Alcohol Units Calculator

Calculate UK units, estimate BAC, and track your weekly intake against the NHS 14-unit guideline.

Drink Builder
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Personal Details (for BAC estimate)

Units Breakdown by Drink
Your Results
0.0 UK units
Alcohol (grams) 0
Calories (alcohol) 0
Est. BAC 0.000%
US Standard Drinks 0.0
% of Weekly Limit 0%
Sober In (hrs)
Weekly allowance used 0%
Country Guideline Comparison (weekly)
🇬🇧 UK (NHS) 14 units Men & Women
🇺🇸 USA (NIAAA) 14 / 7 units Men / Women
🇦🇺 Australia 10 units Men & Women
🌍 WHO ~14 units Low-risk threshold
Units = vol(ml) × ABV% ÷ 1000
BAC = g_alc ÷ (wt × r × 10) − 0.015×h

Drink Scenario Comparison

See how common drink combinations stack up against international guidelines. Select scenarios or create your own.

Quick Scenarios:
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0.0 total UK units
Calories 0
US Std Drinks 0.0
Hours to Sober 0

Guideline Comparison

Country Weekly Limit Your Scenario Status

Common Scenarios Reference

Scenario Drinks Units Calories vs UK 14u
Light social2 pints (4%)4.525432%
DinnerHalf bottle wine4.927335%
Pub night3 pints (5%) + 1 shot10.257173%
Night out2 pints + 2 wines + 2 shots13.776698%
Heavy session5 pints (5%) + 3 shots19.31078138%
Party1 bottle wine + 3 cocktails17.3965123%

7-Day Drink Log

Enter units consumed each day to track your weekly pattern. The NHS guideline is 14 units/week spread over 3+ days.

Weekly Total 0.0
Remaining 14.0
Drinking Days 0
Risk Level Low
Daily Average 0.0
Peak Day --
Your Week vs International Guidelines
Your weekly drinks equal approximately:

How to Use This Calculator

1
Add your drinks — Use presets or manually enter volume (ml) and ABV%. Each drink card shows its unit value instantly.
2
Enter personal details — Body weight and sex are used for the Widmark BAC estimate. Hours since first drink determines how much alcohol has been processed.
3
Explore scenarios — Use the Scenario Analysis tab to compare common drink combinations against UK, US, Australian, and WHO guidelines.
4
Track your week — The Weekly Pattern tab lets you log daily units and see your intake pattern against the 14-unit NHS guideline.

Key Formulas

Units = Volume (ml) × ABV% ÷ 1000
Alcohol (g) = Units × 8
BAC = [g_alc ÷ (wt_kg × r × 10)] − (0.015 × h)
Calories ≈ Units × 56 kcal

Key Terms

UK Unit — 10ml (8g) of pure alcohol; the NHS standard for guidelines.
ABV — Alcohol By Volume; the percentage of a drink that is pure alcohol.
BAC — Blood Alcohol Concentration; grams of alcohol per 100ml of blood (%).
Widmark Formula — Mathematical model for estimating BAC from alcohol consumed, weight, and time.
Distribution Factor (r) — 0.68 for males, 0.55 for females; reflects body water percentage.
US Standard Drink — 14g alcohol (1.75 UK units); one 12oz beer, 5oz wine, or 1.5oz spirits.

Real-World Examples

Friday Night Out
2 pints of 5% lager + 2 glasses of 13% wine (175ml) = 5.6 + 4.6 = 10.2 units — increasing risk territory.
Dinner Party
Half a bottle of 13% wine (375ml) = 4.9 units. Adds roughly 273 alcohol calories on top of your meal.
Safe Weekly Budget
2 pints on Friday + 2 pints on Saturday + 1 glass of wine on Sunday = 4.6 + 4.6 + 2.3 = 11.5 units — within guideline.

Understanding UK Alcohol Units

The concept of the alcohol "unit" was introduced in the UK in 1987 to give people a simple way to measure their alcohol intake. One unit equals 10ml or 8g of pure alcohol — the amount the average adult liver can process in about one hour. This metric underpins NHS alcohol guidelines and enables straightforward comparison between drinks of different strengths and volumes.

Why ABV and Volume Both Matter

A common misconception is that a "glass of wine" is always one unit. In reality, a small 125ml pour of 13% wine contains 1.6 units, while a large 250ml glass of the same wine contains 3.25 units. Similarly, a pint of 3.5% session beer contains 2.0 units while a pint of 8% craft IPA contains 4.5 units. The formula is unambiguous: multiply volume in millilitres by ABV percent and divide by 1000.

NHS Guidelines and Risk Categories

The NHS advises both men and women to drink no more than 14 units per week on a regular basis. This represents the approximate threshold below which the weekly risk of alcohol-related illness remains low. The guidelines also specify spreading drinking over at least three days rather than concentrating units in one or two sessions — "binge drinking" carries acute risks independent of total weekly consumption.

Risk categories increase progressively: 14-21 units/week is "increasing risk," 21-35 units is "high risk," and above 35 units per week is "very high risk," associated with significant probability of liver disease, cardiovascular problems, and alcohol dependency over time.

Blood Alcohol Concentration and the Widmark Formula

BAC estimation uses the Widmark formula, developed by Erik Widmark in the 1930s. The calculation accounts for body weight and sex because larger people dilute alcohol into more body water, and women on average have proportionally less body water than men of the same weight. The formula subtracts 0.015% BAC per hour to account for liver metabolism. Important caveats: food consumption slows absorption significantly, individual metabolic rates vary, and the formula assumes complete absorption. The result is an educational estimate, not a legal measurement.

Calories in Alcohol

Alcohol is calorie-dense at 7 kcal/gram — more than protein or carbohydrates (both 4 kcal/g), though less than fat (9 kcal/g). A unit of alcohol (8g) contributes roughly 56 calories from the alcohol itself. Beer and wine also contain carbohydrates that add further calories — a pint of 5% beer typically totals 200-250 calories. Regular drinking can represent a substantial hidden caloric load, particularly relevant for weight management.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 1 UK alcohol unit?

One UK unit equals 10ml (8g) of pure alcohol. This is the standard measure used by the NHS for alcohol guidelines. A pint of 4% beer contains about 2.3 units, and a 175ml glass of 13% wine contains about 2.3 units.

What is the NHS weekly alcohol guideline?

The NHS recommends not regularly drinking more than 14 units per week for both men and women. Spread these over 3 or more days and include several alcohol-free days each week.

How does the Widmark BAC formula work?

The Widmark formula estimates BAC as: grams of alcohol divided by (body weight in kg x distribution factor x 10), minus (0.015 x hours since first drink). The distribution factor is 0.68 for males and 0.55 for females.

How many calories are in a unit of alcohol?

Alcohol contains 7 calories per gram. One UK unit = 8g of alcohol = approximately 56 calories from alcohol alone. Beer and wine add extra calories from carbohydrates.

What is the difference between a UK unit and a US standard drink?

A US standard drink contains 14g of pure alcohol (1.75 UK units), while a UK unit contains 8g. A 1.5 fl oz shot of 40% spirits equals approximately 1.76 UK units or 1 US standard drink.

How long does it take to process one unit?

The liver processes approximately 1 UK unit (8g alcohol) per hour. This rate cannot be sped up by coffee, water, or exercise. A person who has consumed 14 units takes roughly 14 hours to be alcohol-free.

Does body weight affect alcohol tolerance?

Yes. Larger people have more body water to dilute alcohol, producing lower BAC. Women typically reach higher BAC than men of the same weight due to a lower body water distribution factor (0.55 vs 0.68).

What counts as binge drinking?

The NHS defines binge drinking as more than 6 units in a single session for women or 8 units for men — roughly half a bottle of wine plus a beer for women, or 4-5 average pints for men.

How many units are in a bottle of wine?

A standard 750ml bottle of 13% wine contains approximately 9.75 units. A bottle of 14.5% wine contains about 10.9 units.

Is it safe to drive after one drink?

The legal limit in England/Wales is 80mg/100ml (0.08% BAC). Scotland's limit is 50mg/100ml (0.05%). Even small amounts impair reactions. The safest approach is zero alcohol before driving.

How accurate is the BAC estimate?

The Widmark formula provides an estimate only. Actual BAC varies based on food consumed, metabolic rate, tolerance, genetics, and medications. Never use a calculator to determine driving safety.

Does mixing drinks affect intoxication?

Total units consumed is what matters most. However, carbonated mixers may speed alcohol absorption, and switching drinks makes it harder to track units consumed.

What are the health risks above 14 units/week?

Regularly drinking above 14 units per week increases risk of liver disease, cardiovascular disease, stroke, several cancers, dependency, and mental health problems including anxiety and depression.

What is the AUDIT-C screening tool?

AUDIT-C is a 3-question alcohol use screening tool used by healthcare professionals. A score of 5+ for men or 4+ for women suggests hazardous drinking patterns.

Can I calculate units for home poured drinks?

Yes. Measure the volume in millilitres and multiply by the ABV percentage shown on the bottle, then divide by 1000. Home pours are often larger than pub measures, so measuring accurately is important.