Does Alcohol break a fast?
Alcohol breaks a fast. It provides meaningful calories or triggers an insulin response that ends the fasted metabolic state.
Calories
~100–150 kcal per standard drink (7 kcal/g of ethanol)
Why — the calorie and insulin logic
Alcohol provides 7 kcal per gram — second only to fat. A standard drink (12 oz beer, 5 oz wine, 1.5 oz spirits) delivers 100–150 kcal. Ethanol is a priority fuel that the liver processes before fat, effectively halting fat oxidation while it is being metabolised. It also disrupts sleep quality, which can compound the hunger effects of fasting.
Does it depend on your fasting goal?
Alcohol breaks a fast for every common fasting goal: it adds significant calories (weight loss), halts fat oxidation (metabolic health), and strongly suppresses autophagy. Drinking alcohol in the fasting window also increases the risk of hypoglycaemia for anyone predisposed, particularly if they have not eaten in many hours. Alcohol is best kept to the eating window, in moderation.
Frequently asked questions
- Does alcohol break a fast?
- Yes. Alcohol provides ~7 kcal per gram, halts fat burning while the liver processes it, and suppresses autophagy. It breaks a fast for every common fasting goal.