Alcohol detection windows at a glance
| Test type | Approximate detection window |
|---|---|
| Breath (breathalyzer / BAT) | While alcohol is in your system — usually up to ~12–24 hours |
| Blood | Up to ~12 hours |
| Urine (traditional) | Up to ~12–24 hours |
| Saliva | ~12–24 hours |
| EtG (urine) | Up to ~80 hours after drinking |
| Hair (EtG) | Up to ~90 days |
Why EtG detects alcohol so much longer
Your body eliminates alcohol itself at a fairly steady rate — roughly one standard drink per hour — so a breathalyzer only catches recent drinking. But the body also produces ethyl glucuronide (EtG), a byproduct that lingers long after the alcohol is gone. An EtG urine test can detect drinking for up to about 80 hours, which is why courts, probation and abstinence-monitoring programs favor it.
What affects the timing
- How much you drank and over what period
- Your weight, sex and metabolism
- Food in your stomach and hydration
- Which test is used — breath vs. EtG is a huge difference
Which alcohol test do you need
For current impairment or a DOT alcohol test, a breathalyzer (BAT) is standard. For proving abstinence over a few days — common in family court and probation — an EtG test is the tool. Tell us what your program requires and we'll set it up.
