Lifestyle

I Did Dry January and Honestly? It Changed Everything

Colorful mocktails on a bar counter

The mocktail game has seriously leveled up. Photo: Unsplash

Okay so here’s the thing. I wasn’t planning to write about this because honestly it felt kind of embarrassing at first? Like admitting you’re not drinking feels weirdly confessional in a way that admitting you drink too much never did. But then I looked at the numbers and realized oh wait, I’m actually not that weird for doing this.

49% of Americans plan to drink less alcohol in 2025 — up from 34% in 2023

So I did Dry January this year. My third attempt actually — the first two times I made it like 11 days before a friend’s birthday party derailed me. But this time something clicked. Maybe it was hitting 32 and realizing hangovers now feel like actual illnesses. Maybe it was my therapist (hi Dr. Reyes!) pointing out that my “one glass of wine to unwind” had become three glasses and also it was happening every night.

Whatever the reason, I made it the whole month. And then… I just kept going?

Maya’s Take: The weirdest part wasn’t not drinking. It was realizing how much of my social life was built around alcohol. Like when did grabbing drinks become the ONLY way to catch up with people? Why can’t we just get coffee? Or go for a walk? Or literally anything else?

Maya’s Take:

According to a 2025 survey from NCSolutions, 30% of Americans participated in Dry January this year — that’s a 36% increase from 2024. And it’s not just a January thing anymore. Nearly half of Americans say they’re trying to drink less overall.

2025 survey from NCSolutions

And get this — Gen Z is leading the charge. Almost two-thirds of Gen Zers (65%) say they plan to drink less in 2025, and 39% are going fully dry for the entire year. When I was 22 I thought not drinking at a party was social suicide. These kids are literally choosing sobriety and making it cool somehow?

The Science Is Actually Pretty Wild

Here’s something that surprised me. According to Harvard’s Gazette, drinking rates in America have dropped to a 96-year low. Like, we haven’t drunk this little since right after Prohibition ended in 1939. Only 54% of U.S. adults say they drink at all anymore.

Dr. Marisa Silveri, who runs McLean Hospital’s Neurodevelopmental Laboratory on Addictions and Mental Health, credits the “sober-curious movement” for a lot of this. And honestly I think she’s right. Theres something about the framing — “sober curious” sounds so much less scary than “I have a drinking problem” or even “I’m an alcoholic.” It’s like… permission to just try it out without committing to a whole identity shift.

The Good News: 13% of people who do Dry January decide to stay alcohol-free beyond January. And 86% end up cutting back long-term. So even if you “fail” at going completely dry, you’re probably still drinking less than before.
The Good News:

What actually helped me stick with it was the mocktail explosion that’s happened over the past few years. Like, five years ago your non-alcoholic options at a bar were basically soda or cranberry juice. Now there are entire sober bars — like Sans Bar in Austin, which was actually the first one in the US — and even regular bars have stepped up their NA game.

Biscuit (my cat, in case you’re new here) doesn’t care whether I’m drinking wine or sparkling water with bitters. But I swear he’s been more cuddly since I stopped waking up dehydrated and grumpy every morning. Or maybe I’m just projecting. Probably projecting.

The Awkward Conversations

The hardest part wasn’t the cravings or the FOMO. It was other people’s reactions. Some highlights:

“You’re not even going to have ONE drink?” (my mom, at every family dinner)

“Wait are you pregnant??” (three different coworkers, which like… wow)

“That’s so boring” (a guy I was dating, who is no longer a guy I’m dating)

Maya’s Take: It’s wild how defensive some people get when you don’t drink. Like I’m not judging them? I’m just trying to figure out my own stuff. But apperently choosing not to drink is somehow a commentary on everyone else’s choices. The survey data backs this up too — 30% of non-drinkers say they feel judged for not drinking. Which is so backwards when you think about it.

Maya’s Take:

The good news is this stigma seems to be fading, at least among younger people. The survey found that 41% of Gen Z is interested in going to a sober bar. FORTY ONE PERCENT. That would have been unthinkable when I was in my early twenties. We would have roasted anyone who suggested going to a bar that didn’t serve alcohol.

So What Now?

I’m not saying I’ll never drink again. I had champagne at my friend’s wedding last month and it was fine. Nice, even. But I’ve noticed that alcohol has become more of an occasional thing rather than a default. When someone asks if I want to grab drinks, I actually think about whether I want to drink or whether I just want to hang out.

My sleep is better. My skin is better. My anxiety is… well, still there (thanks brain!) but definitely less intense. And I’m saving probably $200-300 a month which in this economy? Not nothing.

If you’re thinking about trying it — whether it’s Dry January or just cutting back — I’d say go for it. The worst case scenario is you learn something about yourself. The best case is you feel better than you have in years.

And if you need mocktail recommendations, my DMs are open. I’ve tried literally all of them at this point.

Maya Chen

Lifestyle writer. Oversharer. Cat mom. Writing about dating apps, burnout recovery, and why you should drink more water. Based in Denver, runs on iced oat lattes.

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