How a BAC Calculator Works, and Why the Number Is Only an Estimate
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators
Blood Alcohol Concentration is simply the share of your blood that is alcohol, usually written as a percentage like 0.05 or 0.08. A BAC calculator does not measure that directly the way a breathalyzer does; instead it predicts it from a handful of facts you supply. The engine behind nearly every online version is the Widmark formula, named after the Swedish toxicologist Erik Widmark who worked it out in the 1920s. Understanding its four moving parts makes the output far more meaningful than a single mystery number.
The first input is how much alcohol you actually drank, measured in grams of pure ethanol rather than glasses. Because a standard U.S. drink holds about 14 grams of alcohol, the calculator multiplies your drink count by that figure, but the count only works if your pours match the standard. A 16 oz pint of 7% IPA or a generous home cocktail can quietly equal two or three standard drinks, which is the most common reason people underestimate their own BAC.
The second and third inputs, body weight and sex, set how widely that alcohol spreads. Heavier bodies contain more water and more tissue to absorb the alcohol, lowering the concentration, which is why the formula divides by weight. Sex enters through the distribution factor r, about 0.68 for men and 0.55 for women, reflecting average differences in body water. These are population averages, so a lean, muscular person and someone with more fat mass at the same weight can land at noticeably different real values.
The fourth input is time, and it works in your favor. The liver clears alcohol at a steady pace of roughly 0.015 BAC per hour regardless of weight or sex, so the calculator subtracts that amount for every hour since your first drink. Nothing on the menu of folk remedies, not coffee, cold water, exercise, or fresh air, changes this rate. If the math says you are above a level you care about, the only real fix is waiting, and the calculator can show you roughly how long that wait is.
Finally, respect what the number cannot capture. Food in your stomach slows absorption, some medications interfere with metabolism, carbonation can speed it up, and your personal r value and liver speed are not the textbook averages. For these reasons the estimate should guide planning and learning, never a decision to get behind the wheel. The legal driving limit is 0.08% in most U.S. states and 0.05% in Utah, but impairment can start lower, so treat any positive reading as a reason to find another way home.
Quick tips
- Convert big pours into standard drinks before entering them: count a 16 oz strong beer or a double cocktail as two drinks, not one, or the estimate will read too low.
- Start the clock at your first sip, not your last, because the calculator subtracts elimination from the full elapsed time since drinking began.
- Use it before you go out to plan a cutoff time, not afterward to justify driving; the only safe BAC for driving is zero.
- Remember the 0.015-per-hour rule when reading the result: dividing your estimated BAC by 0.015 gives a rough number of hours until you near zero.
The BAC Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.