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How To Stay Sober During The Holidays

9 min read
Cathy Bilotti - Clinical Director - Simple Path Recovery

Cathy Bilotti, M.ED., LMHC

Clinical Director

How To Stay Sober During The Holidays hero image warning of the dangers of the holiday season for recovering addicts.
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Article SummaryThe single most powerful tool for holiday sobriety is preparation. Decisions made in advance carry far more weight than decisions made in the moment, when emotions and social pressure are running high.

The holidays are supposed to be a season of joy, but for many people in recovery, they are the hardest stretch of the year. Office parties, family gatherings, year-end celebrations, and emotional anniversaries all collide in a few short weeks, and almost all of them involve some combination of alcohol, drugs, and old triggers. Staying sober during this time takes more than willpower. It takes planning.

Are you worried about being able to stay sober during the holidays? The good news is that thousands of people in recovery navigate the holidays sober every single year, and many of them find that the season becomes easier with practice. With the right strategies, support, and self-care, you can not only survive the holidays sober but actually enjoy them. If you are still in early recovery or feel especially vulnerable, structured support such as an intensive outpatient program can be an excellent anchor through high-risk weeks.

Why the Holidays Are Especially Hard for People in Recovery

How To Stay Sober During The Holidays is an important question since it is a high risk period for people to relapse.

Understanding what makes the holidays such a high-risk period is the first step toward navigating them well. Several pressures stack up at the same time, and they are not always obvious from the outside. According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, some people are more likely to drink beyond their limits during this time.

Increased Social Drinking and Drug Use

From Thanksgiving through New Year’s Eve, alcohol shows up at almost every social gathering. Even people who barely drink the rest of the year sometimes indulge during this period. For people in recovery, the increased exposure to substances, combined with constant invitations to celebrate, creates a steady stream of potential triggers.

Family Stress and Old Dynamics

Family time is meaningful, but it can also surface unresolved conflict, criticism, or roles you have been working to leave behind. Spending extended hours with relatives can reactivate emotional patterns that drove substance use in the first place.

Emotional Triggers Like Loneliness, Grief, and Memory

The holidays carry a heavy emotional load. Some people feel lonely. Others grieve loved ones who are no longer here. Many face complicated memories about who they used to be during past holidays. Building skills for managing emotions in early sobriety is especially important during this season.

Plan Ahead Before the Season Begins

The single most powerful tool for holiday sobriety is preparation. Decisions made in advance carry far more weight than decisions made in the moment, when emotions and social pressure are running high. Look at your calendar in early November and identify which events you will attend, which you will skip, and which require special planning. Talk to your sponsor, therapist, or trusted recovery contact about your plan. Putting it into words solidifies your commitment.

Set Boundaries Around Events and Family

Boundaries are not punishments. They are clear statements about what you will and will not accept during the season. Healthy holiday boundaries protect your recovery without isolating you from the people you love.

Boundaries About Substances

You do not have to attend every event where alcohol or drugs will be present. For the events you do attend, decide in advance how long you will stay and which beverages or rituals you will participate in. You are also free to ask hosts to keep nonalcoholic options visible and accessible.

Boundaries About Time and Energy

Saying yes to every gathering during the holidays is one of the most common early recovery mistakes. Pace yourself. Decline events that drain you or trigger old patterns. Leaving early is always an option, and the people who matter will understand.

Build Your Holiday Recovery Toolkit

tips for How To Stay Sober During The Holidays include things like finding a support network to manage cravings and have a go-to non-alcoholic drink.

A few simple supplies and habits go a long way in protecting your sobriety during the holidays. Before the season starts, assemble your toolkit:

  • A list of three to five people you can call from any event if a craving hits
  • A go-to nonalcoholic drink so you always have something in your hand
  • A pre-written reason for not drinking, in case anyone asks
  • A list of meetings, including virtual ones, you can attend on holidays themselves
  • A grounding or breathing technique you can use in the bathroom of any gathering
  • A planned ride or transportation option that does not depend on others

Carrying these tools mentally and physically reduces the cognitive load when challenging moments arise. You do not have to figure anything out on the fly.

Have an Exit Strategy for Every Event

Every social event you attend during the holidays should come with a clear exit plan. Decide ahead of time how long you will stay, who knows, you might leave early, and how you will get home. If you arrive feeling strong but start to feel triggered partway through, leaving is not a weakness. It is recovery in action.

Some people in recovery find it helpful to drive themselves to every event so they are never dependent on someone else’s timeline. Others travel with a sober friend who has agreed to leave when they want to leave. Either approach is valid.

Holiday Sobriety Survival Strategies at a Glance

The table below offers a quick reference for the most common holiday challenges and the sober strategy that addresses each one.

ChallengeCommon TriggerSober Strategy
Office partiesOpen bar, social pressure, professional anxietySet a time limit, bring your own drink, leave on schedule
Family dinnersOld conflicts, criticism, alcohol on the tableSet a time limit, bring your own drink, and leave on schedule
New Year’s EveDrinking culture, reflection on the past yearAttend a sober event, stay in, host a substance-free gathering
Grief anniversariesLoneliness, painful memoriesSchedule meetings, call a sponsor, plan distractions
TravelDisrupted routines, isolationPack meeting info, schedule check-ins, keep healthy habits
Gift exchangesFinancial stress, family tensionSet a budget, lower expectations, leave room for self-care

You will not need every strategy for every event, but having the framework reduces stress before the season begins.

Take Extra Care of Your Body and Mind During the Holidays

The basics of self-care matter even more during high-stress weeks. Aim to protect the daily habits that keep your recovery stable:

  • Prioritize seven to nine hours of sleep, even when schedules get busy
  • Eat regular, balanced meals instead of grazing on holiday snacks all day
  • Limit caffeine and avoid energy drinks during high-stress events
  • Get some movement every day, even a short walk between gatherings
  • Allow yourself quiet time alone, especially after intense social hours
  • Stay hydrated, since dehydration can intensify cravings and anxiety

The holidays are not the time to overhaul your routines. They are the time to defend them.

Stay Connected to Your Support System

Isolation is one of the biggest risks during the holidays, especially for people who have lost touch with family or are new to a recovery community. Make connection a daily habit during this season.

Attend extra meetings, even virtual ones, during the weeks leading up to and following major holidays. Many fellowships modeled on Alcoholics Anonymous host alcathons or marathon meetings on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Eve. Call your sponsor more often than you think you need to. Reach out to friends in recovery who understand what you are navigating without explanation.

If you are early in recovery, consider attending a sober holiday event in your area. They exist in nearly every city and are a powerful reminder that joy without substances is possible.

What To Do If You Slip

A slip during the holidays is not the end of your recovery story. Many people relapse during this season, and many of them go on to build years of strong sobriety afterward. If you use it, the most important thing is what you do next.

Reach out immediately to a sponsor, therapist, or treatment provider. Do not wait for the new year. Do not wait until you feel ready. The faster you reconnect to support, the easier it is to interrupt the slide.

A Note for Family Members

If you are a family member of someone in recovery during the holidays, your role matters. Keep alcohol and other substances out of common areas, have nonalcoholic options visible, and avoid pressuring your loved one to explain their sobriety to extended family. Take care of yourself, too. Family support groups like Al-Anon often host holiday-specific meetings that can be enormously helpful during this stretch of the year.

Holiday Sobriety Is a Skill You Can Build

The first holiday season in recovery is often the hardest. Each year after that tends to get a little easier as you develop your own toolkit, your own traditions, and your own confidence that joy without substances is real and sustainable. If you are unsure whether your current recovery plan is strong enough for the holiday season, or if you are wondering whether you are ready for addiction treatment, a confidential conversation with a qualified provider can help you map the right next step.

The holidays will keep coming every year. With the right preparation, they can become a season you look forward to rather than a season you simply survive.

Frequently Asked Questions About Staying Sober During the Holidays

Should I avoid holiday parties altogether if I am in early recovery?

Not necessarily, but skipping the highest-risk events in early sobriety is often the wisest choice. Attend only what genuinely matters to you, bring sober support if possible, and never feel guilty for prioritizing your recovery over an obligation. Self-protection during the first year is essential.

How do I respond when people pressure me to drink at family events?

Keep your response simple and confident. Statements like “I am not drinking tonight” or “I will pass, thanks” need no further explanation. If pressed, you can mention health reasons, an early morning, or that you are driving. The less you negotiate, the faster the conversation moves on.

What if I relapse during the holidays?

A slip does not erase your recovery. Reach out immediately to a sponsor, therapist, or treatment provider, even before the new year. Speed matters more than perfection. The longer you wait, the harder it becomes to reconnect with support, so prioritize honesty over shame.

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Cathy Bilotti - M.ED., LMHC - Clinical Director

Cathy Bilotti, M.ED., LMHC

Clinical Director

Cathy decided 10 years ago to switch gears and leave her family restaurant business to pursue a career she felt was more rewarding and aligned with her passion of helping others. Cathy received her master’s degree in mental health counseling from Florida Atlantic University and is a licensed mental health counselor in the state of Florida.

She has worked in the field for the past 8 years and has experience in treating both mental health and substance abuse. Cathy is passionate about creating a safe, trusting environment with her clients that promotes healing. Her desire is to explore the root of her client’s problems and how substance use became the solution to their issues.

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