Alcohol Calorie Calculator for Drinks

Alcohol Calorie Calculator

Estimate drink calories from drink type, ABV, pour size, mixer volume, sugar, servings, dilution, garnish, and meal context using an alcohol-grams formula.

🍹Drink Presets

Load a common pour, then adjust ABV, mixer, sugar, servings, and meal context for the actual glass you are planning.

Drink Inputs
For beer, wine, and seltzer, enter the full beverage volume here.
80 proof spirits are 40% ABV.
Use this for rim sugar, agave, honey, or extra syrup not counted as the mixer.
Dilution changes finished volume, not calories.
Total Calories --- for all servings
Per Serving --- kcal per drink
Alcohol Portion --- standard drink estimate
Mixer and Meal Context --- share of selected context

Calorie Breakdown

ComponentPer ServingTotal BatchHow It Was Estimated
📊Calorie Anchor Grid
7calories per gram alcohol
14 gUS standard drink alcohol
4calories per gram sugar
0calories from plain soda
5 oztypical wine pour
12 oztypical beer bottle
1.5 oztypical spirit shot
29.6 mlone fluid ounce
🍹Drink Type Comparison
Spirit Soda100

Most calories come from alcohol because soda water adds none.

Wine120-130

A 5 oz glass is usually close to one standard drink.

Beer100-250

Volume, ABV, and residual carbs widen the range.

Sweet Cocktail180-500

Juice, syrup, cream, and liqueurs can exceed the alcohol calories.

📋Drink Calorie Tables
Alcohol BaseTypical PourABVApprox Calories
Vodka, gin, rum, tequila1.5 fl oz40%About 97 kcal from alcohol
Whiskey or brandy1.5 fl oz40%About 97-105 kcal before mixers
Red or white wine5 fl oz12-14%About 120-130 kcal
Regular beer12 fl oz4.5-5.5%About 140-170 kcal
IPA or strong ale16 fl oz6-8%About 220-300 kcal
MixerCalories per fl ozSugar per fl ozBest Fit
Soda water or club soda00 gVodka soda, tequila soda, highballs
Tonic water102.5 gGin and tonic, vodka tonic
Regular cola123.2 gRum and cola, whiskey cola
Ginger beer112.8 gMules and dark rum drinks
Sweet and sour mix307 gSours, margaritas, party pitchers
Cream of coconut505.5 gPina coladas and creamy tiki drinks
Popular DrinkServingApprox CaloriesCalorie Driver
Vodka soda1.5 oz spirit plus soda95-105 kcalAlcohol almost entirely
Gin and tonic1.5 oz gin, 4 oz tonic135-155 kcalTonic sugar plus alcohol
Margarita on rocks7 oz finished drink230-280 kcalTequila, liqueur, sweetener
Whiskey sour4-5 oz finished drink170-220 kcalWhiskey and sour mix
Pina colada8 oz creamy drink400-520 kcalCoconut cream and juice
Sugar Add-InCommon AmountAdded CaloriesCounting Note
Simple syrup0.5 fl ozAbout 45 kcalCount in mixer or extra sugar
Agave or honey2 tspAbout 40 kcalEnter grams for accuracy
Sugar rim1 tsp usedAbout 16 kcalOnly count what sticks to glass
Fruit juice splash1 fl ozAbout 10-17 kcalDepends on juice and sweetness
Liqueur0.5 fl ozAbout 45-70 kcalIncludes alcohol and sugar
💡Calorie Tips
Measure before topping: The alcohol pour and ABV set the alcohol calories. Ice, soda water, and dilution can make the drink larger without lowering its calorie total.
Separate sweet components: If a recipe uses juice, syrup, liqueur, and a sugared rim, count each one once so the mixer and sugar calories do not hide inside the glass.

Alcohol contains calorie; the calories in alcohol come from ethanol. Ethanol contains 7 calorie per gram. Thus, the strength of the alcohol will be the primary factor in the total calorie count of the drink.

A person must understands that the amount of ethanol in a drink will determine the amount of energy that that drink provides to the body. For example, a 1.5 ounce shot of spirits at 40% ABV will contain approximately 14 grams of pure alcohol. 14 grams of pure alcohol contains approximately 100 calories.

How Alcohol Adds Calories to Drinks

If a person increases the ABV of the drink or the size of the pour of the alcohol, the total calories in that drink will increase. The type of mixer that is use in the drink can change the total number of calories in that drink. Some mixers contains sugar and calories and others contain 0 calories.

For example, soda water and diet cola contain 0 calories. However, drinks such as tonic water and sweet and sour mix do contains sugar and, therefore, add to the total calories of the drink. The more calories that a mixer contains per ounce the drinker uses, the more the total calories of the drink will be.

Additionally, any drinks that contain sugar or sweetely liquids can increase the total number of calories in that drink. However, any drinks with sugar added to them will also have an increased total calorie count. Finally, any garnishment to the drink, such as cherries or orange slices, will also contain calories.

While the total number of calories from these garnishments may be small for each drink, the more of these garnishments that are consumed, the more calories is taken from the body. Additionally, dilution from ice or shaking the drink will not change the number of calories in the drink. The body will not absorb the calories from the alcohol and sweet liquids if they are dilute.

Thus, although the drink may appear to be larger after the addition of ice or after shaking it, its calories will remain the same. Another factor in determining the total calories in drinks is the number of servings. For instance, if an individual consumes two of the same cocktail or drinks, the body will consume twice the amount of grams of alcohol from those drinks and twice the calories from the mixers in those drinks.

A person can use the context selector to compare the total calories of many drinks to they’re daily calorie budget or the number of calories that should of been consumed during meals. While the calculator will provide a baseline for the number of calories that are in a drink, a person should also consider other variables for the same drink. For example, a heavy pour of a drink in a short glass may contain the same amount of alcohol as a measured pour of that same drink into a tall glass, but the heavy pour will contain more calorie than the measured pour due to the increased grams of alcohol that are present.

Many people will focus upon the mixer in a drink when attempting to reduce the calories that are consumed from the drink. However, the method for reducing the calories in the drink is dependent upon the type of drink that is consumed. For example, if an individual is consuming straight spirits or dry wine, the alcohol will be the largest source of calories; therefore, reducing the number of servings or the ABV will reduce the calories that are consumed from those drinks.

However, if an individual is consuming drinks that contain cream or fruit, the added ingredients will contain more calories then the alcohol; therefore, a person should focus upon the mixers for these types of drink. For individuals that wish to maintain consistency with their calorie intake and expenditure, it is useful to be able to track the number of calories that they consume from the drinks that they consume. For instance, a running estimate of the total calories that are consumed from drinks throughout the evening will be more accurate than simply noting the calories from each individual drink.

Additionally, one extra round of drinks or one extra ounce of liqueur will increase the total number of calories that the individual consumes. Such small increases in total calories will become visible to an individual after entering the data of the drinks that are consumed into the calculator. Additionally, it is also useful to consider how the calories from drinks relate to the food that is consumed by an individual.

For example, a cocktail that is consumed prior to dinner will occupy the same space within the calorie budget of an individual as an appetizer. Thus, by using the calculator to determine the calories of the drink that is consumed, an individual will be able to recognize how that drink impacts the number of calories that are left for food to be consume. Thus, using the calculator ensures that the arithmetic for the total calories that are consumed from a drink is accurate.

Alcohol Calorie Calculator for Drinks

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