Free Resources
Printable downloads for your classroom, home, or school. Free to use and share.
1. Download
Click the download button on any resource.
2. Print
Print in color for best results. Letter size works great.
3. Share
Post in classrooms, send home with students, or share digitally.
Create Your Own
Fill out a simple form and download a personalized card or plan — free, private, and ready to print.
My Allergy Card
Create a personalized allergy alert card with your allergens, medications, and emergency contacts. Download as an image to print, save to your phone, or share.
Emergency Action Plan
Build a detailed emergency action plan with symptoms, response steps, medications, and contacts. Share with schools, caregivers, and friends.
Activities & Printables
Word Search
A fun allergy-themed word search puzzle where kids find key food allergy safety words. Great for classrooms or home learning.
Spot the Differences
A printable spot-the-differences activity that teaches kids to look closely — just like reading food labels! Fun for all ages.
What Should You Say?
A fun activity where kids practice what to say in real-life allergy situations — building confidence and empathy.
Guides & References
Parent Guide
A printable guide covering food allergy basics, why school rules matter, and how every family can help keep classmates safe.
Big 9 Quick Reference
A fridge-friendly one-pager with the 9 most common food allergens. Print it out and keep it where the whole family can see it.
Classroom Materials
Classroom Poster
A colorful, print-ready poster with the Allergy-Safe Friend Rules — designed to display at student eye level in your classroom all year long.
External Resources
Explore these trusted organizations for in-depth information about food allergies, school safety, and support.
Allergy & Asthma Network
Food Allergy Awareness Week campaign — 11 ways to get involved, free toolkits, podcasts, and advocacy resources.
FARE
Food Allergy Research & Education — the leading nonprofit for food allergy advocacy, research, action plans, and school guidelines.
Kids With Food Allergies
A division of AAFA focused on families — school planning resources, allergen-free recipes, and a supportive parent community.
CDC — Food Allergies
Authoritative public health information on food allergy prevention, symptoms, and management from the Centers for Disease Control.