America's 15 Hardest Drinking Cities
Ah, Consumer Behavior. Forbes took a look at the CDC's 2007 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Survey (BRFSS) and ranked 33 cities based on their resident's answers to three survey questions:
whether they had at least one drink of alcohol within the past 30 days; whether men had more than two drinks per day or women one drink per day; and whether they had five or more drinks on one occasion. In each case, higher-ranking cities reported larger percentages of their population answering in the affirmative.
Of course, as Forbes notes, a better "hard drinkin'" rank doesn't mean your city is a "den of debauchery," and "just downing a few cold ones doesn't make a person irresponsible." Well, like, duh...
Forbes' 15 Hardest Drinking Cities
- 1. Austin, TX
- 2. Milwaukee, WI
- 3. San Francisco, CA
- 4. Providence, R.I.
- 5. Chicago, IL
- 8. (tie) Seattle, WA, Cleveland, OH, St. Louis, MO
- 9. Boston, MA
- 10. Cincinnati, OH
- 11. Pittsburgh,PA
- 12. Virginia Beach, VA
- 13. Portland, OR
- 14. Jacksonville, FL
- 15. Detroit, MI
America's Hard-Drinking Cities [Forbes]
(Photo: Paxton Holley )
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Comments:
We're number 1! We're number 1! And I grew up in Number 12! Woot!
This has been reported ad nauseum in the Austin media - and every channel has thoughtfully provided accompanying stories re: the evils of college kids' binge drinking at 6th Street bars. I have lived in Austin 9 years and been there (6th st) only once - which was more than enough.
@Wormfather is Wormfather: @Uptowngirl: I think they surveyed residents and discounted the travelers/tourists. My opinion only...
@Wormfather is Wormfather: I'm surprised by NYC and Vegas not being on the list either, but eh.... My old hometown, coming in at 4th = happy medium
I'm including the residents. I haven't seen a town drink as hard as New Orleanians. I even talked with a mixologist from London who said Bombay Sapphire recognized New Orleans as the hardest drinking city in North America, and was on par with Western Europe.
these questions are too confusing - especially for your above-average imbiber. for example, more than 2 drinks/day? is that calendar day or 24-hr period? some would consider four drinks before midnite & four after as one day while others would consider it two. 5 drinks/occasion? what exactly is an "occasion"? i mean, is a week-long bender one occasion? if i start with a few hair of the dog rounds as part of my morning routine, but take a break for lunch & then get back to business, is that the same occasion or is that 2 separate occasions?
@Uptowngirl: Agreed. There is something seriously wrong with this survey's methodology if New Orleans isn't first on the list.
well, they obviously didn't stop by madison wisconsin, where about 1/5th of the population is between 18 and 24 and survives the weekends by downing as many glass boots full of spaten optimator and as many of wando's fishbowls full of god knows what as they can. ha, i heard someone from boston recently bragging about drinking 40 shots of beer in 40 minutes. puhlease, if you haven't joined the century club (100 in 100) you're not a drinker. i won't even mention the 5 beers in 5 minutes challenge, though i guess i just did. (all hail kanderson for doing all five in less than 90 seconds!)
Yeah, I'm surprised Madison isn't on there, too. A lot of "college towns" I expected are absent. Oh well! Time to heat it up and have a cold one or twelve!
Drunks in Boston? I've never heard of such a thing. Why if ever there was a teetotaling city it would be Boston.
Ending the sarcasm here, I'm not surprised. Massachusetts in general seems to be a bit of a drinking state. If you don't drink you are pretty much stigmatized and ostracized from social settings around here.
I'm a non-drinking Republican Yankee fan in Massachusetts. It's a wonder I'm not dead yet. ;)
@redhelix: Don't you mean rehtahded?
It doesn't surprise me that Austin is #1 on the list. 6th street in downtown Austin is nothing but bar after bar after bar. There's probably 20 bars inside a 100 yard stretch of the street on both sides. On the weekends they close off 6th street to traffic at night (cross streets remain open) so none of the drunks get hit by motorists. I don't think Austin has ever heard of a dry precinct.
It'd be worth seeing the breakdown of which alcohols are consumed in these cities. SF is #3 because of the enormous amount of wine consumed there - SF has some great local beers and its share of residents who drink them but if you look at the questions asked, it would tend to favor cities with lots of wine consumption.
Portland and Seattle are likely more mixed between wine and beer, whereas Austin seemed like a beer town to me when I was there last month.

























Booya! I live between #4 and #9. Let the party begin!