No, no amount of alcohol is known to be safe in pregnancy, so skipping wine is the safest choice.
Red wine can feel like the “nice” kind of alcohol. It shows up at dinners, weddings, and low-key nights at home. That vibe makes the question stick: is one glass actually a problem?
The clean, science-based answer from major medical and public health groups is consistent. Alcohol crosses the placenta. It can affect development, and there’s no way to predict who is impacted at lower levels.
Why This Question Comes Up So Often
Wine sits in a weird spot. People link it with relaxation, food, and tradition. Some people also mix up “moderation” advice for non-pregnant adults with pregnancy guidance, even though the goals are different.
Another reason: people hear mixed anecdotes. One person says they had wine and everything turned out fine. Another person says they didn’t. Anecdotes don’t give a safe threshold.
How Alcohol Reaches The Baby
After you drink, alcohol moves from your stomach and intestine into your bloodstream. From there it can pass through the placenta into the baby’s bloodstream.
The baby’s body clears alcohol more slowly than an adult’s. That difference is a big part of why medical groups lean toward “none” instead of trying to define a “safe” serving size.
Drinking Red Wine During Pregnancy: What The Evidence Shows
Researchers can’t run trials that assign pregnant people to drink alcohol, so most evidence comes from observational data, screening programs, and outcomes seen with prenatal alcohol exposure. That kind of evidence has limits, yet it still points in the same direction: alcohol exposure can harm development.
When researchers do find “no difference” at low intake in one dataset, it often reflects measurement problems, under-reporting, or outcomes that weren’t tracked long enough. That’s one reason guidance stays conservative.
Can You Drink Red Wine While Pregnant?
Public health guidance is blunt: there is no known safe amount and no safe time to drink during pregnancy, including wine. See the CDC’s guidance on About Alcohol Use During Pregnancy.
OB-GYN guidance aligns with that message. ACOG states there is no safe amount or type of alcohol in pregnancy, which includes red wine. See ACOG’s Alcohol and Pregnancy.
UK guidance is similar. The NHS recommends not drinking alcohol during pregnancy to keep risk low. See Drinking alcohol while pregnant.
If you want a plain-language overview of outcomes tied to prenatal alcohol exposure, MedlinePlus summarizes fetal alcohol spectrum disorders at Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders.
Alcohol And Pregnancy Guidance At A Glance
This table turns the usual “rules” into real-life decisions, without pretending there’s a safe loophole.
TABLE #1 (Place this after ~40% of the final article once expanded)
| Situation | What Current Guidance Says | What To Do In Real Life |
|---|---|---|
| One glass of red wine | No known safe amount during pregnancy | Skip it; choose a non-alcohol option |
| A sip at a toast | No safe time during pregnancy to drink | Stop at the sip; switch drinks and move on |
| Wine “only with meals” | Type of alcohol doesn’t change the risk | Food doesn’t make alcohol safe in pregnancy |
| Red wine vs. beer vs. spirits | All contain ethanol, the harmful ingredient | Don’t trade one type for another |
| Early pregnancy before a positive test | Stop once you know you’re pregnant | Write down timing/amount; bring it up at a prenatal visit |
| “Special occasion” drinking | No safe occasion-based exception | Plan a celebration drink that’s alcohol-free |
| Cooking with wine | Heat can reduce alcohol, but it may not remove all | Pick recipes that don’t rely on wine, or use a substitute |
| “Non-alcoholic” wine | Some products still contain small amounts of alcohol | Read labels and choose truly alcohol-free options |
| Regular drinking before pregnancy | Higher intake is tied to higher risk | Stop now and talk with your prenatal care clinician |
What If You Drank Before You Knew You Were Pregnant?
This happens. A lot. The next move is simple: stop drinking now, then bring the details to your prenatal appointments so your care team can tailor next steps to your timeline.
Avoid spiraling into guilt. You can’t redo last week. You can control what happens from here.
Write Down The Details While They’re Fresh
Jot the dates, what you drank, and rough amounts. Note whether it was one night or a pattern across weeks. This gives your clinician something concrete to work with.
Bring It Up At A Prenatal Visit
Say it plainly. “I had wine before I knew I was pregnant, and I stopped.” You’re giving your clinician a risk picture, not asking for permission.
Alcohol-Free Swaps That Still Feel Like Wine Time
Most people miss the ritual more than the alcohol: the glass, the pour, the pause. You can keep that routine without ethanol.
TABLE #2 (Place this after ~60% of the final article once expanded)
| Swap | Why It Works | Make It Feel Like A Treat |
|---|---|---|
| Sparkling water + fruit | Same “sip and relax” vibe | Serve in a stemmed glass with ice |
| Tart cherry juice spritz | Dry, tangy flavor profile | Add soda water and a citrus twist |
| Grape juice diluted | Wine-like base without alcohol | Use a 50/50 mix with sparkling water |
| Herbal tea iced | Complex flavors, zero alcohol | Chill and add a splash of lemon |
| Alcohol-free “0.0%” wine | Mimics the taste for some people | Check the label for true 0.0% products |
| Mocktail with bitters-free build | Feels like a bar drink | Use a salted rim or fancy garnish |
| Kombucha (check label) | Fermented bite some people like | Choose brands that state alcohol content clearly |
| DIY “sangria” bowl | Fruit-forward and festive | Use juice + sparkling water + sliced fruit |
Handling Social Pressure Without A Speech
You don’t owe anyone a debate. A short line and a quick topic change usually does the job.
- “No thanks, I’m skipping alcohol.”
- “I’m sticking with sparkling tonight.”
- “I’m driving.”
- “I’ve got an early morning.”
Next Steps
If you’re pregnant, the safest choice is to skip red wine and other alcohol. If you already drank, stop now, write down the details, and bring it up at a prenatal visit.
If stopping feels hard or you were drinking daily before pregnancy, talk with your prenatal care clinician before making big changes on your own.
References & Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“About Alcohol Use During Pregnancy.”States there is no known safe amount or time to drink alcohol during pregnancy, including wine.
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).“Alcohol and Pregnancy.”OB-GYN guidance that no safe amount or type of alcohol is established during pregnancy.
- NHS (UK).“Drinking alcohol while pregnant.”Recommends not drinking alcohol during pregnancy to reduce risk to the baby.
- MedlinePlus (NIH/NLM).“Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders.”Explains how alcohol use during pregnancy can lead to fetal alcohol spectrum disorders.
Mo Maruf
I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.
Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.