Alcohol withdrawal symptoms can start within about six hours of the last drink, and they run from mild anxiety and shaky hands to seizures and a life-threatening state called alcohol withdrawal delirium. About half of people who drink heavily and then suddenly stop or cut back feel some withdrawal, though the severity swings widely. Most cases stay mild. A smaller share turn dangerous fast.
What follows is what alcohol withdrawal feels like, the hour-by-hour timeline, who’s most at risk, how it’s diagnosed, and the treatments that keep detox safe. We’re Reach Recovere, a nonprofit that helps you find care that fits and then sort out how to pay for it.
Alcohol withdrawal is the set of symptoms that hit when someone who drinks heavily over time suddenly stops or sharply cuts back. The body has adapted to alcohol, and pulling it away throws the nervous system into overdrive. About half of people with unhealthy alcohol use feel withdrawal when they reduce their intake, though how bad it gets ranges widely.
Two words get mixed up here. Withdrawal is what your body does on its own when alcohol leaves. Detox is the supervised medical process of getting through it safely.
Withdrawal grows out of alcohol use disorder (AUD), the medical name for what many people still call alcoholism, a brain disorder that can be mild, moderate, or severe. It’s common. In 2024, about 27.9 million people ages 12 and older, roughly 1 in 10, had AUD in the past year. Not everyone with AUD goes through withdrawal. The heavier and longer the drinking, the higher the odds.
Alcohol withdrawal symptoms fall on a spectrum, from mild shakiness and bad sleep up to seizures and delirium. Clinicians group them roughly by severity, because that grouping guides how closely a person needs to be watched. The same person can move up the scale within a day, so early mild symptoms don’t guarantee an easy course.
Mild withdrawal is the most common picture, and it usually shows up first. Tremor, the classic “alcohol shakes,” can be noticed within about six hours of the last drink.
Common mild signs include:
Mild does not always stay mild. That’s the part people underestimate.
Moderate withdrawal stacks physical stress on top of the mild signs. As the nervous system ramps up, heart rate and blood pressure climb, sweating increases, and a low-grade fever may show. Some people develop alcohol hallucinosis, seeing, hearing, or feeling things that aren’t there. It affects about 2% of people in withdrawal, and the hallucinations usually clear within roughly 72 hours.
Hallucinosis isn’t delirium tremens, and the difference is the whole point. In hallucinosis, a person can still think clearly between the hallucinations. In delirium tremens, consciousness itself is clouded. The second one is far more dangerous and needs immediate medical care.
Severe withdrawal is where alcohol detox becomes dangerous. Two complications drive the risk: withdrawal seizures and alcohol withdrawal delirium, long known as delirium tremens.
Withdrawal seizures typically occur between 8 and 48 hours after the last drink, and they can strike even when no other withdrawal symptoms are present. Delirium tremens is the most severe form of the syndrome. It brings fever, a racing heart, heavy sweating, agitation, disorientation, and hallucinations, and a person can develop it anywhere from 3 to 8 days after their last drink. Only about 3% to 5% of people in withdrawal progress to delirium tremens, but it can be deadly without care.
The warning signs of severe withdrawal: a seizure, confusion or disorientation, a high fever, agitation that won’t settle, hallucinations with a clouded mind. Anyone showing these needs immediate medical care.
Alcohol withdrawal tends to follow a rough arc: symptoms begin within hours, build over the first day or two, and peak around 72 hours before easing. The exact timing shifts from person to person based on how much and how long they drank, their overall health, prior withdrawals, and other drugs in the picture. Treat the windows below as a map, not a guarantee.
Clinicians often think in overlapping stages tied to onset windows. The table maps each stage to when it tends to start and what it usually looks like.
| Stage | Typical onset | Hallmark signs | Severity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early / mild | About 6 to 12 hours after the last drink |
|
Mild |
| Hallucinosis | Roughly 12 to 24 hours |
|
Moderate |
| Seizure window | About 8 to 48 hours |
|
Severe |
| Delirium tremens | About 3 to 8 days |
|
Emergency |
Stages overlap, and not everyone passes through all of them. Most people never reach the seizure or delirium stages. Source: NIH StatPearls, Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome.
For most people, the acute, physical phase of alcohol withdrawal eases within about a week. Symptoms usually begin within hours, peak around 72 hours, and then taper. After a withdrawal seizure, a person is typically watched closely for roughly the next 24 hours, since more can follow.
That’s the acute stage. Some symptoms outlast it. A subset of people develop post-acute withdrawal, where sleep, mood, and anxiety problems linger for weeks or longer. What stretches the timeline out is usually a long, heavy drinking history, prior complicated withdrawals, and untreated symptoms left to build instead of managed early.
Worried that quitting on your own isn't safe? It might not be. Find a detox or treatment program that fits your situation.
Find Treatment Near YouAlcohol withdrawal is a rebound effect in the brain’s chemistry. Alcohol is a central nervous system depressant that boosts GABA, the brain’s main calming signal, while dampening glutamate, its main excitatory signal. Drink heavily for long enough and the brain adapts: it turns down its own GABA and turns up glutamate to stay balanced.
Take the alcohol away suddenly, and that balance breaks. GABA drops off while glutamate runs high, leaving the nervous system overexcited. That overexcitement is what you feel as the shakes, the racing heart, the anxiety, and, at the severe end, seizures.
This kind of physical dependence builds after a sustained stretch of heavy drinking, not after a single rough weekend. Genetics shape who develops alcohol problems in the first place, with heritability accounting for roughly 60% of the risk.
Severe withdrawal isn’t random. Certain factors make a complicated, dangerous course more likely, and clinicians use them to decide who needs inpatient monitoring. The higher-risk features include:
One mechanism deserves its own mention: the kindling effect. Each time the brain goes through withdrawal, it lowers the seizure threshold, so successive episodes tend to be worse than the last. People who’ve had withdrawal seizures before are at high risk of having them again. That’s why repeated cycles of quitting and relapsing, without medical support, can quietly raise the stakes each round.
Post-acute withdrawal syndrome, or PAWS, is a longer tail of milder symptoms that can continue after the acute phase ends, persisting at a lower, subacute intensity and gradually fading over time.
For alcohol, those lingering symptoms often include anxiety, irritability, low or unstable mood, fatigue, trouble sleeping, and difficulty concentrating. Sleep disturbance, anxiety, and mood swings can persist for up to two years after someone stops heavy drinking, though they ease over time.
PAWS is manageable. Knowing it exists helps, because a rough patch weeks into sobriety can feel like failure when it’s really the brain still healing. Steady support and treatment carry people through it.
Alcohol withdrawal is a clinical diagnosis, which means a provider makes the call from your history, your symptoms, and an exam rather than a single blood test. To measure how severe it is, clinicians lean on a standardized tool: the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol, revised, better known as the CIWA-Ar.
The CIWA-Ar scores 10 common withdrawal symptoms, such as tremor, sweating, anxiety, agitation, nausea, and sensory disturbances. The total score sorts severity and guides treatment:
A rising score is a signal to act. As the number climbs, the care team can step a person up from simple monitoring to medication. Bedside checks and lab work often go alongside the score to track heart rate, blood pressure, and electrolytes.
Alcohol withdrawal treatment has two jobs: get a person through detox safely, then treat the alcohol use disorder underneath it. Care usually moves from evaluation to monitored stabilization to follow-up, and it can happen in an outpatient clinic for mild cases or an inpatient unit for moderate to severe ones. Supportive care, fluids, vitamins, and medication all play a role.
Medical detox is supervised withdrawal. A team evaluates how severe the case is, watches for complications, and treats symptoms as they appear. In supervised settings, dosing is often symptom-triggered, meaning medication is given in response to a rising CIWA-Ar score rather than on a fixed clock.
The arc looks like this:
Detox on its own isn’t a cure. It’s the doorway to treatment, not the finish line.
Benzodiazepines are the mainstay of treatment for moderate to severe alcohol withdrawal, because they calm the same overexcited nervous system that drives the symptoms. Diazepam (Valium) is often used first for its rapid, long-lasting effect, with lorazepam (Ativan) preferred when there’s concern about liver function. For mild withdrawal in the outpatient setting, a tapering course of a benzodiazepine or gabapentin may be used with a support person involved. Phenobarbital is another option for severe cases.
Supportive medications matter just as much:
Separate from withdrawal itself, three medications carry FDA approval to treat the underlying alcohol use disorder: naltrexone, acamprosate, and disulfiram. All three are nonaddictive—and this is the fear that stops people from trying them, they don’t trade one dependence for another—and they can be started during or after detox. Every medication here is prescription-only and meant for use under medical supervision.
Light or occasional drinkers who stop usually don’t face dangerous withdrawal, and they can ride out mild symptoms at home with rest, fluids, and food. The calculus changes for heavy, long-term drinkers, where unsupervised detox can be risky.
The reason supervision saves lives is simple. A clinical setting catches a rising CIWA-Ar score, a brewing seizure, or early delirium before it becomes a crisis. At home, those warning signs can slip past until it’s an emergency. If you’re unsure which side of the line you’re on, talk to a clinician before you stop.
The most reliable way to soften withdrawal is to not quit cold turkey if you’re physically dependent. A gradual, medically supervised taper lowers the intensity compared with abrupt cessation, and it lets a clinician adjust the plan as symptoms shift.
A few steps help when you’re planning to stop:
The stakes are plain: alcohol withdrawal is potentially life-threatening for someone who has been drinking heavily, and doctors can prescribe medications that make it safer and less distressing. Unsupervised cold-turkey quitting is exactly what to avoid in that situation.
Yes. Severe alcohol withdrawal can be fatal, mainly through delirium tremens, seizures, and the strain that extreme autonomic overactivity puts on the body. This is the reason medical supervision matters so much for heavy drinkers.
The numbers show why prompt care is the deciding factor. Historically, the death rate from delirium tremens ran as high as 20%. With modern critical care, fast diagnosis, and treatment, that rate is now around 1%. The danger is real, and it’s also highly treatable when caught early.
Red-flag signs that call for immediate medical care include a seizure, confusion or disorientation, a high fever, severe agitation, and hallucinations paired with a clouded mind. If any of these appear during detox, get medical help right away.
Getting through withdrawal is the first step, not the cure. Detox clears alcohol from the body, but it doesn’t treat the brain changes that drive alcohol use disorder, which is why ongoing treatment is what carries recovery forward.
The outlook is hopeful. No matter how severe the problem seems, evidence-based treatment with behavioral therapy, mutual-support groups, and medication can help people recover. Many people with AUD do. Setbacks are common, and they’re read as a cue to adjust the plan, not a personal failure. Getting help early can head off a return to drinking.
Recovery usually runs as a continuum: detox, then a treatment program, then aftercare that keeps the support going. This is where Reach Recovere’s Find-and-Fund approach comes in: we help you find care that fits your life, then work out how to pay for it.
It depends on how much you drank and which test is used. Blood and breath tests detect alcohol for a shorter window, while urine tests can pick up alcohol or its byproducts longer. Feeling sober and being fully clear of alcohol aren't the same thing. Testing windows vary by person, so there's no single fixed number.
For light drinkers, mild withdrawal can often be managed at home. For heavy, long-term drinkers it can be risky, because seizures and delirium tremens are possible. If you've had a prior withdrawal seizure or delirium, or you drink heavily every day, detox under medical supervision instead.
Yes. Tremor, twitching, and cramping are common, driven by the overexcited nervous system that defines withdrawal and by electrolyte shifts such as low magnesium or potassium. Mild shaking is typical, but severe or worsening symptoms should be evaluated by a clinician.
It can. Withdrawal raises heart rate and blood pressure, and anxiety adds to the strain, which together can produce chest discomfort. Chest pain is never something to wait out. Seek immediate medical care to rule out a serious cause.
Kindling means each repeated episode of alcohol withdrawal tends to be more severe than the one before. Repeated cycles lower the seizure threshold, so people who've withdrawn many times face a higher risk of seizures and complications.
Acute anxiety often peaks in the first 24 to 72 hours, alongside other withdrawal symptoms. For some people, anxiety lingers as part of post-acute withdrawal, easing gradually over weeks to months. Persistent anxiety is treatable, and it's worth raising with a provider.
Withdrawal commonly brings irritability, low mood, and depression, partly because alcohol and mental health conditions often occur together. Integrated treatment that addresses both at once tends to work best, which is why a full assessment is part of good detox care.
If alcohol has a grip on your daily life, you don’t have to white-knuckle detox alone, and you don’t have to figure out the system by yourself. Medically supervised detox keeps withdrawal safe, and the right treatment program afterward is what makes recovery stick. Most plans cover medically necessary detox and treatment, and there are options for people without strong coverage too.
Reach Recovere is a nonprofit. We help you find quality detox and treatment that fits your needs, then help you sort out how to pay for it. That’s the whole point: get you to care, and get the cost out of the way.
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I am a professional writer, mainly in the fields of mental health, addiction, and living in recovery. I attempt to stay on top of the latest news in the addiction and the mental health world and enjoy writing about these topics to break the stigma associated with them.
I am a professional writer, mainly in the fields of mental health, addiction, and living in recovery. I attempt to stay on top of the latest news in the addiction and the mental health world and enjoy writing about these topics to break the stigma associated with them.
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