When you ask “what’s stronger” among common alcoholic drinks, the clear winner based on pure alcohol content by volume is spirits. A typical pour of spirits contains significantly more alcohol by volume than an equal pour of wine or beer. However, the real-world answer gets more nuanced when you consider how each is typically served and consumed.
Defining “Stronger”
For the purposes of this discussion, “stronger” refers to Alcohol By Volume (ABV). This percentage indicates how much pure alcohol is present in a given volume of the drink. A higher ABV means a more concentrated alcohol solution.
The Contenders by ABV
- Beer: Most standard lagers fall in the 4-6% ABV range. Craft beers, especially certain IPAs, stouts, or barleywines, can push into the 7-12% ABV range, with some rare examples even higher.
- Wine: Table wines typically range from 11-14% ABV. Fortified wines like Port or Sherry are much higher, often 17-20% ABV, due to added spirits during fermentation.
- Spirits: This category includes whiskey, vodka, rum, gin, tequila, and brandy. Most standard spirits are around 40% ABV (80 proof), though some can be lower (e.g., liqueurs) or considerably higher (e.g., barrel-proof whiskeys, some absinthes, which can exceed 60% ABV).
The Reality of Consumption: What Other Articles Miss
Here’s where the simple ABV comparison often leads people astray. While spirits undeniably have a higher alcohol percentage, they are served in much smaller quantities than beer or wine. This is a critical insight that many discussions overlook.
Standard Drink Sizes Equalize Total Alcohol
In many countries, a “standard drink” or “unit” of alcohol is defined as containing approximately 14 grams (or 0.6 fluid ounces) of pure alcohol. When you look at standard serving sizes, you’ll find they are calibrated to deliver roughly this same amount:
- Beer: A 12-ounce (355 ml) serving of 5% ABV beer.
- Wine: A 5-ounce (148 ml) serving of 12% ABV wine.
- Spirits: A 1.5-ounce (44 ml) shot of 40% ABV (80 proof) spirits.
This means that one standard beer, one standard glass of wine, and one standard shot of spirits all deliver approximately the same amount of alcohol into your system. The perception of one being “stronger” often comes from how quickly someone consumes multiple servings, or from mixing spirits with other ingredients that mask their potency.
Beyond the Numbers: Other Factors
While ABV is the primary metric for raw strength, your personal experience of “stronger” can be influenced by:
- Speed of Consumption: Drinking several shots quickly will lead to faster intoxication than slowly sipping a beer over an hour, even if the total alcohol ends up being similar.
- Mixers: Diluting spirits with non-alcoholic mixers (soda, juice) can make them feel less potent, but the alcohol content remains.
- Individual Factors: Body weight, metabolism, food intake, and tolerance all play a significant role in how quickly and strongly you feel the effects of alcohol.
Final Verdict
By pure alcohol concentration (ABV), spirits are definitively stronger than both wine and beer. A milliliter of whiskey contains more alcohol than a milliliter of wine, which contains more than a milliliter of beer.
However, if your question is about the total alcohol delivered in a typical serving, then a standard beer, a standard glass of wine, and a standard shot of spirits are roughly equal. The key takeaway: pay attention to serving size and your consumption rate, not just the percentage on the label.