Neurologists Reveal How Alcohol Consumption at Night Can Harm Your Brain Health
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Beth Ann Mayer
Mon, May 18, 2026 at 3:25 PM CDT
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Mindfulnessย experts often urge us to focus on the present: Live in the moment rather than worry about what you said yesterday or what youย mightย have to deal with three months from now.
Still, that doesn't mean you should never think about the future. And what you do todayโtonight, evenโcan lay the foundation for betterย brain healthย as you age, especially if you turn a single smart choice around your nightly routine into a habit.
"By far the most critical single nightly habit isย sleep," saysDr. Paul E. Bendheim, MD, a clinical professor at the University of Arizona College of MedicineโPhoenix and the founder ofย BrainSavers, Inc. "Good sleep improves and protects brain health. Poor sleep quality is increasinglyย recognized as a risk factorย forย Alzheimerโs diseaseย and all-causeย dementia."
Another neurologist agrees, noting that nighttime is a pivotal period for your brain.
"Nighttime is when the brain does a large portion of its recovery work," saysย Dr. Jasdeep S. Hundal, Psy.D. ABPP-CN, the director of The Center for Memory & Healthy Aging at the Jersey Shore University Medical Centerโs Hackensack Meridian Neuroscience Institute.
Dr. Hundal tellsย Paradeย that your brain recharges, repairs and organizes information from the day into memory while you sleep. A good night's rest also helps regulate your mood and reset attention for the next day, which 10/10 explains why you feel on edge after a bad night of sleep.
He notes that habits can, over time, affect your clarity, memory and the efficiency of your brain. There's one specific nightly habit that could be secretly shrinking your brain, though. Neurologists reveal the habit, which was once thought to be "healthy."
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This Nightly Habit Could Be Secretly Shrinking Your Brain, Neurologists Warn
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"Alcohol shrinks the brain," explainsDr. Fawad Mian, MD, a neurologist and the founder of Ascend Regenerative.
Dr. Mian notes that alcohol is toxic to brain cells. "It suppresses growth factors, which impairs the health of our neurons," Dr. Mian explains. "Itโs like taking away sunlight and water from plants."
Another neurologist compares it to a side effect of another nighttime habit: taking a bath.
Dr. Jessica Zwerling, MD, MS,ย encourages people to consider how "wrinkled" their fingers can look after a long soak in the bathtub. Drinking can have a similar effect on the brain.
"When the brain is exposed to ongoing heavy drinking, it can shrink, or 'lose volume,' which affects the way we think," Dr. Zwerling reveals. "These changes can happen in vulnerable areas of the brain, particularlyย the hippocampus, which we think of as a 'storage chip.'"
She notes that shrinking (or "atrophy") can also happen in white and gray matter areas (neurons and axons in the central nervous system that help you process information), adding that areas affected by the shrinking can include the cerebellum (the balance center) and the frontal lobes (known for judgment and planning).
Alcohol can have a shrinking effect on the brain at any time of day. But nighttime is when you sleep, which can add an extra layer of stress on the brain (and your whole body). Alcohol's effect on sleep may surprise you if a cocktail orย glass of red wineย makes you sleepy.
"Alcohol acts as a sedative in the first half of the night," points out Dr. Bendheim. "In theย second half of the night, as alcohol is metabolized, there is restless sleep, increased awakenings and a tendency towards unpleasant dreamsโanxiety-laden."
But those sleep stages are the deep, restorative ones your brain needs to recover and store information, Dr. Hundal warns. "In simple terms, your brain is not getting the full reset it needs. Alcohol also slows communication between brain cells, so even if you sleep through the night, your brain is not processing and organizing information as effectively."
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Other Ways Nightly Drinking Affects Brain Health
Dr. Hundal warns that alcohol can have short and long-term brain health consequences beyond shrinkage. "In the short term, alcohol slows down brain function," he says. "That affects attention, reaction time and decision-making. It also interferes with memory because your brain has more difficulty forming and storing new information, especially if sleep is disrupted."
Over time, Dr. Hundal shares that repeatedly consuming alcohol can have a cumulative effect, worsening all of the above and more. In the most severe cases, that long-term alcohol use is associated withย structural and functional changesย in the brain.
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How Much Alcohol Is Safe for the Brain?
There's not a "safe" amount of alcohol for brain health, although this was not always thought to be the case. "The conversation around this is shifting," Dr. Hundal explains. "Moderate use was previously considered relatively safe, but moreย recent dataย suggests even lower levels may have some negative impact on brain health. From a brain perspective, less is generally better."
Dr. Bendheim understands that the whiplash on alcohol and health is real, but the more recent data on alcohol is sound.
"Although alcohol is deeply embedded in many cultural and social practices, the currentย evidenceย is clear: abstinence or very low consumption is generally the best choice for long-term brain and overall health," he explains.
He notes that more recent data trumps older research that suggested a possible link betweenย heart health benefits and light drinking.
"It is important to acknowledge that not using alcohol can create meaningful psychological and social difficulty for some individuals," Dr. Bendheim explains. "However, and importantly, that concern does not negate the broader medical-scientific evidence documenting beyond doubt that even modest alcohol use carries real and severeย long-term health risks."
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