Alcohol and illegal drugs
Alcohol has a wide range of effects on your body. Adding illegal drugs into the mix can have unpredictable – even fatal – results. Find out more here.
Alcohol is recognised as a ‘psychoactive substance’ by the World Health Organization, because of how it affects your brain, the way you think and feel, and your health.1
Illegal drugs are psychoactive substances too and have a wide range of different dangerous health effects on their own. If you drink alcohol and take drugs at the same time or close together, it can have serious harmful effects as the different substances interact with each other and with your body. The effects can even be fatal.
The best advice is not to take illegal drugs at all. If you do drink alcohol, you should never combine it with illegal drugs, and always stick to the UK Chief Medical Officers’ (CMOs) low risk drinking guidelines.
If you or someone else needs urgent help after taking drugs or drinking, call 999 for an ambulance. Tell the crew everything you know. It could save their life.
Alcohol is a depressant, which means it alters the delicate balance of chemicals in your brain2 and interferes with processes in your central nervous system.3
All illegal drugs have different effects of their own, which are dangerous in their own right – including depressants like heroin and tranquilisers. If you have alcohol with another depressant it can multiply the effect – putting your body at increased risk.
Some other illegal drugs have a ‘stimulant’ effect, like cocaine, ecstasy (MDMA) and other amphetamines. Combining a stimulant with alcohol can cause additional stress on your body, which can be dangerous.4
If you’re under the influence of drugs you are less likely to make considered decisions about how much alcohol you drink - these lowered inhibitions put you at risk of acute alcohol poisoning.
And with no quality control in the world of illegal drugs, you can never be sure of exactly what you’re taking - they can be mixed or contaminated with other harmful substances. Adding alcohol into the mix adds another risk factor to what is already a potentially lethal cocktail.
Here are some facts about what can happen when you mix certain illegal drugs with alcohol.
The UK Chief Medical Officers’ low risk drinking guidelines advise it’s safest for both men and women to drink no more than 14 units a week, spread over three or more days with several drink-free days, and no bingeing. Drinking more than this puts you at greater risk of heart disease, seven types of cancer and other health problems.
Cannabis (also called marijuana or weed) is the most used illegal drug in the UK.5 It can have a variety of effects on people ranging from causing feelings of relaxation to being lethargic or paranoid, confused or anxious.6
If you use cannabis and alcohol together, the results – both physical and psychological – can be unpredictable. Drinking alcohol at the same time as using cannabis can make you feel dizzy or nauseous, or make you vomit.7
Never drive after smoking cannabis, or drinking alcohol. You are more likely to crash – and if you combine the two, the danger is even greater.8
Drink driving – the law
Both cannabis and alcohol can affect your mental health too. Psychiatric effects of cannabis include panic, anxiety, paranoia and depression.9 Skunk, a term for stronger types of cannabis, can pose even greater risks.10
And because of the way alcohol interferes with your ‘fight or flight’ response,11 drinking can make you more vulnerable to anxiety,12,13 and make symptoms worse.14
Cannabis is usually smoked with cancer-causing tobacco too, and if you use tobacco together with alcohol there is a multiplying effect on your risk of cancer because of the way they interact.15
Alcohol makes it easier for the mouth and throat to absorb the cancer-causing chemicals in tobacco.16
Taking alcohol and cocaine together increases the risk of heart attacks, fits and even sudden death.
When alcohol and cocaine are taken together, they interact to produce a highly toxic substance in your liver called cocaethylene.17 It increases the depressive effects of alcohol on your nervous system, making your reaction to the cocaine stronger and more dangerous.
Cocaethylene takes longer to get out of your system than either alcohol or cocaine if taken on their own. This means your heart and liver are exposed to a longer period of stress - mixing alcohol and cocaine can be fatal up to 12 hours after you’ve taken them.18
Ecstasy (also known as MDMA) is a stimulant which can make people feel energised and uninhibited, while also raising body temperature and heart rate19 and contributing towards feelings of depression, anxiety and panic attacks for some users.20
Ecstasy dehydrates you. So does alcohol, because it’s a ‘diuretic’ which means it makes you pee more, and sweat more.21 This makes it harder to keep enough fluid in your body. If you drink alcohol while taking ecstasy - you risk overheating and becoming dangerously dehydrated when you combine the two.
Both MDMA and alcohol damage your liver too.22,23 The liver is the organ that sustains the greatest degree of tissue damage through heavy drinking, which leads to alcohol-related liver disease.24
Dehydration can become serious and lead to confusion and seizures. Serious dehydration requires urgent medical attention.25
Long-term use of MDMA has also been found to have links to anxiety and depression.26 Long-term heavy drinking negatively impacts your mental health too27 – so combining the two means there’s more than one way you’re increasing the risk to your mental health.
Amphetamines - often called ‘speed’ - are a stimulant which as well as creating feelings of alertness, increase the rate of your breathing and heart rate, and increase your blood pressure.28
Taking any stimulant which makes you feel more alert can make you less aware of the effect of any alcohol you drink,29 so you may end up drinking more than you realise – putting you at greater risk of acute alcohol poisoning.
Both amphetamines and alcohol reduce your inhibitions too,30 you are more likely to do something you regret – and you are putting yourself at greater risk of accidents.
And just like ecstasy, amphetamines can also increase your body temperature and cause dehydration – which is heightened when you add alcohol. As amphetamines already put a lot of pressure on your heart, adding alcohol can be fatal.
Alcohol with heroin is one of the most dangerous combinations of drugs.
Alcohol lowers the amount of heroin required to fatally overdose - around half of people who die from heroin overdoses have drunk alcohol.31
Heroin - as well as other opiates like methadone - slows down your heart rate and breathing.32 As alcohol is also a depressant, if you combine the two, your risk of overdose increases. You are also at greater risk of choking if you vomit, as both drugs together impair your gag reflex.
Benzodiazepines (‘benzos’, diazepam, Valium or Xanax) are a type of depressant, which are sometimes given under prescription to treat anxiety. Possession of these types of drugs in the UK is illegal without a prescription, and there are also illegally produced ‘street benzos’ which are similar but can be far more dangerous.33
Any medication you have been prescribed by a doctor is not illegal for your own use. Depending on what you’re taking and your health condition, drinking can make medication less effective, or lead to dangerous health consequences. Always consult with your doctor or pharmacist if you think you might want to drink any alcohol.
Alcohol and medication
Taking benzodiazepines can make you drowsy, dizzy and sometimes aggressive. Taking them with alcohol is dangerous, and increases your risk of overdose and death. That’s because they both depress your central nervous system, which affects your breathing and gag reflex.34
These types of drugs have also been implicated in some cases of drink spiking.35 Find out more about drink spiking here, and how you can stay safe.
The number of illegal drugs has increased rapidly over recent years, due to substances known as ‘new psychoactive substances’ (NPS). These have been illegal since 2010, but they were previously sometimes referred to as ‘legal highs’.
The wide range of substances in this category means they can have a wide range of very different effects. For example, prominent types of NPS include a stimulant called mephedrone (‘meow meow’) and a synthetic cannabinoid called ‘spice’. Mixing them with alcohol is dangerous - it’s impossible to definitively say exactly how they will react if you mix them together.
The best advice is not to take any illegal substances, and to avoid alcohol with them if you do.
In an emergency, if you or someone else needs urgent help after taking drugs or drinking, call 999 for an ambulance. Tell the crew everything you know. It could save their life.
If you need urgent help outside of a medical emergency:
For more information and advice on illegal drugs, visit the websites below.
If you are concerned that you or someone you care about has a problem with alcohol there is a lot of help available. Here you can find useful links and phone numbers to get the support you need.
Get support[30] Taylor, B., Irving, H.M., Kanteres, F., Room, R., Borges, G., Cherpitel, C., Greenfield, T. and Rehm, J. (2010). The more you drink, the harder you fall: a systematic review and meta-analysis of how acute alcohol consumption and injury or collision risk increase together. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 110(1-2), 108-116.
[31] National Treatment Agency for Substance Abuse. HS, 'Does the combined use of heroin or methadone and other substances increase the risk of overdose?', 2007.
Last Reviewed: 16th May 2023
Next Review due: 16th May 2026