Track your first sober night.
Enter the date and time of your last drink. This private sober counter will track your days, hours, minutes, money saved, and progress. No account needed.
Start your sober counter
This stays on your device. You do not need to create an account, explain yourself, or tell anyone. Just enter your last drink date and start tracking.
Your first number matters.
The number does not have to be big. One hour matters. One night matters. One morning without regret matters.
The point of this counter is not to shame you. It is to give you proof. Proof that time is moving. Proof that your body is getting a break. Proof that you can get through more than your brain says you can.
Common sober milestones
First 12 hours
This can feel uncomfortable, especially at night. Keep it simple: hydrate, eat, rest, and avoid arguments.
First 24 hours
One full day is a real win. Your brain may still bargain with you, but you now have proof you can pause.
First 3 days
This can be a hard stretch. If symptoms feel severe or unsafe, get medical help right away.
First week
Sleep, mood, and cravings may still swing around. Do not confuse discomfort with failure.
First month
You may start seeing more money saved, more clear mornings, and more control over your evenings.
Restarting
If you drank again, restart the counter. Do not turn one setback into giving up completely.
If seeing the number feels hard
Some people feel proud when they see their sober time. Other people feel pressure. Both are normal.
The number is not your worth. It is just information. If you need to restart, restart. If you made it one hour longer than last time, that still matters.
This is not about looking perfect. It is about getting honest and giving yourself a real chance.
What to do when you want to reset the counter
Before you reset it because you are about to drink, try this:
Wait 20 minutes
Tell yourself you can decide later. Not now. Let the craving peak and come down first.
Change rooms
Move away from the place where you usually drink. Your environment matters more than you think.
Use the help page
Go to the “I Need Help Right Now” page and follow the steps before making a decision.
Safety reminder
Alcohol withdrawal can be dangerous for some people, especially after heavy or long-term drinking. If you experience seizures, hallucinations, chest pain, severe confusion, fainting, or severe shaking, seek emergency medical care immediately.
Tonight’s goal is simple.
Do not worry about forever tonight.
Get through dinner. Get through 9 PM. Get through the craving. Get through the silence. Get through the habit.
Then wake up tomorrow with one clean number on the board.
This website is intended for adults age 21 and older. This tool is for educational and supportive purposes only and is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Alcohol withdrawal can be serious or life-threatening. If you have severe symptoms or feel unsafe, seek emergency medical care immediately.