Alcohol Addiction: Signs, Withdrawal, and Treatment
Table of Contents
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is the most common addiction in the U.S., affecting an estimated 28 million adults. Because alcohol is legal, social, and woven into daily life, the line between heavy drinking and a clinical disorder is often invisible until consequences mount. This guide breaks down what alcohol addiction is, how it develops, the warning signs, the withdrawal risks, and what treatment actually works.
Unlike most other addictions, alcohol withdrawal can be medically dangerous — even fatal — for people with heavy long-term use. Anyone considering stopping after sustained daily drinking should consult a medical professional first.
What alcohol use disorder is
Alcohol use disorder is a chronic medical condition characterized by an impaired ability to stop or control alcohol use despite negative consequences. It exists on a spectrum from mild to severe, defined in the DSM-5 by 11 criteria including cravings, tolerance, withdrawal, drinking more than intended, and continued use despite problems.
Most people with AUD do not match the stereotype of someone living on the street — the majority are working professionals, parents, students, and retirees who appear functional to everyone around them. This is why AUD is often called "high-functioning" until it isn’t.
Signs of alcohol addiction
Behavioral signs
- Drinking more or longer than intended
- Unable to cut down despite trying
- Time spent drinking or recovering interferes with work, family, or hobbies
- Continued drinking despite relationship, work, or health problems
- Hiding bottles, drinking alone, drinking before social events
- Driving after drinking, missing important events, or risky behavior while drinking
Physical signs
- Needing more alcohol to feel the effect (tolerance)
- Shakiness, sweating, or nausea when not drinking
- Sleep problems — falling asleep easily, waking at 3 a.m.
- Weight changes, facial flushing, broken capillaries on the face
- Elevated liver enzymes, high blood pressure
Psychological signs
- Cravings or preoccupation with the next drink
- Anxiety, irritability, or depression that lifts when drinking starts
- Memory blackouts, missing chunks of evenings
- Guilt, shame, or defensiveness about drinking
How alcohol addiction develops
Most AUD develops over years, not weeks. The progression usually goes:
- Social drinking — alcohol is part of celebration, stress relief, or social bonding
- Heavy drinking — more frequent, more per session; tolerance builds quietly
- Problem drinking — consequences begin (DUI, fight, missed work, health issue) but drinking continues
- Alcohol dependence — the body needs alcohol to function normally; missed days produce shakes, anxiety, or insomnia
- Severe alcohol use disorder — drinking organizes the day; major medical and life consequences accumulate
Genetics, mental health, trauma history, and environment all influence how quickly someone moves through these stages. People with parents who had AUD are 4–7 times more likely to develop it themselves.
Alcohol withdrawal can be dangerous
This is what sets alcohol apart from most other substances: alcohol withdrawal can kill you. After heavy long-term use, abruptly stopping can produce:
- Tremors, anxiety, insomnia (mild)
- Sweating, nausea, racing heart (moderate)
- Seizures (severe)
- Delirium tremens (DTs) — severe confusion, hallucinations, autonomic instability, fatal in about 5% of untreated cases
Anyone drinking heavily every day for weeks or more should consult a doctor before stopping. A medical detox with benzodiazepine tapering can prevent the dangerous complications. See withdrawal timelines by substance.
Treatment for alcohol addiction
Unlike cocaine or meth, alcohol has several FDA-approved medications and one of the most-studied treatment evidence bases of any addiction. The most effective approaches:
Medical detox (when needed)
3–7 days of supervised tapering with benzodiazepines for anyone at risk of seizures or DTs.
Medication-assisted treatment (MAT)
- Naltrexone — reduces cravings and the rewarding feel of alcohol
- Acamprosate — reduces post-acute withdrawal symptoms and supports abstinence
- Disulfiram (Antabuse) — produces an unpleasant reaction when alcohol is consumed
- Gabapentin — often used off-label for cravings and post-acute symptoms
Behavioral therapy
- Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
- Motivational interviewing
- The Community Reinforcement Approach (CRA)
- 12-step facilitation
- SMART Recovery
Levels of care
Most people benefit from a step-down through detox → residential → PHP → IOP → outpatient. Levels of care explained walks through what to expect at each stage.
Related resources
- Levels of care explained
- How long does withdrawal last? (by substance)
- Cocaine and alcohol — what happens when you mix them
- Dual diagnosis — treating both matters
Frequently asked questions
How much alcohol is too much?
NIAAA defines heavy drinking as more than 4 drinks on any day or 14 drinks per week for men, and more than 3 drinks on any day or 7 per week for women. But the more useful question is whether drinking is producing consequences — relationships, work, mood, sleep, health. If it is, the amount is too much regardless of national averages.
Can I just stop drinking on my own?
For light or moderate drinkers, yes. For heavy daily drinkers, no — alcohol withdrawal can be medically dangerous. If you drink heavily every day, talk to a doctor before quitting, or enter a medical detox. A 3–7 day supervised taper prevents the dangerous complications.
What is the most effective treatment for alcohol addiction?
There is no single best treatment — the most effective approach combines medication (naltrexone, acamprosate, or disulfiram) with behavioral therapy (CBT, motivational interviewing) and ongoing support (12-step or SMART Recovery). Long-term outcomes are strongest when MAT and therapy continue for at least a year.
Is AA the best support group for alcoholism?
AA has the longest track record and the largest network of meetings, but it is not the only option. SMART Recovery uses cognitive behavioral techniques and is preferred by many people uncomfortable with the spiritual framework of AA. Refuge Recovery uses Buddhist principles. Most clinicians recommend trying multiple options to find what fits.
What happens if I keep drinking?
Long-term heavy drinking causes liver disease (fatty liver, hepatitis, cirrhosis), increased risk of multiple cancers (mouth, throat, esophagus, liver, breast, colon), heart disease, brain shrinkage, severe depression and anxiety, sleep disorders, and increased mortality. Many of these conditions partially or fully reverse with sobriety, especially in earlier stages.
Talk to a Bodhi consultant today
Free, confidential consultation — 24/7
Bodhi places adults in Joint Commission and CARF accredited addiction treatment programs nationwide. Most PPO and HMO insurance plans accepted.
Sources & references
- National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). Understanding Alcohol Use Disorder. niaaa.nih.gov
- American Psychiatric Association. DSM-5-TR, Alcohol Use Disorder criteria.
- SAMHSA. Medication-Assisted Treatment for Alcohol Use Disorder.
- CDC. Alcohol and public health.



