Beers & Burpees Don’t Mix
Let’s get this out of the way first… No one is here to cancel happy hour.
But if you’re training consistently, trying to feel better in your body, and wondering why progress sometimes feels slower than it should, alcohol is usually part of that story whether we want it to be or not.
Alcohol isn’t evil. It’s just not on your side when it comes to fitness.
It’s Not Just About Calories
Most people think alcohol only matters because of the calories. That part is true, but it’s actually the smallest piece of the puzzle.
When you drink, your body treats alcohol as a toxin. That means everything else like burning fat, repairing muscle, even regulating blood sugar, gets put on hold while your liver works to clear the alcohol from your system.
Researchers have shown that your ability to burn fat for fuel drops significantly after drinking. In a study published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, fat burning was reduced by up to 73% for several hours after alcohol consumption. Your body literally cannot prioritize fat loss while alcohol is present.
So even if you ate well that day, trained hard, and hit your protein, your body is now forced into storage mode instead of rebuilding mode.
Every workout you do creates small amounts of muscle damage. That’s not a bad thing, that’s the stimulus for growth. Recovery is when your body uses protein to repair that damage and build stronger muscle tissue. Alcohol interferes with that process.
Your Sleep Is Worse Than You Think
Alcohol can make you fall asleep faster, which is why so many people think it helps their sleep. But the quality of that sleep is worse.
Studies from sleep labs have consistently shown that alcohol reduces deep sleep and REM sleep. The two stages that matter most for physical recovery, hormone balance, memory, and mood. It also raises your resting heart rate through the night and increases how often you wake up, even if you don’t remember it.
You might be in bed for eight hours, but your body didn’t get eight hours of recovery.
This matters because poor sleep increases stress, worsens insulin sensitivity, and drives cravings the next day. All things that work directly against fat loss and performance.
So… Do You Have to Quit Drinking?
No. But you should know the trade offs.
One or two drinks occasionally won’t derail anything. But drinking several times per week adds up fast. Not just in calories, but in missed recovery.
If your goal is to get leaner, stronger, have more energy, and feel better in your body, alcohol becomes something you have to manage instead of ignore.
The Real Takeaway
You don’t need to be perfect to make progress, but your habits should point in the same direction as your goals.
If you’re training hard, eating well, and showing up consistently, alcohol often becomes the one thing quietly working against all of it. Cheers!
Hart











