The overwhelming burden of morbidity and mortality from injury and medical conditions requiring acute care are borne by low- and middle-income countries lacking accessible, quality care systems. Current evidence suggests the lack of prehospital care systems likely contributes to this disproportionate burden. As an initial step in a longitudinal, collaborative effort to strengthen the chain of survival for emergency conditions in Liberia, baseline attitudes and behaviors in accessing and utilizing emergency care were characterized. A multistage, proportional, cluster sampling frame was employed to conduct a cross-sectional, community-based survey of 800 households across rural Lofa County and the greater capital (Monrovia) metropolitan area. The primary outcome was facility-based utilization of emergency care within the 12 months prior to survey administration. 43.9% of individuals surveyed reported a visit to an emergency unit in the last year. Multivariable logistic regression revealed increased adjusted odds of facility-based emergency care utilization in households that were low-income, non-English-speaking, lacking electricity, or had a non-durable roof. Among these individuals, 23.6% had sought care from a community health worker, family/friend, clinic, pharmacy, or traditional healer prior. The majority of persons seeking care do so without ambulance services. 34.8% of all households have called a community member for a medical emergency, but 88.9% of survey respondents report no first aid training and cite barriers to rendering aid. This represents the first household survey to assess the perceptions and utilization of emergency care in Liberia. Formal pre-hospital care provision is limited and substantial barriers to emergency care access exist. First aid training and acceptance is lacking, despite frequent reliance on community-based aid during emergencies.