Tips on cutting down

If you regularly drink more than the recommended limits, try these simple tips to help you cut down.

The NHS recommends:

  • Men should not regularly drink more than 3 to 4 units of alcohol a day.
  • Women should not regularly drink more than 2 to 3 units of alcohol a day.
  • If you've had a heavy drinking session, avoid alcohol for 48 hours. 

'Regularly' means drinking these amounts every day or most days of the week.

Make a plan
Before you start drinking, set a limit on how much you’re going to drink.

Set a budget
Only take a fixed amount of money to spend on alcohol.

Let them know
If you let your friends and family know you’re cutting down and that it’s important to you, you could get support from them.

Take it a day at a time
Cut back a little each day. That way, every day you do is a success.

Make it a smaller one
You can still enjoy a drink but go for smaller sizes. Try bottled beer instead of pints, or a small glass of wine instead of a large one.

Have a lower-strength drink
Cut down the alcohol by swapping strong beers or wines for ones with a lower strength (ABV in %). You'll find this information on the bottle.

Stay hydrated
Drink a pint of water before you start drinking, and don't use alcohol to quench your thirst. Have a soft drink instead.

Take a break
Have the odd day each week when you don’t have an alcoholic drink.

Drinks diary

You may be surprised to find out how much you actually drink. Download a drinks diary (PDF, 656Kb) to track your drinking over a week.

Benefits of cutting down

The immediate effects of cutting down include:

  • feeling better in the mornings
  • being less tired during the day
  • your skin may start to look better
  • you’ll start to feel fitter
  • you may stop gaining weight

Long-term benefits include:

Mood
There’s a strong link between heavy drinking and depression, and hangovers often make you feel anxious and low. If you already feel anxious or sad, drinking can make this worse, so cutting down may put you in a better mood generally.

Sleep
Drinking can affect your sleep. Although it can help some people fall asleep quickly, it can disrupt your sleep patterns and stop you from sleeping deeply. So cutting down on alcohol should help you feel more rested when you wake up.

Behaviour
Drinking can affect your judgment and behaviour. You may behave irrationally or aggressively when you’re drunk. Memory loss can be a problem during drinking and in the long-term for regular heavy drinkers.

Heart
Long-term heavy drinking can lead to your heart becoming enlarged. This is a serious condition that can’t be completely reversed, but stopping drinking can stop it getting worse.

Immune system
Regular drinking can affect your immune system. Heavy drinkers tend to catch more infectious diseases.

Last reviewed: 01/03/2012

Next review due: 01/03/2014

Comments are personal views. Any information they give has not been checked and may not be accurate.

planegreen said on 24 April 2012

All the advice given here rings very true in my case. Drinking in excess has made me not only put weight on but I had a very healthy skin and people often thought I was younger than my age. Now I look in the mirror and my face looks years older and my skin is rank.

I am now cutting right down and in two weeks only had a drink once. I have had a terrible year not sleeping very well and always waking in the night and I am sure this is related to everyday steady drinking. I was drinking half a bottle of vodka a day. That is not much compared to some people who drink 1+ litres per day but the effects are damaging on your health and then on you socially and in work life. All of these things suffered in my life and now I am putting the drinking away and already feel better after two weeks.

Be careful what alcohol you consume and be honest with yourself. If your now drinking spirits in situations where it is not meant to be, i.e like at home on your own then you have a problem and are very likely spiraling into been an alcoholic. Take the positive steps and don't expect that someone will stop you doing it. You have to stop yourself!!.

Stay healthy.

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Mid Lifer said on 27 October 2011

I had been drinking heavily for 25 years. First as a binge drinker and as I got older drinking in the home.

I've really cut down over the past two months.

One thing I did was to put a message on my wine bottle - saying 'Just one glass'. This helped me develop a new habit of stopping after having one drink.

I personally, believe that to have this skills - all you need to do is practice it. Practice just having one drink - even at first it wasn't that hard and it soons becomes quite natural.

http://themoderatedrinker.blogspot.com/2011/10/how-to-be-moderate-drinker.html

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Mid Lifer said on 26 September 2011

Hi

I'm cutting down right now. Just completed three weeks and am happy with my progress.

Just a small point on make a plan - I've found before that I was very inconsistent with making a plan. I only occasionally thought about it before drinking.

Now I use a 'trigger' to remind me. Where I keep the wine, I have a note that can't be missed and it basically reminds me that I'm only allowed one glass of wine a night. It's simple and effective.

I now know in the house that I only drink one glass and outside the house, I've started to turn down drinks. This is real progress.

I've written about this in more detail on my blog.

http://middliferenaissance.blogspot.com/2011/09/trigger-your-motivation.html

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Tools

Alcohol unit calculator

Use this alcohol unit calculator to find out how many units there are in a single drink or in a number of drinks

Alcohol units calculator

Drinking and alcohol

Calculate your units, read about the health risks of drinking too much and find out where to get help and support