Alcohol Calculator

Alcohol science

Alcohol Metabolism Explained: How Your Body Processes Every Drink

From the first sip to the last molecule: a complete guide to how alcohol is absorbed, distributed, metabolised, and eliminated, and why the rate varies so much between individuals.

Standard elimination rate

~0.015% BAC/hour

Average adult; broad range about 0.010-0.035%

Liver processing capacity

~1 standard drink/hour

At typical alcohol doses

First-pass metabolism

Up to 20%

Alcohol broken down before reaching bloodstream

Reference only

This calculator uses a Widmark-style formula for estimation only. Individual results vary based on metabolism, food intake, medications, health, and drink accuracy. Never use this tool to decide whether you are safe to drive, work, or perform safety-critical tasks.

Body timeline

The Journey of Alcohol Through Your Body

From the moment you take a drink, alcohol moves through absorption, distribution, metabolism, and elimination.

Section 1

Absorption: Why Drinking Speed and Food Change Everything

Alcohol absorption occurs primarily in two locations: the stomach and the small intestine. The stomach absorbs alcohol relatively slowly, while the small intestine absorbs it quickly because it has a much larger surface area. Gastric emptying, or how fast alcohol leaves the stomach, is therefore a major determinant of how quickly BAC rises.

Food slows gastric emptying and keeps alcohol in the stomach longer. A meal high in fat and protein has the strongest buffering effect, lowering peak BAC and delaying the time to peak even when the total alcohol dose is the same.

Carbonated drinks such as sparkling wine, beer, and spirits mixed with carbonated mixers can speed gastric emptying. That is one reason sparkling drinks may feel faster than still drinks with similar alcohol content. The beer vs wine vs spirits guide compares absorption speed across drink types.

First-pass metabolism means some alcohol is broken down before it reaches the main bloodstream. ADH in the stomach lining and liver performs part of this early breakdown. Lower gastric ADH activity, chronic heavy drinking, and some H2 blockers can reduce first-pass metabolism, allowing more alcohol into the blood. See alcohol and medications for the medication side.

Section 2

How the Liver Breaks Down Alcohol: Three Pathways

Alcohol metabolism is not one reaction. It is a sequence of pathways that convert ethanol to acetaldehyde, acetaldehyde to acetate, and acetate to carbon dioxide and water.

PathwayPrimary EnzymeWhen ActiveRateKey ProductsNotes
ADH pathwayADH -> ALDHAll drinking levelsFixed, about 1 drink/hrAcetaldehyde -> acetate -> CO2 + H2OPrimary pathway; rate-limiting at typical doses.
MEOS / CYP2E1CYP2E1High BAC; chronic drinkersInducibleAcetaldehyde + reactive oxygen speciesInduced by chronic drinking; metabolises many medications.
Catalase pathwayCatalaseMinor contributionVery slowAcetaldehydeMinor overall; may be relevant in some tissues.

The ADH pathway is dominant at typical drinking levels. At higher alcohol concentrations and in chronic heavy drinkers, CYP2E1 becomes more important. Catalase contributes only a small fraction of whole-body alcohol metabolism.

Acetaldehyde is the key intermediate. It is much more toxic than ethanol and must be converted to acetate by ALDH. Reduced ALDH2 activity causes acetaldehyde accumulation, flushing, nausea, rapid heartbeat, and a higher long-term risk profile with regular drinking.

Section 3

The Elimination Rate: Why 0.015%/Hour Is an Average, Not a Constant

The standard alcohol elimination rate used in many BAC tools, about 0.015% BAC per hour, is a population average. It reflects how fast the liver processes alcohol after absorption and distribution. The how BAC works guide explains how this rate is applied in Widmark-style estimates.

Real elimination rates vary widely. Many people fall around 0.012-0.020% per hour, but the broader range can be about 0.010-0.035% per hour depending on liver health, genetics, chronic drinking, age, sex, medication use, and other factors. Detection windows in the how long does alcohol stay guide are built around this uncertainty.

Despite the variability, an average rate is still useful for planning. The practical rule is to treat any result as a minimum estimate and add a safety margin, especially if liver health, medications, or unusually heavy drinking are involved. Medication effects are covered in the alcohol and medications guide.

FactorEffectMechanism
Chronic heavy drinkingFasterCYP2E1 induction increases metabolic capacity
Liver diseaseSlowerReduced hepatic ADH and ALDH activity
Sex: femaleSlightly slowerLower gastric ADH activity and lower body water on average
Age: olderSlowerReduced liver mass and enzyme activity
Fasting / malnutritionSlowerReduced cofactor availability for ADH
Genetic ADH variantsVariableADH variants affect ethanol-to-acetaldehyde conversion
Genetic ALDH2 variantDifferent risk profileAcetaldehyde accumulates, causing flushing and higher cancer risk
MedicationsVariableSome compete for or induce metabolic enzymes
High BACVariableADH saturation and MEOS contribution change with dose
FeverSlightly fasterHigher temperature can increase enzyme activity

Section 4

Why the Same Drinks Affect People Differently: The Key Variables

Body Weight and Composition

Alcohol distributes into body water, not body fat. A heavier person with more total body water dilutes the same alcohol dose into a larger volume, producing a lower BAC. Two people of the same weight can still differ if one has more muscle and therefore more body water.

Sex

Women typically reach higher BAC levels than men after the same dose per kilogram because body water percentage and first-pass metabolism differ on average. The Widmark formula reflects this with different distribution constants.

Genetics

ADH variants affect how quickly ethanol becomes acetaldehyde. ALDH2 variants affect how quickly acetaldehyde clears. Fast ADH plus slow ALDH can produce flushing, nausea, rapid heartbeat, and a different long-term risk profile.

Food and Hydration

Food slows gastric emptying and lowers peak BAC. Hydration does not speed alcohol metabolism, but dehydration concentrates alcohol in less body water and worsens symptoms such as headache and fatigue.

Tolerance

Tolerance can make someone feel less impaired at the same BAC through brain adaptation and learned compensation. It does not make driving performance safe. For more, see alcohol and driving.

Medications and Health Conditions

Some medicines compete for liver enzymes, inhibit first-pass metabolism, or amplify impairment without changing BAC. Liver disease, diabetes, and other conditions can also shift the real clearance rate.

Personal estimate

How Your Metabolism May Differ from the Average

The following factors can shift your personal elimination rate above or below the standard 0.015% per hour average. Select the factors that apply to you to see an adjusted estimate.

Select factors that apply to you

Result

NEAR AVERAGE

Estimated range: 0.010 - 0.020 %BAC/hour

Average reference: 0.015 %BAC/hour. Most people fall somewhere near this range, but the real value can differ with liver health, genetics, drinking history, age, sex, body composition, and medication use.

This is an educational estimate based on population-level research. Individual metabolism varies. This is not a medical assessment.
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Section 5

Acetaldehyde: The Real Reason Alcohol Causes Long-Term Damage

Many long-term alcohol harms are driven not only by ethanol itself, but by acetaldehyde, the first product of alcohol oxidation. Acetaldehyde can damage DNA, bind to proteins and DNA, and trigger inflammatory responses. It is one reason alcohol is linked with several cancers and with liver injury.

Chronic alcohol-related liver damage often progresses from fatty liver to alcoholic hepatitis and, in some heavy drinkers, cirrhosis. Fatty liver can be reversible with abstinence, but cirrhosis is scarring that seriously reduces liver function, including alcohol metabolism.

Alcohol and acetaldehyde also affect the brain, pancreas, heart, and gastrointestinal tract. Chronic heavy use can contribute to cardiomyopathy, pancreatitis, neurodegeneration, and increased cancer risk in the mouth, throat, oesophagus, liver, colon, rectum, and breast.

Section 6

What Actually Affects How Fast You Sober Up

The liver metabolises alcohol at a rate determined by enzyme capacity. Common interventions do not meaningfully accelerate that process. Time is the only reliable method, and the sober-up calculator applies that timing assumption to a BAC estimate.

InterventionEffect on BACEffect on ImpairmentVerdict
Coffee / caffeineNoneMakes you feel more alert; does not restore reaction time❌ Myth
Cold showerNoneNo meaningful effect on impairment❌ Myth
ExerciseNegligibleNo meaningful effect❌ Myth
Eating after drinkingNoneFood before drinking helps; food after absorption does not lower BAC❌ Myth
Drinking waterNoneReduces dehydration symptoms only❌ Myth
VomitingMinimalOnly matters if alcohol has not yet been absorbed❌ Myth
SleepNoneRest helps after BAC falls but does not speed metabolism✅ Useful
TimeReduces BACImpairment falls as BAC falls✅ Useful
Activated charcoalNoneDoes not bind alcohol meaningfully after absorption❌ Myth
B vitamins / supplementsNoneMay treat deficiency in some people, but does not lower BAC❌ Myth

Related pages

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FAQ

Alcohol Metabolism FAQ

Common questions about alcohol processing, elimination speed, acetaldehyde, sex differences, and sober-up myths.

Alcohol is primarily metabolised in the liver by alcohol dehydrogenase, which converts ethanol to acetaldehyde. Aldehyde dehydrogenase then converts acetaldehyde to acetate, which is further broken down to carbon dioxide and water. At high alcohol concentrations or with chronic heavy drinking, the MEOS/CYP2E1 pathway also contributes.

The average adult elimination rate is about 0.015% BAC per hour, roughly one standard drink per hour at typical doses. Real rates vary, often from about 0.010% to 0.035% per hour, depending on genetics, liver health, drinking history, age, sex, medications, and other factors.

BAC and impairment vary because of body water, weight, sex, food intake, drinking speed, genetics, tolerance, liver function, medications, and health conditions. The same drink count is not the same dose for every body.

Acetaldehyde is the first metabolic product of alcohol oxidation. It is more toxic than ethanol and contributes to inflammation, cellular damage, and cancer risk. People with reduced ALDH2 activity can accumulate acetaldehyde quickly, causing flushing and a higher risk profile with drinking.

No. Coffee can make someone feel more alert, but it does not lower BAC or restore reaction time, divided attention, or judgement. Time is the only reliable way for BAC to fall.

Women typically have a lower body-water percentage and lower gastric alcohol dehydrogenase activity on average, so the same alcohol dose can produce a higher BAC. The Widmark formula accounts for this with different distribution constants.