure our 3/8 plate steel. Our most popular model, The Tank, has a door made from a 3/8 thick plate steel just like the walls. It is reinforced even further by having a 3 structure bracing the door’s backside. In addition, it has three sets of hinge pins and lock pins that are accessible and visible from inside the room. The door uses hinge pins and 7/8 sliding lock pins, both made out of stainless steel. At Survival Zone Safe Rooms we also include a grade 1 lock on our doors so that home and business owners can store valuable possessions inside and then lock them up in order to be secure. There is also a peep sight on all of our safe room doors allowing its occupants to see outside and have an idea of what is going on within the vicinity.

The door on all our models swings to the inside. This design choice for an inward swinging door is because if some sort of debris or other obstruction were to lean against the safe room door, the occupants inside could still open the door and safely exit the safe room after the event of a tornado. Both inward and outward-swinging doors have benefits, but inward-swinging doors are less likely to be blocked by debris. Always keep an emergency kit in your safe room in the rare event that extremely heavy debris blocks the door. The kit can include tools to open damaged doors such as a crowbar, jack, or spreader. Refer to the FEMA website for more information on emergency kits in the event of a tornado or hurricane.

ICC-ES is the Evaluation Services for the ICC-500.

A safe room is a hardened structure that is specifically designed to meet FEMA criteria and provide near-absolute protection in extreme weather events. Each model of our safe rooms meets FEMA 320 and ICC-500. Buildings or spaces designated for use as a shelter from tornadoes and/or hurricanes must meet the requirements in ICC-500. To be considered a FEMA safe room, the structure must be designed and constructed to the guidelines specified in FEMA 320, which all of our safe rooms meet. We take the care to meet these guidelines on all of our models to ensure your family has the utmost safety when a storm hits.

You can call (918) 371-2288 or enter your information into the contact form on our website and we will get in touch with you.