📖 11 min read

Understanding alcohol units helps you track your drinking and stay within recommended limits. This guide explains how to calculate units and provides quick references for common drinks.

What is an Alcohol Unit?

One UK alcohol unit equals 10ml (or 8g) of pure alcohol. This is approximately the amount an average adult can process in one hour.

Units Formula: Units = (Volume in ml × ABV%) ÷ 1000 Example: Pint of 4% beer = (568 × 4) ÷ 1000 = 2.3 units

UK Drinking Guidelines

NHS Recommendation: Both men and women should not regularly drink more than 14 units per week. This should be spread over 3 or more days with several drink-free days.

What Does 14 Units Look Like?

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Calculate alcohol units in your drinks and track your weekly consumption against UK guidelines. Get instant results with our Alcohol Unit Calculator. You may also find our BAC Calculator, Calorie Calculator and BMI Calculator useful.

Units in Common Drinks

Beer and Lager

DrinkVolumeABVUnits
Pint of regular lager568ml4%2.3
Pint of premium lager568ml5%2.8
Can of lager440ml4%1.8
Bottle of lager330ml5%1.7

Wine

DrinkVolumeABVUnits
Small glass125ml12%1.5
Standard glass175ml12%2.1
Large glass250ml12%3.0
Bottle of wine750ml12%9.0

Spirits

DrinkVolumeABVUnits
Single measure (pub)25ml40%1.0
Double measure50ml40%2.0
Bottle of spirits700ml40%28.0
Home Pours: Home measures are often larger than pub measures. A typical home pour of wine might be 200-250ml, not the 175ml standard.

Processing Time

Your body processes alcohol at roughly 1 unit per hour. After 6 units at 11pm, you won't be alcohol-free until 5-7am.

Driving Limit: The UK limit is 80mg per 100ml blood (50mg in Scotland). The only safe option is not to drink at all if driving.

Binge Drinking

The NHS defines binge drinking as drinking more than 8 units (men) or 6 units (women) in a single session.

How Alcohol Unit Calculations Work: The Methodology

The UK alcohol unit was introduced in 1987 as a simple way to quantify alcohol consumption. One unit equals 10 millilitres (ml) or 8 grams of pure ethanol. The formula is straightforward: Units = (Volume in ml x ABV%) / 1,000. The ABV (Alcohol By Volume) percentage is displayed on all alcoholic drinks sold in the UK as a legal requirement.

This formula means that the number of units in a drink depends on both its volume and its strength. A pint (568ml) of 4% lager contains 2.3 units, but the same volume at 5.2% contains 2.95 units -- nearly 30% more. Similarly, a 250ml glass of 14% wine contains 3.5 units, compared to 2.5 units for the same glass at 10% ABV. Both factors matter, and modern trends towards higher-strength wines and craft beers mean that drinks today contain more units than they did a generation ago.

Your body metabolises alcohol at approximately one unit per hour, though this varies significantly based on weight, sex, liver health, genetics, food consumption, and hydration. Women generally process alcohol more slowly than men due to lower levels of alcohol dehydrogenase (the enzyme that breaks down alcohol) and typically lower body water content. This is one reason the UK guideline is now the same 14 units for both sexes, despite men generally being larger.

Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) is a separate measurement from units, expressed as milligrams of alcohol per 100ml of blood (mg/100ml). The UK legal driving limit is 80mg/100ml in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, and 50mg/100ml in Scotland. As a rough guide, one unit raises BAC by approximately 15-20mg/100ml in a 70kg person, though individual variation is substantial. There is no reliable way to calculate exactly when you will be under the limit based on units consumed, which is why the safest approach is not to drink at all if driving.

UK-Specific Context: Alcohol Guidelines and Regulations

The current UK Chief Medical Officers' guideline of 14 units per week was established in January 2016, replacing the previous gender-specific guidelines of 21 units for men and 14 units for women. The change was based on updated evidence showing that even moderate alcohol consumption carries health risks, including a demonstrated link between alcohol and several types of cancer (particularly breast, bowel, mouth, throat, and liver cancers).

The guidelines also recommend that if you do drink 14 units in a week, you should spread this over three or more days rather than concentrating it in one or two sessions. Having several drink-free days each week is also recommended. The NHS emphasises that there is no "safe" level of drinking -- the 14-unit guideline represents a low-risk level at which the risk of alcohol-related illness is kept acceptably low, not eliminated.

Alcohol misuse costs the NHS approximately £3.5 billion per year and is a factor in approximately 24,000 deaths annually in England alone. Public Health England (now the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities) estimates that around 10 million adults in England regularly drink above the recommended guidelines. The Alcohol Duty system in the UK was reformed in August 2023, with a new structure that taxes drinks based on their alcohol content rather than their category, meaning higher-strength drinks attract proportionally higher duty.

UK alcohol labelling regulations require all alcoholic drinks to display the ABV percentage, but unit information is currently voluntary. Many producers voluntarily include unit counts and the Chief Medical Officers' guidelines on their labels. Calorie labelling on alcohol is not yet mandatory in the UK, though there are proposals to introduce it. For reference, alcohol contains 7 calories per gram, making it almost as calorie-dense as fat (9 calories per gram).

The UK drink-drive limit has not changed in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland since 1967. Scotland lowered its limit to 50mg/100ml (from 80mg) in December 2014, aligning with most European countries. Penalties for drink-driving in England and Wales include a minimum 12-month driving ban, an unlimited fine, and up to 6 months in prison. Causing death by careless driving while over the limit carries a maximum sentence of 14 years.

Worked Examples: Calculating Units in Common UK Drinking Scenarios

Example 1: Friday Night at the Pub

3 pints of 4.5% premium lager + 1 double gin and tonic (50ml of 40% gin)

Lager: 3 x (568 x 4.5) / 1,000 = 3 x 2.56 = 7.67 units

Gin: (50 x 40) / 1,000 = 2.0 units

Total: 9.67 units -- nearly 70% of the entire weekly allowance in one session.

Processing time: Approximately 10 hours before alcohol-free.

Example 2: Weekend Wine with Dinner

Sharing a bottle of 13.5% wine (750ml) between two people over Saturday dinner.

Per bottle: (750 x 13.5) / 1,000 = 10.13 units

Per person (half bottle): 5.06 units

If each person also has a pre-dinner aperitif (125ml glass of 12% prosecco = 1.5 units), their total is 6.56 units -- nearly half the weekly allowance.

Example 3: Tracking a Moderate Week

Monday: 0 units (drink-free) | Tuesday: 0 | Wednesday: 2 pints of 3.8% session ale = 4.3 units | Thursday: 0 | Friday: 2 glasses of 12% wine (175ml each) = 4.2 units | Saturday: 1 pint of 5% craft IPA = 2.8 units | Sunday: 0

Weekly total: 11.3 units -- within the 14-unit guideline, spread over 3 days with 4 drink-free days.

Common Mistakes and Tips

Mistake 1: Underestimating home measures. Research by Alcohol Change UK shows that home pours of wine average 200-250ml, not the 175ml standard glass. A generous 250ml pour of 14% wine contains 3.5 units, not the 2.1 units of a standard pub measure. Always measure your pours or use a wine glass with volume markings.
Mistake 2: Not accounting for increased ABV in modern drinks. Average wine strength has risen from about 10% ABV in the 1970s to 13-14% today. Similarly, craft beers often range from 5-8% ABV, compared to the 3.5-4% of traditional bitter. A pint of 7% craft IPA contains 4.0 units -- almost twice what you might expect from "a pint."
Mistake 3: Thinking you can "speed up" alcohol processing. Coffee, cold showers, food, and exercise do not speed up alcohol metabolism. Your liver processes approximately one unit per hour regardless. The only thing that removes alcohol from your system is time.
Tip: Download the free NHS Drink Free Days app or the Drinkaware app to track your weekly units easily. Setting a target of 3-4 drink-free days per week is one of the most effective ways to stay within the 14-unit guideline.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories are in alcoholic drinks?

A pint of 4% lager contains approximately 180 calories, a 175ml glass of 12% wine contains about 130 calories, and a single measure of spirits with a mixer contains 50-100 calories (depending on the mixer). A bottle of wine contains roughly 600 calories. The NHS describes these as "empty calories" because alcohol provides no nutritional benefit. Someone drinking 14 units per week from wine consumes approximately 1,000 additional calories weekly, equivalent to roughly 5-6 doughnuts.

Is it safe to drink alcohol while taking medication?

Many medications interact with alcohol. The NHS advises particular caution with painkillers (especially paracetamol, which combined with alcohol can cause severe liver damage), antibiotics (some types cause nausea when mixed with alcohol), antidepressants, blood pressure medications, and antihistamines. Always read the patient information leaflet and ask your pharmacist if you are unsure. Some medications, such as metronidazole, require complete alcohol avoidance.

What counts as "binge drinking" in the UK?

The NHS defines binge drinking as consuming more than 8 units in a single session for men, or more than 6 units for women. To put this in context, 8 units is approximately 3 pints of 5% lager or just over a bottle of 12% wine. Binge drinking significantly increases the risk of accidents, alcohol poisoning, and risky behaviour. According to the ONS, approximately 27% of UK adults report binge drinking at least once in the previous week.

Can I "save up" units and drink them all at the weekend?

No. The 14-unit guideline is explicitly not designed to be consumed in one or two sessions. Drinking 14 units in a single sitting constitutes heavy binge drinking and carries immediate health risks including alcohol poisoning, accidents, and heart rhythm disturbances. The guideline recommends spreading units over at least three days. The health risks of 14 units in one session are far greater than 14 units spread over a week, even though the total is identical.

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Tips for Reducing Intake

  1. Have drink-free days: Aim for 3-4 per week
  2. Use smaller glasses: 125ml wine instead of 250ml
  3. Choose lower ABV: 3.5% beer instead of 5%
  4. Alternate with water: Soft drink between alcoholic drinks
  5. Set a budget: Decide your limit before you start

Getting Support

How long does it take for alcohol to leave my system and when is it safe to drive?
The liver processes alcohol at a fairly constant rate of approximately one unit per hour, though this varies slightly between individuals based on weight, sex, liver health, and genetics. As a rough guide, a large glass of wine (250ml at 13% ABV, approximately 3.3 units) takes about 3-4 hours to process, while a pint of strong lager (5.2% ABV, approximately 3 units) takes about 3 hours. Nothing speeds up this process: coffee, cold showers, fresh air, and food do not help. For driving, the UK limit is 80mg of alcohol per 100ml of blood in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland (50mg in Scotland). After a heavy night of drinking, you may still be over the limit the following morning. The general advice from road safety organisations is to avoid driving for at least 12 hours after heavy drinking, or use an approved personal breathalyser to check before driving.
What support is available on the NHS if I want to reduce my alcohol intake?
The NHS provides several free services for people concerned about their drinking. Your GP can offer confidential advice, blood tests to check liver function, and referrals to specialist alcohol services. NHS talking therapies (IAPT) provide counselling specifically for alcohol-related issues, including cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) which has strong evidence for helping people change drinking habits. The Drinkline helpline (0300 123 1110) offers free confidential advice and can connect you with local services. Many areas have community alcohol teams that provide structured treatment programmes. For more severe alcohol dependence, NHS treatment may include medically supervised detoxification, medication such as naltrexone or acamprosate to reduce cravings, and residential rehabilitation. The NHS website at nhs.uk/live-well/alcohol-advice provides self-assessment tools, unit tracking guides, and information about the health risks associated with different levels of consumption.
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Dr. Sarah Chen, PhD

Dr. Sarah Chen, PhD

Research Scientist, Public Health

Sarah holds a PhD in Public Health from the University of Edinburgh and has published research on UK health metrics and obesity trends. She translates complex medical data into practical, accessible guidance for everyday readers.

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Last updated: February 2026 | UK alcohol guidelines verified