Reference only
Reference only. This page is educational. Do not use it to decide whether you are safe to drive, work, or pass a test.
Section 2
Blood and Breath: The Driving Question
Alcohol leaves the blood at a medically accepted average rate of 0.015% BAC per hour. This rate is the backbone of every sober-up calculator, breathalyzer timeline, and police sobriety guideline. It does not speed up with coffee, water, food, or sleep - the liver processes alcohol at its own pace regardless of what else you do.
A person who reaches a peak BAC of 0.08% will take approximately 5h 20m to reach 0.00%. A peak of 0.15% takes about 10h. A peak of 0.20% - common after a heavy night - takes over 13h 20m to fully clear.
The most dangerous gap is between feeling sober and being sober. Alcohol tolerance means the brain adapts to the presence of alcohol over time, reducing the subjective feeling of impairment even when BAC remains elevated. Read more about alcohol tolerance. A regular drinker may feel completely normal at 0.05% or even 0.08%, levels that measurably impair reaction time, peripheral vision, and decision-making in laboratory tests. Feeling fine is not evidence of a safe BAC.
Breathalyzers measure alcohol in deep lung air and convert it to an estimated blood alcohol concentration using a fixed breath-to-blood ratio. Blood tests are more accurate but require a medical setting. For roadside enforcement, breath is the standard. Both tests become unreliable below approximately 0.01% BAC; at that point, the reading is effectively zero for practical purposes.
| Peak BAC | Hours to 0.05% | Hours to 0.02% | Hours to 0.00% |
|---|
| 0.05% | 0h | 2h | 3h 20m |
| 0.08% | 2h | 4h | 5h 20m |
| 0.10% | 3h 20m | 5h 20m | 6h 40m |
| 0.15% | 6h 40m | 8h 40m | 10h |
| 0.20% | 10h | 12h | 13h 20m |
| 0.25% | 13h 20m | 15h 20m | 16h 40m |
Based on an average elimination rate of 0.015% BAC per hour. Individual rates vary. Use the Sober-Up Calculator for a personalised estimate.
Section 3
Urine Tests: The 80-Hour Window
There are two fundamentally different types of urine alcohol tests, and they detect completely different things. A standard urine alcohol test measures ethanol directly, the same alcohol that shows up in blood and breath. This test has a short window of 6-12 hours after drinking, similar to a breathalyzer.
The EtG test is different. EtG is a metabolic byproduct produced when the liver processes alcohol. It is not alcohol itself - it is a marker that the body was exposed to alcohol. EtG can be detected in urine for up to 80 hours after drinking, and in some cases of heavy drinking, up to 5 days.
EtG testing is used in situations where abstinence must be verified over a period of days rather than hours: alcohol monitoring programmes, court-ordered sobriety, workplace return-to-duty programmes, and some professional licence reinstatement processes. It is not used for roadside enforcement. If you are subject to an EtG monitoring programme, the relevant window is 3-5 days after any drinking, not the same-day breathalyzer window.
| Test Type | Light Drinking (1-2 drinks) | Moderate (3-5 drinks) | Heavy (6+ drinks) |
|---|
| Standard urine (ethanol) | 6-12 hours | 12-24 hours | Up to 48 hours |
| EtG urine test | 12-24 hours | 24-48 hours | 48-80 hours |
| EtG (heavy chronic) | — | — | Up to 5 days |
EtG detection thresholds vary by laboratory, typically between 100 and 500 ng/mL. These windows are estimates. Actual results depend on hydration, kidney function, and laboratory cut-off levels.
Section 5
Hair Follicle Tests: 90 Days of History
Hair follicle tests do not detect alcohol itself. They detect fatty acid ethyl esters and EtG that become incorporated into the hair shaft as it grows. Because hair grows at approximately 1 cm per month, a 3 cm hair sample represents approximately 90 days of history. This makes hair testing the only method that can reveal a pattern of drinking over months rather than hours or days.
Hair alcohol testing is used in forensic investigations, child custody proceedings, professional licence assessments, and some insurance applications. It is not used for roadside enforcement or routine workplace testing because it cannot detect recent drinking - a person who drank heavily last night but has been abstinent for a month would show a historical positive but no current impairment.
Hair tests have known limitations. External contamination from alcohol-containing hair products can produce false positives. Very light or infrequent drinking may fall below detection thresholds. Hair colour and cosmetic treatments can affect marker levels. For these reasons, hair test results in legal proceedings are typically interpreted by a specialist toxicologist rather than used as standalone evidence.