Alcohol Calculator

Global standard drinks

Standard Drink Sizes by Country: The Complete Global Reference

A standard drink means different things in different countries - from 8g of pure alcohol in the UK to 20g in Austria. Here is every definition, with real-world equivalents.

Smallest standard drink

8g

United Kingdom and Iceland

Most common definition

10g

Used by WHO and many countries

Largest standard drink

20g

Austria

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.

Live converter

How Many Standard Drinks Is Your Drink?

Enter one drink by volume and ABV. The same glass is then translated into each country's local standard drink definition.

Unit

Pure alcohol

14.0g

Volume x ABV x 0.789, using ethanol density in g/ml.

Standard drinks by country

Showing 6 definitions.

United States

14g per Standard drink

1.00 standard drinks

United Kingdom

8g per Unit

1.75 units

Australia

10g per Standard drink

1.40 standard drinks

Canada

13.6g per Standard drink

1.03 standard drinks

WHO reference

10g per Reference drink

1.40 reference drinks

Japan

19.8g per 1合(いちごう)

0.71 go

For serving presets and a full session log, use the drink standard units calculator.

Need the full standard drinks calculator?

Convert any drink with serving presets

The drink standard units calculator converts any drink to standard units for the US, UK, Australia, Canada, and WHO definitions.

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Global database

Standard Drink Definitions: 40+ Countries

Search by country or local term, then compare each definition with real-world beer, wine, and spirits equivalents.

CountryStd. Drink Size= Beer (5%)
North America · 3 definitions

Canada

Standard drink

13.6g
345ml (12oz)

Mexico

Bebida estándar

14g
355ml (12oz)

United States

Standard drink

14g
355ml (12oz)
United Kingdom & Ireland · 2 definitions

Ireland

Standard drink

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

United Kingdom

Unit

8g
203ml (6.9oz)
Oceania · 2 definitions

Australia

Standard drink

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

New Zealand

Standard drink

10g
253ml (8.6oz)
Western Europe · 13 definitions

Austria

Getränkeeinheit

20g
507ml (17oz)

Belgium

Standaardglas

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Denmark

Genstand

12g
304ml (10oz)

Finland

Annos

12g
304ml (10oz)

France

Verre standard

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Germany

Getränkeeinheit

12g
304ml (10oz)

Greece

Μονάδα

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Italy

Unità alcolica

12g
304ml (10oz)

Luxembourg

Verre standard

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Netherlands

Standaardglas

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Portugal

Dose padrão

14g
355ml (12oz)

Spain

UBE

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Switzerland

Standardgetränk

10g
253ml (8.6oz)
Nordic Europe · 3 definitions

Iceland

Eining

8g
203ml (6.9oz)

Norway

Enhet

12g
304ml (10oz)

Sweden

Standardglas

12g
304ml (10oz)
Eastern Europe · 9 definitions

Croatia

Standardno piće

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Czech Republic

Standardní nápoj

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Estonia

Alkoholiühik

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Hungary

Standard ital

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Latvia

Standarta deva

12g
304ml (10oz)

Lithuania

Standartinis vienetas

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Poland

Porcja standardowa

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Russia

Стандартная доза

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Slovenia

Standardna merica

10g
253ml (8.6oz)
Asia · 7 definitions

China

标准饮酒量

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

India

Standard drink

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Israel

Standard drink

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Japan

1合(いちごう)

19.8g
501ml (17oz)

Singapore

Standard drink

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

South Korea

표준음주량

14g
355ml (12oz)

Turkey

Standart içki

12g
304ml (10oz)
South America · 4 definitions

Argentina

Unidad de bebida

12g
304ml (10oz)

Brazil

Dose padrão

14g
355ml (12oz)

Chile

Unidad de bebida

14g
355ml (12oz)

Colombia

Trago estándar

10g
253ml (8.6oz)
Africa & Middle East · 1 definitions

South Africa

Unit

12g
304ml (10oz)
WHO & International References · 2 definitions

ICAP definition

Reference drink

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

WHO reference

Reference drink

10g
253ml (8.6oz)

Showing 46 of 46 definitions. Equivalent volumes are rounded and assume 5% beer, 12% wine, and 40% spirits.

Section 1

Why Does a "Standard Drink" Mean Different Things in Different Countries?

Standard drink definitions were developed independently by each country's health authorities, usually around familiar local serving sizes. The UK's 8g unit reflects a small pub measure of spirits, Australia's 10g standard drink reflects local labelling practice, and the US 14g definition maps neatly to a 12 oz can of regular beer. These definitions were made to be locally intuitive, not internationally interchangeable.

The practical consequence is that health guidance expressed in standard drinks cannot be compared by the headline number alone. Fourteen UK units equals 112g of pure alcohol, while fourteen US standard drinks equals 196g. The same number can represent a very different dose.

This matters for legal and health reference pages too. Use alcohol laws by country for legal BAC limits, but use standard drink definitions when comparing health guidance or drink counts across countries.

Section 2

Weekly Drinking Guidelines: What the Numbers Actually Mean in Pure Alcohol

Because standard drink sizes differ, weekly guidelines expressed in drinks or units represent different pure alcohol totals. The table below converts major guidelines into grams per week, the only meaningful comparison. For the calorie and body-weight side of these totals, see alcohol and weight loss.

CountryGuideline (women)Pure alcohol/weekGuideline (men)Pure alcohol/week
🇬🇧 UK≤14 units≤112g≤14 units≤112g
🇦🇺 Australia≤10 std drinks≤100g≤10 std drinks≤100g
🇳🇱 Netherlands≤7 std drinks≤70g≤7 std drinks≤70g
🇳🇿 New Zealand≤10 std drinks≤100g≤15 std drinks≤150g
🇨🇭 Switzerland≤10 std drinks≤100g≤15 std drinks≤150g
🇺🇸 USA≤14 std drinks≤196g≤21 std drinks≤294g
🇩🇪 Germany≤12 std drinks≤144g≤24 std drinks≤288g
🇫🇷 France≤10 std drinks≤100g≤10 std drinks≤100g
🇸🇪 Sweden≤9 std drinks≤108g≤14 std drinks≤168g
🇦🇹 Austria≤14 std drinks≤280g≤21 std drinks≤420g
Austria's 14 standard drinks per week for women equals 280g pure alcohol. The Netherlands' 7 standard drinks per week equals 70g. The Austrian limit is four times higher in pure alcohol terms, because its standard drink is twice as large and its drink count guideline is also higher.

Section 3

The UK Unit System: How It Works

The United Kingdom uses units rather than standard drinks. One unit equals 8 grams of pure alcohol. The formula is simple: volume in millilitres multiplied by ABV percentage, then divided by 1,000. A 568ml pint of 4% beer is 568 x 4 / 1,000 = 2.3 units.

The UK Chief Medical Officers' guideline recommends that both men and women drink no more than 14 units per week, spread across several days with alcohol-free days. Fourteen UK units equals 112g of pure alcohol per week.

Pint of 4% lager

Size
568ml
ABV
4%
Units
2.3 units

Pint of 5% lager

Size
568ml
ABV
5%
Units
2.8 units

175ml wine glass

Size
175ml
ABV
13%
Units
2.3 units

250ml wine glass

Size
250ml
ABV
13%
Units
3.3 units

25ml spirits measure

Size
25ml
ABV
40%
Units
1.0 unit

35ml spirits measure

Size
35ml
ABV
40%
Units
1.4 units

Section 4

The Australian Standard Drink: 10g and Mandatory Labelling

Australia defines one standard drink as containing 10 grams of pure alcohol. Unlike many countries, Australia requires alcoholic beverages to display the number of standard drinks on the label, making it easier to track consumption from the package itself.

The Australian Alcohol Guidelines recommend no more than 10 standard drinks per week and no more than 4 standard drinks on any single day. Ten Australian standard drinks per week equals 100g of pure alcohol.

Section 5

Using Standard Drinks in BAC Calculations: Getting It Right

When a BAC calculator asks for number of drinks, it usually assumes one specific standard drink size. If you enter UK units into a US-based calculator without converting, the estimate can be wrong. The safer method is to enter volume and ABV directly. The alcohol content by drink database helps when you do not know the ABV.

The Widmark formula behind BAC estimates works from pure alcohol dose, body weight, sex, and time. The how BAC works guide explains the formula, while the BAC by drinks table shows why local drink definitions matter.

Your countryYour std drink= US std drinksExample: "3 drinks" =
🇬🇧 UK (8g)8g0.57 US drinks1.7 US std drinks
🇦🇺 Australia (10g)10g0.71 US drinks2.1 US std drinks
🇨🇦 Canada (13.6g)13.6g0.97 US drinks2.9 US std drinks
🇩🇪 Germany (12g)12g0.86 US drinks2.6 US std drinks
🇦🇹 Austria (20g)20g1.43 US drinks4.3 US std drinks
🌐 WHO (10g)10g0.71 US drinks2.1 US std drinks

Related pages

Use the definitions in practice

FAQ

Standard Drink Sizes FAQ

Common questions about country-specific standard drink definitions, UK units, and calculator inputs.

A standard drink is a unit of measurement for alcohol consumption that represents a fixed amount of pure alcohol. The definition varies by country: 8g in the UK, 10g in Australia and many European countries, 13.6g in Canada, and 14g in the United States. The WHO uses 10g as its international reference.

It depends on the country. Common definitions are 8g in the UK, 10g in Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, France, and WHO reference materials, 12g in Germany, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, and Italy, 13.6g in Canada, 14g in the United States, Mexico, and Brazil, and 20g in Austria.

A pint is 568ml. A pint of 4% lager contains 2.3 UK units, a pint of 5% lager contains 2.8 units, and a pint of 6% IPA contains 3.4 units. The UK formula is volume in ml multiplied by ABV percentage, then divided by 1,000.

A standard 750ml bottle of wine at 13% ABV contains about 7.7 Australian standard drinks. At 14% ABV, the same bottle contains about 8.3 standard drinks. Australian labels are required to show the number of standard drinks.

One common reason is that calculators use different standard drink definitions. A calculator using the US 14g definition will not match a calculation based on UK 8g units. The most accurate approach is to enter drink volume and ABV directly instead of only entering a drink count.

The World Health Organization uses 10 grams of pure alcohol as its international reference unit for a standard drink. This is the same gram definition used by Australia, New Zealand, France, and Ireland, smaller than the US 14g definition and larger than the UK 8g unit.