📘 Understanding the Alcohol Calculator
How to use it, the science behind BAC, and answers to common questions
How to Use the Calculator
This tool works in two powerful modes to help you understand alcohol's impact on your body.
Forward Mode – Safe Limit
Enter your age, sex, weight, body fat % (optional), food intake, and drinking duration. Select pregnancy status or any interacting medications. The calculator estimates how many standard drinks you can safely consume to stay below 0.04% BAC — a level where impairment is minimal and considered safer for most activities.
Reverse Mode – Drunkenness Estimator
Add each drink you’ve had (beer, wine, spirits) with its volume and ABV%. The tool sums cumulative alcohol, accounts for time elapsed, and estimates your current BAC. Use the “What if I stop now?” slider to see how BAC drops over hours. A live graph shows your BAC curve and peak intoxication time — helping you plan when you'll be sober.
Why It Matters
Alcohol affects everyone differently based on physiology — two people drinking the same amount can have vastly different BAC levels. Age, sex, weight, body fat, food, and medications all change how alcohol is absorbed and eliminated. This calculator helps you make informed, harm-reduction decisions — whether you’re planning a night out or checking your impairment before driving. It also flags dangerous medication interactions and alcohol poisoning risks, potentially saving lives.
The Math Behind the Calculator
BAC = (Alcohol grams × absorption factor) ÷ (Body water volume × 1000) – (0.015 × hours)
- Alcohol grams = volume (ml) × (ABV/100) × 0.789 (ethanol density)
- Body water volume = estimated from weight, sex, age, and body fat % (fat contains almost no water)
- Absorption factor: 1.0 (empty stomach), 0.85 (light snack), 0.72 (full meal)
- Metabolism rate: ~0.015% BAC eliminated per hour (liver processes ~1 standard drink/hour)
Worked Example
Situation: 75 kg male, two 355 ml beers (5% ABV), light snack, consumed over 1 hour.
→ Alcohol grams = 710 ml × 0.05 × 0.789 ≈ 28 g per beer → total 56 g
→ Body water ≈ 75 kg × 0.68 ≈ 51 L
→ Absorption factor (light snack) = 0.85 → effective grams = 56 × 0.85 ≈ 47.6 g
→ BAC raw = 47.6 / (51×1000) × 100 ≈ 0.093%
→ Metabolism over 1h = 0.015% → final BAC ≈ 0.078% (near legal limit).
If he waits another hour, BAC drops to ~0.063%.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this medical advice?
No — this is an educational estimation based on population models. Individual metabolism varies greatly. Always consult a physician for personal health decisions.
What if I'm pregnant or trying to conceive?
The calculator enforces zero tolerance — no safe amount of alcohol is known during pregnancy. It will display a clear red warning and recommend avoiding alcohol entirely.
Why does medication matter so much?
Many drugs — benzodiazepines, opioids, antidepressants, anticoagulants — dangerously amplify alcohol's sedative effects, leading to respiratory depression, liver damage, or bleeding risks. The calculator provides specific warnings and drastically reduces safe limits.
Can I drive if my BAC is below 0.08%?
Impairment begins well below legal limits — coordination, reaction time, and judgment start declining at 0.02% BAC. Never drive after drinking any amount. The calculator is for risk awareness, not a driving license.
How accurate is the BAC estimate?
It is as accurate as the Widmark formula allows (within ±0.01-0.02% for most people) but cannot replace a breathalyzer. Factors like genetics, hydration, and rare enzyme deficiencies are not included.
What is the "What if I stop now?" slider useful for?
It simulates how long after your last drink your BAC will drop below certain thresholds — great for planning a safe ride or estimating when you might be sober. Remember: only time lowers BAC.
Drink responsibly. Know your limits.
This calculator promotes harm reduction. If you feel unwell or suspect alcohol poisoning, seek emergency medical help immediately.
Clicking will take you to the top of this page (where the calculator is embedded above).
© Educational tool — not for medical diagnosis. Always consult a healthcare professional.
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Scientific References & Verified Sources
The calculations in this tool are based on peer-reviewed research and official health guidelines.
The Foundational Widmark Formula
Widmark, E. M. P. (1932). Die theoretischen Grundlagen und die praktische Verwendbarkeit des gerichtlich-medizinischen Alkoholbestimmung [The Theoretical Foundations and Practical Usability of the Forensic Medical Alcohol Determination]. Berlin: Urban & Schwarzenberg.
📚 Context: Erik Widmark's pioneering work established the fundamental equation for estimating Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC). The "Widmark factor" (distribution ratio 'r') and metabolism rate (β) used in modern calculators derive directly from this research.
Updated Total Body Water (TBW) Calculation
Watson, P. E., Watson, I. D., & Batt, R. D. (1981). Prediction of blood alcohol concentrations in human subjects. Updating the Widmark equation. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 42(7), 547–556.
💧 Context: This landmark study improved upon Widmark's original model by incorporating Total Body Water (TBW) estimates based on weight, height, age, and sex. The TBW method provides more accurate BAC predictions across diverse populations and is widely adopted in clinical and forensic settings.
NIAAA: BAC Thresholds & Standard Drink Definitions
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). (2004). NIAAA Council Approves Definition of Binge Drinking. NIAAA Newsletter, No. 3, p. 3.
🏛️ Context: The NIAAA defines binge drinking as a pattern that raises BAC to 0.08 g/dL or higher, which is the legal driving limit in most U.S. states. Additionally, NIAAA provides the official "standard drink" equivalents (14g pure alcohol) used globally for alcohol research and public health messaging.
📖 About the Metabolism Rate Used
The calculator uses the standard metabolic elimination rate of 0.015% BAC per hour, which is derived from extensive research including: Jones, A. W. (2010). Evidence-based survey of the elimination rates of ethanol from blood with special reference to the widely used metabolic rate of 0.015 g/100 mL·h. Journal of Analytical Toxicology, 34(9), 556-561. Science Direct