Sober-up time

Sober Up Calculator: How Long Until Your BAC Reaches Zero?

Enter your current BAC estimate or breath-test reading to see how your Blood Alcohol Concentration drops over time - and when it may fall below a driving limit or reach 0.00%. Based on the medically accepted average elimination rate of 0.015% BAC per hour.

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.

0.015% BAC per hour

That medically accepted average clearance rate is the backbone of almost every sober-up estimate.

Feeling sober is not proof

You can feel normal again while your BAC is still above a legal or safety-relevant threshold.

Time is the only fix

Coffee, showers, sleep, food, and exercise do not meaningfully accelerate liver clearance.

Start here

Use your current BAC estimate as the starting point

This tool works best when you already know your current BAC from a breathalyzer or from the main BAC calculator. Once you have that number, this page shows how long it may take to reach a lower limit or 0.00%.

Inputs

How it works

How Your Body Processes Alcohol: The Science Behind Sobering Up

The 0.015% rule: the only thing that sobers you up

Educational sober-up tools use a simple medical average: BAC falls by about 0.015% per hour. That is why the same message appears across university and hospital guidance. The liver does most of the work, and it does it at a fairly steady pace rather than on demand. Roughly 90% of alcohol is metabolized in the liver, while a smaller share leaves through breath, sweat, and urine. That is why sobriety is primarily a time problem, not a hydration, caffeine, or willpower problem.

Heavy drinking makes the timeline longer than people expect because a high peak BAC can linger well into the morning after the obvious worst part has passed. The point of a sober-up calculator is to show that lag in a concrete way. A person can feel more awake, more stable, and more confident long before the bloodstream is actually clear.

TimeStatusBAC
2:00amFall asleep dizzy and heavily impaired0.200%
3:00amNausea and restless sleep0.185%
4:00amStill extremely uncomfortable0.170%
7:00amWake with headache and poor coordination0.125%
8:00amDriving to work still carries DUI risk0.110%
10:00amJudgment and reaction time remain impaired0.080%
12:00pmAttention and focus can still feel off0.050%
4:00pmBAC reaches zero, though full recovery may lag0.000%
Even when you feel sober, your BAC may still be above a legal driving limit such as 0.08%. The only reliable ways to know are a breath test or waiting the full calculated timeline with extra margin.

Why women metabolize alcohol differently

Women often reach a higher BAC and stay elevated longer after the same amount of alcohol because body-water distribution and first-pass metabolism are different on average. Educational materials frequently note that women have less alcohol dehydrogenase activity available before alcohol enters the bloodstream, which means less of the dose gets neutralized early. Body weight also matters. Smaller bodies dilute alcohol less, so the same drinks create a higher concentration.

What can slow down alcohol metabolism or worsen the outcome

Liver disease can slow the body's ability to clear alcohol. Drinking on an empty stomach raises absorption speed and can create a higher peak BAC. Carbonated mixers may speed absorption as well. Medication interactions matter too. Alcohol alongside sedatives is dangerous, and heavy drinking while taking acetaminophen can further burden the liver. Even when the average 0.015% rule stays useful for planning, those real-world factors are why the safest approach is always to leave more time than the minimum estimate.

Reference tables

Hours to Zero BAC: Reference Tables by Weight & Sex

These tables give a quick planning reference for how long common drink counts can take to reach zero BAC. They are most useful for understanding scale. Three drinks, six drinks, and nine drinks create very different next-morning risk, especially at lower body weights.

Drinks140 lbs160 lbs180 lbs200 lbs220 lbs240 lbs
1 drink1h1h1h1h1h1h
2 drinks2h2h1.5h1h1h1h
3 drinks3.5h3h3h2.5h2h2h
4 drinks5h4.5h4h3.5h3h3h
5 drinks6h5.5h5h4.5h4h3.5h
6 drinks7h6h5.5h5h4.5h4h
7 drinks8.5h7.5h6.5h6h5.5h5h
8 drinks10h9h8h7h6.5h6h
9 drinks13.5h12h10.5h9h9h8h

1 standard drink = 12 oz beer (5%) / 5 oz wine (12%) / 1.5 oz spirits (40%). Data based on University of Arizona Campus Health Service reference tables. Individual results vary. Do not drive until BAC reaches 0.00%.

Testing windows

How Long Does Alcohol Stay in Your System? Detection Windows

Even after you feel sober, alcohol can still be detected in the body by different testing methods. The answer depends on whether someone is measuring immediate impairment, recent use, or a slower biological trace.

Test TypeDetection WindowCommon Use
🫁 BreathUp to 24 hrsRoadside DUI enforcement
🩸 BloodUp to 12 hrsEmergency medicine and forensic testing
💧 UrineUp to 80 hrsWorkplace testing and legal evidence
💧 Saliva1-5 daysRapid screening panels

Important distinction

Feeling sober is subjective. BAC reaching 0.00% means alcohol has been cleared from blood. Testing negative is a different question that depends on the test type and threshold. Someone can feel completely normal and still test positive on a urine test well after BAC reaches zero.

Safe to drive means BAC has actually reached 0.00% and the full sober-up window has passed. When in doubt, do not drive.

Myths

Sober Up Myths: What Actually Does Not Work

There is no shortage of quick-fix advice for sobering up, but the science stays stubbornly simple: nothing meaningfully speeds up your liver. Most hacks only change alertness or comfort, not BAC.

Myth

Coffee sobers you up

Fact

Caffeine may make you feel more awake, but it does not lower BAC. You can become a wide-awake impaired driver with judgment and reaction time still reduced.

Myth

A cold shower speeds up metabolism

Fact

Cold water can feel dramatic, but it does not change liver enzyme activity or reduce the alcohol already circulating in blood.

Myth

Eating after drinking fixes the problem

Fact

Food helps most before or during drinking by slowing absorption. Once alcohol is already in the bloodstream, eating has minimal effect on BAC.

Myth

Exercise burns off alcohol faster

Fact

A workout can increase alertness and dehydration, but it does not accelerate alcohol clearance in any meaningful way.

Myth

Sleeping it off always works

Fact

Sleep does not speed metabolism. Someone who goes to bed at 0.20% BAC may still be above 0.08% many hours later, even if they feel better on waking.

Myth

Energy drinks cancel out alcohol

Fact

They can mask fatigue and make people underestimate impairment, which is one reason caffeinated alcohol products drew major safety concerns.

The only thing that sobers you up is time. The liver clears alcohol at a fairly fixed pace, which is why planning ahead matters far more than searching for a trick after the fact.

Variables

Factors That Affect Your Sobering Up Time

The calculator accounts for the two biggest personal variables, but sobering-up time is still shaped by what was consumed, how quickly it was consumed, and what else was happening in the body.

🧬 Biological factors

Body weight: lighter people usually reach a higher BAC from the same dose.

Sex: women generally have less first-pass alcohol metabolism and less body water for dilution.

Liver health: disease or liver stress can slow clearance.

Genetics: enzyme differences can shift tolerance and metabolism.

🍺 Drinking factors

Number of drinks consumed.

ABV of each drink.

Drinking speed: shots raise BAC faster than slow sipping.

Carbonated mixers can increase absorption speed.

🍽️ Food and timing

An empty stomach increases absorption speed and peak BAC.

Food eaten before drinking slows absorption more than food eaten after.

Time between drinks changes the peak and total clearance window.

Frequent drinking can change tolerance without meaningfully protecting you from BAC.

💊 Medications

Acetaminophen and alcohol both burden the liver.

Sedatives plus alcohol can create dangerous impairment.

Some medicines alter alertness far more than BAC alone suggests.

Medication questions should be checked with a clinician or pharmacist.

Pro tip: if you do not know your BAC, start on the main BAC calculator first. Weight and sex are two of the most important personal factors in the estimate.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions About Sobering Up

These answers are written to help with planning and harm reduction, not to justify a borderline driving decision.

The answer depends on how much you drank and what your BAC peaked at, not just on how you feel now. A common educational estimate is that BAC falls by about 0.015% per hour. That means a BAC of 0.10% can take roughly 6 to 7 hours to reach zero, while a BAC of 0.20% can take about 13 to 14 hours. Those numbers are useful for planning, but they are still averages. Heavy drinking, health factors, medication use, or poor data entry can all make the real timeline slower than the model. The safest interpretation is to use the calculator as a minimum planning window and then leave extra buffer when driving, work, or other safety-critical tasks are involved.

No. Nothing reliably makes the liver process alcohol faster. Coffee, cold showers, exercise, greasy food, and energy drinks may change how alert you feel, but they do not lower BAC in a meaningful way. That is why campus health services and hospital systems repeatedly emphasize the same message: time alone sobers you up. The body clears alcohol at a relatively steady pace, and no hack changes that enough to matter for a safety decision. A person who feels sharper after caffeine or a shower can still be impaired in reaction time, balance, and judgment. That makes false confidence one of the biggest real-world risks after drinking.

BAC stands for Blood Alcohol Concentration. It measures the amount of alcohol circulating in the bloodstream and is usually expressed as a percentage. In most U.S. states, 0.08% is the legal threshold commonly associated with drunk driving for adult drivers, although stricter rules apply for under-21 and some commercial drivers. A BAC at or above that level is strongly associated with slower reactions, worse coordination, and poorer judgment. Lower numbers can still matter. Many people begin showing impairment well below 0.08%, which is one reason legal limits are not the same thing as safe limits. A BAC of 0.00% means alcohol has been fully cleared from blood, but it does not guarantee that fatigue or other aftereffects are completely gone.

It depends on the test. Breath tests may detect alcohol for up to about 24 hours, blood tests for around 12 hours, urine tests for up to 80 hours, and saliva tests for 1 to 5 days depending on the method and threshold used. This is why feeling sober is not the same thing as testing negative. A person can reach 0.00% BAC and still return a positive result on a slower test type, especially urine or saliva. That distinction matters for workplace testing, legal proceedings, and any situation where the question is not immediate impairment but whether alcohol use can still be identified later. When the stakes are high, rely on the test window, not on how recovered you feel.

Drinking water does not lower BAC and does not speed alcohol metabolism. What it can do is help with hydration, since alcohol acts as a diuretic and dehydration can worsen how awful someone feels afterward. Water is still useful because it can slow the pace of drinking, reduce how much alcohol gets consumed over the course of the night, and make hangover symptoms less severe. But once alcohol is already circulating in the bloodstream, water is not a sober-up tool. Only time lowers BAC. It helps to separate two goals: water can help you feel a bit better, but it cannot make you legally or medically sober faster.

Women often reach a higher BAC than men after the same amount of alcohol because the body usually handles alcohol differently before and after it enters the bloodstream. Educational materials often highlight that women have less first-pass alcohol metabolism and different body-water distribution on average, which means the same dose can stay more concentrated. Body composition matters too. On average, women have less body water available for dilution than men of the same weight, so alcohol is spread through a smaller fluid volume. The result is that women can hit a higher BAC faster and stay elevated longer, which is one reason matching a male friend's drinking pace can be especially risky.

Possibly not. Sleep does not metabolize alcohol any faster, it only lets time pass. If you went to bed with a high BAC, several hours of sleep may still leave you above 0.08% the next morning. A late-night BAC around 0.20% can easily remain in a legally risky range at 8:00 or 9:00 the next day, even if you no longer feel obviously drunk. The safest approach is to calculate the full time to 0.00% BAC, not just the time to feel better, and then give yourself extra margin if you have to drive. Morning-after DUI arrests happen because people confuse sleep with clearance.

A sober-up calculator is an estimate, not a medical or legal measurement. It becomes more useful when the starting BAC is realistic, whether it came from a breath test or from careful drink logging in a BAC calculator. It becomes less useful when someone guesses their BAC, forgets how strong the drinks were, or ignores health and medication factors. The clearance rate used in most educational tools is an average, not a promise. Real metabolism can be slower, especially after heavy drinking or when the liver is under stress. Treat the result as a planning tool that helps you think conservatively, not as permission to drive or proof that you are fit for a safety-sensitive task.

Related guides

Keep Exploring

Use these related pages if you need to estimate BAC first, compare legal limits, or convert drinks into standard units.

References

Data Sources & References

These public-health and university resources underpin the detection windows, timeline examples, and reference tables on this page.

All timeline values are averages for educational use. Actual metabolism varies. Last reviewed: March 2026.

Emergency warning

When to stop calculating and get help

If someone is hard to wake, is vomiting repeatedly, has slowed or irregular breathing, turns pale or blue, or may be at risk of alcohol poisoning, the priority is emergency help, not more math. A calculator can help with planning, but it should never delay action when symptoms look severe.