Skip to Content
Pocket Contingency 11-Function Survival Card Tool - Stainless Steel

Price:

0.99


Pocket Grooming Control Keychain Multitool Knife - Transparent Blue
Pocket Grooming Control Keychain Multitool Knife - Transparent Blue
1.99 1.99
Shadow Ledger Everyday Wallet Multi-Tool Card - Black
Shadow Ledger Everyday Wallet Multi-Tool Card - Black
3.99 3.99

Backroad Contingency Survival Card Tool - Stainless Steel

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8079/image_1920?unique=4de4d6f

15 sold in last 24 hours

Middle of a Hill Country backroad, no light but the dash, this slim survival card rides where your credit card does. Stainless steel teeth and edges open cans, slice cord, tighten bolts, and pop bottles without bulking your pocket. It disappears in the wallet until a tire blows, gear breaks, or a fire needs starting. For Texans who hate dead weight but like having an answer when something fails, this is the quiet tool that’s always there.

0.99 0.99 USD 0.99

MT908BDS

Not Available For Sale

8 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

When the Nearest Help Is Forty Miles of Caliche Away

Out past the last gas station between Fort Stockton and Sanderson, you don’t carry tools for show. You carry what disappears in your pocket until the truck acts up, a strap frays, or a can of beans is all that’s left in the cooler. That’s where a flat, stainless 11-in-1 survival card earns its keep. It rides in your wallet like any other card, but when things go sideways on a Texas backroad, it turns into a saw, a cutter, a wrench, and a lifeline.

Compact Survival Card for Texas Everyday Carry

This isn’t a toolbox. It’s a single piece of stainless steel cut and ground into eleven functions that fit the size of a credit card. Slide it next to your driver’s license and you’ve got a can opener for camp suppers on the Brazos, a bottle opener for cold beer after a day fencing in the Panhandle wind, and a sharp edge for cutting cord, tape, or cloth when you’re working in a hot Houston parking lot and don’t feel like digging through the truck bed.

The serrated edge pulls its weight when you’re trimming small branches for kindling at a Guadalupes campsite. The hex openings cinch down loose bolts on a hitch, a chair, or a burner in a South Texas deer blind. A straight ruler edge gives you quick measurements when you’re laying out a quick fix in a San Antonio garage or marking a cut on a piece of scrap in the shade of a barn.

Why a Wallet Survival Tool Works in Texas Carry Culture

Texans carry what they can trust to be there. Sometimes that’s an OTF knife riding deep in a pocket. Sometimes it’s a small multi-tool clipped to a belt. And sometimes the most reliable piece of gear is the one that never leaves your billfold. This survival card is built for that quiet role. Stainless steel shrugs off sweat from Gulf Coast humidity, dust from West Texas wind, and the occasional splash of spilled coffee on a long I-35 haul.

Slide it into the included black slip pouch and it’s easy on your wallet and your fingers. No bulk, no snagging. Just a thin sheet of metal that turns into a saw for cutting plastic bands in a warehouse, a knife edge that will open feed sacks behind a Central Texas co-op, and a bottle opener that doesn’t care if it’s tailgate barbecue in Lubbock or a backyard cookout in Katy.

Legal Peace of Mind Under Texas Knife Laws

Texas knife laws are generous these days, but a lot of folks still prefer tools that raise zero questions. This survival card is not a knife in the way Texas law usually thinks about blades. There’s no folding mechanism, no automatic deployment, no spring, no OTF action. It’s a flat multi-tool with a small cutting edge and openers built into the body.

That means it rides in a wallet through courthouse-adjacent parking lots in county seats, sits in a pocket while you walk through a Buc-ee’s on the way to Galveston, and lives in a purse at a Friday night football game without feeling like you’re testing a grey area. Of course, common sense still rules: don’t take it past security checkpoints where any metal tool will get flagged. But for daily life — truck, shop, office, campus apartment — this card stays well inside the comfort zone for Texas carry laws.

How Texas Law Sees Tools Like This

Texas removed state-level bans on automatic and OTF knives, and the main concerns now are blade length and restricted locations. A card-sized survival tool with integrated edges sits closer to a utility piece than a dedicated knife. That’s why many Texans pair something like this with their preferred OTF knife Texas side carry: the OTF for serious cutting and quick deployment, the survival card for quiet utility where a full blade might be overkill or draw the wrong sort of attention.

Built for Ranch Roads, Lease Roads, and I-10 Shoulders

Think about where you spend time: stuck in Houston traffic, working a fence line outside San Angelo, parked under a lone oak off a Hill Country low-water crossing, or idling on the shoulder of I-10 between Junction and Kerrville waiting on a wrecker. This survival card belongs in all of those places.

The can opener slot bites into metal lids when the last daylight is slipping behind mesquite and you still haven’t eaten. The saw edge works through thin plastic, small branches, or stubborn packing material when you’re unpacking gear at a lease. The little hex cutouts tighten hardware on scopes, mounts, and accessories without digging through a bag. The round cutout with radial marks lines up as a simple reference when you’re trying to orient or mark by sun out in open country.

Texas Use Cases That Make a Card Tool Worth Carrying

In the Big Thicket, it’s cutting cord for a tarp when the rain shows up early. In Amarillo, it’s opening taped boxes in a loading dock when your main blade is locked up in the toolbox. In Brownsville, it’s a pocket-friendly way to open bottles and snacks at a park without flashing a full knife around families. It’s a city and countryside tool, the same as the state it was built to serve.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Survival Card Tools

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas law now allows OTF knives and other automatics for most adults, with the main limits being on certain restricted locations and, for some knives, classification as location-restricted if the blade is over a set length. That’s why many people here will buy an OTF knife Texas side carry for serious work, then add a low-profile survival card like this for places where they want a tool that looks more like a wallet accessory than a dedicated blade. Both can live in the same daily carry without stepping outside what Texas law comfortably allows in most situations.

Will this survival card really hold up to Texas heat and dust?

Stainless steel doesn’t care much about August in Laredo or grit blown off a plowed field outside Lamesa. Kept in its slip pouch in your wallet or glove box, it shrugs off sweat, humidity, and the fine powder that sneaks into every truck cab during a Panhandle windstorm. Wipe it down after heavy use, and it’ll be there the next time a hinge needs tightening or a package needs opening.

How does it compare to carrying a full multi-tool or just a knife?

A full multi-tool gives you more leverage. A dedicated OTF knife gives you faster, cleaner cuts. The survival card gives you presence. It’s always on you, even when you’ve left your bigger gear on the counter or in the truck console. Texans who already carry a favorite blade use this as backup: bolt fixer, can opener, bottle popper, and saw when their main knife is too much or simply not there.

From Wallet to Work in One Quiet Motion

Picture a fall evening on a dusty lease road outside Uvalde. The light is gone, the fire is nothing but coals, and someone realizes the last can in the cooler is still sealed. Your OTF is buried in a gear bag. Your multi-tool’s back in the truck. You reach for your wallet, slide out a thin card of steel, hook the lid, and it’s done — no digging, no drama. That’s the role this 11-in-1 survival card plays across the state: tucked beside a driver’s license, forgotten until the exact moment it’s needed, and then absolutely worth the space it takes.

No Specifications