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Alcohol Impact Simulator

Alcohol Impact Simulator — What It Is & How It Helps

This tool lets you estimate the impact of alcohol in a single session. It converts drinks into UK units, estimates BAC (blood alcohol concentration), shows a rough time to sober up, and highlights likely short-term effects (e.g., reaction time and coordination). It also adds alcohol-only calories and a note on how alcohol can stimulate appetite, helping people make more informed choices.

What the simulator calculates

  • UK units — using: (volume ml × ABV% ÷ 100) ÷ 10. (1 UK unit = 10 ml pure alcohol.)
  • BAC estimate — Widmark-style formula using body weight, sex (body water ratio), hours since first drink, and an adjustable metabolism rate.
  • Recovery time — approximate hours to near-zero BAC (typical metabolism ~0.015% BAC/hour, adjustable 0.010–0.020).
  • “Morning after” — estimated BAC remaining after a chosen sleep duration (e.g., 8 hours).
  • Alcohol-only calories — ethanol grams × 7 kcal (ethanol ≈ 0.789 g/ml). Mixers/food can add more.

How this helps people

  • 🔎 Clarity — turns pints, wines, and shots into comparable units and a single BAC estimate.
  • 🧭 Safer planning — shows rough time to sober up and a morning-after estimate to avoid risky decisions.
  • 📏 Guideline awareness — compares a session to the UK’s 14 units/week low-risk guideline, encouraging drink-free days.
  • 🍟 Appetite insight — explains alcohol’s tendency to increase appetite and reduce self-control, which can lead to extra eating.
  • 🔥 Calorie visibility — shows alcohol-only calories to support weight- and health-related goals.

How to use it

  1. Enter your body weight, select sex, and set hours since first drink.
  2. Add drinks from the searchable list (beer, wine, spirits, alcopops, cocktails) or add a custom drink with ml and ABV.
  3. Review your Units, BAC, recovery time, morning-after, and calories.
  4. Use the results for awareness and planning—not for deciding whether to drive.
What alcohol does at common BAC levels
  • 0.02–0.04%: mild relaxation; reduced judgment/divided attention.
  • 0.05–0.08%: slowed reactions; impaired coordination and tracking.
  • 0.08%+: high crash risk; illegal to drive in England/Wales (Scotland ≈ 0.05%).
  • 0.15%+: severe impairment; blackouts possible. 0.30%+: medical emergency risk.
Alcohol & appetite: why you may eat more
Alcohol can increase appetite via brain reward pathways and reduces self-control, so people often choose saltier, fattier foods and larger portions. It can also disturb sleep, which may raise hunger hormones the next day.
Limits & important notes
  • Estimates only: Individual absorption/metabolism vary widely (age, health, meds, food, genetics).
  • Not a legal or medical tool: Do not use to decide if you’re safe/legal to drive. Police tests are definitive.
  • Guidelines: Men & women—aim not to regularly exceed 14 units/week, spread over 3+ days with several drink-free days.
  • Calories shown are from alcohol only; mixers/ingredients can significantly increase totals.

Method overview: Units use the UK formula (1 unit = 10 ml ethanol). BAC is a Widmark-style estimate using weight, sex-based body water ratio, drinking duration, and a selectable metabolism rate (~0.010–0.020% per hour; default 0.015%).