Cuisine saine avec des ingrédients favorables à la réduction de l acide urique

Beer, Wine, and Spirits: What the Data Says About Alcohol and Gout

(Updated : 29 April 2026) 3 min read

In brief

Alcohol is one of the most well-documented dietary triggers for gout attacks. Beer is the most problematic (purines + alcohol), but all alcoholic beverages can raise uric acid. Ethanol increases uric acid production and slows its renal excretion. Wine is slightly less risky than beer, but still inadvisable during active gout. The scientific evidence is clear: reducing alcohol is one of the most effective levers.

Alcohol is one of the best-documented risk factors for gout flares. But not all drinks are created equal. Beer is far worse than wine, and some choices are significantly better than others. Here is what the data actually shows.

Why Does Alcohol Raise Uric Acid?

Alcohol affects uric acid through three mechanisms:

  1. It increases uric acid production: the liver’s breakdown of ethanol generates endogenous purines
  2. It reduces kidney excretion: alcohol competes with uric acid for renal excretion
  3. It dehydrates: dehydration concentrates uric acid in the blood

Beer: The Number One Offender

Beer is particularly harmful for gout because it combines alcohol with purines from brewer’s yeast (guanosine). It stacks every risk factor at once:

  • 2+ beers daily: 2.5x higher risk of gout
  • Beer shows the strongest association with gout of any alcoholic beverage
  • Even non-alcoholic beer contains purines (the yeast is still present)

For craft beer lovers: unfortunately, craft beers, IPAs, and stouts tend to contain even more yeast residue than filtered commercial beers, making them potentially worse for uric acid levels.

Wine: A Less Risky Option

Wine, particularly red wine, contains very few purines. Available data shows a much weaker association with gout compared to beer:

  • 1-2 glasses daily: only a modest increase in risk
  • Red wine contains polyphenols (resveratrol) that may have a slight protective effect
  • However, the alcohol itself still affects uric acid metabolism

Drink Comparison Chart

Drink Purines Gout risk Verdict
Regular beer High (guanosine) Very high Avoid when possible
Non-alcoholic beer Moderate Moderate Not as safe as you think
Red wine Very low Low to moderate Least risky option
White wine Very low Low to moderate Similar to red wine
Whiskey, vodka None Moderate Better than beer
Sparkling water None None Best choice

Practical Tips for Social Situations

  • Swap beer for a glass of wine whenever possible
  • Alternate every alcoholic drink with a full glass of water
  • Set a 2-drink maximum per occasion
  • Club soda with lime is an excellent alternative at bars and parties
  • During football season or BBQs, try switching to hard seltzer (lower purine than beer)

Want to check the full nutritional profile of your favorite foods? Use our interactive food database.

PDF Guide

Complete dietary strategy including alcohol guidance

The PDF guide gives you a full dietary plan that addresses alcohol, with clear rules on what to drink, how often, and how to manage occasional indulgences without triggering a gout attack.

  • Alcohol rules built into the plan
  • Alternatives to high-risk drinks
  • 14-day meal plan with or without alcohol

Get the guide — €9.90

The information on this website is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Please consult your doctor before making dietary changes, especially if you are on medication.

Grégoire Tranchat

Grégoire Tranchat

Author & site creator

Passionate about nutrition for over 10 years, Grégoire created this site after personally dealing with high uric acid. He relies on trusted official sources (NHS, Mayo Clinic, MedlinePlus) to understand the relationship between diet and the AUG index. He shares his research here to help others make better daily food choices.

Grégoire is not a healthcare professional. The content on this site is for informational purposes and does not replace medical advice.

Practical meal guide

Want to go further?

Browse our database of 2,281 foods with the 3 AUG composite indices crossing up to 22 parameters (gout, stones, weight), or download our practical guide with 7-day meal plans.

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The information on this website is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. It is not a substitute for professional medical consultation. Please consult your doctor or a registered dietitian before making dietary changes, especially if you are on medication.