Every summer, the same script plays out: long days, backyard barbecues, rooftop happy hours and a cold alcoholic drink in hand to help relax and socialize.

In the past it was thought that drinking alcohol — specifically red wine — was a health food . Yet more recent data has changed that thinking. The current position of the World Health Organization is that no level of alcohol consumption is safe for our health. Drinking risks start with the first drop and compound with every drink.

But here's the good news: genuine summer relaxation doesn't require alcohol. There are more evidence-informed ways to do that now than ever. Below are three categories of alcohol-free summer relaxation strategies: what to drink instead, how to move your body, and how to quiet your mind.

Non-Alcoholic Drinks To Refresh And Unwind

The non-alcoholic beverage aisle has changed dramatically in the last few years. What used to mean sparkling water and juice now includes an entire category of "functional" drinks formulated to mimic the social ease of a cocktail without the hangover.

Brewing a warm or iced cup of chamomile, lemon balm, or lavender tea before bed does something canned beverages can’t. They build ritual. The physical act of preparing tea — the kettle, the steeping, the first sip — can become a conditioned cue that tells the brain the workday is over. This may quench what people actually seek from an evening drink. R esearch links chamomile to improved sleep quality and reduced anxiety, while lemon balm has traditionally been used to calm a frazzled nervous system.

A wave of new adaptogenic drinks use ingredients like L-theanine, ashwagandha, and GABA-supporting botanicals. Kava ( Piper methysticum ) provides fast-acting relaxation and muscle-soothing effects. Native to the Pacific Islands, its active compounds (kavalactones) act directly on the brain's GABA receptors much like a mild sedative and are typically used for acute anxiety or insomnia. These drinks nudge the same inhibitory neurotransmitter pathways alcohol acts on but without the depressant effects or the regret the next morning. Importantly, alcohol-free botanical drinks are not risk free, so it's worth reading about the risks before imbibing or discussing with your physician if you're on other medications.

For the tactile experience of a cold, effervescent drink in hand, fermented and botanical sodas offer the fizz and complexity of a cocktail without the ethanol. Some contain gut-supportive probiotics as a bonus, and early human trials suggest regular kombucha consumption may shift gut bacteria toward beneficial, short-chain-fatty-acid-producing species — the kind increasingly linked to mood and stress regulation.

Engage In Relaxing, Healthy Movement (Without Alcohol)

One of the most consistent findings in stress physiology is that movement can be the fastest route to a calmer nervous system. Exercise increases circulating endorphins and helps reduce stress hormones like cortisol. This is part of why a hard workout can leave you feeling more relaxed than a cocktail ever could.

A local yoga, Zumba, or strength class gives you a structured, social outlet in the same time slot happy hour usually occupies, trading the bar stool for a mat or a mirror. Regular yoga practice has been associated with measurably lower evening cortisol levels compared with active control groups.

Get on the water or the trail

Longer daylight hours make early-morning hikes, sunset kayak trips, and stand-up paddle board sessions realistic on a weeknight. Being near water has a documented calming effect on anxiety and slows heart and breathing rates — and the mild cardiovascular effort adds a physiological reset on top of the psychological benefits.

Host an ice cream social instead of a happy hour

Swapping the beer-and-wine backyard gathering for a build-your-own sundae bar keeps the social ritual of summer entertaining intact, minus the alcohol. It’s also the gathering the kids remember more fondly. Physician and bioethicist Ezekiel Emanuel makes a similar case in his book Eat Your Ice Cream , arguing that the real health value isn't the dessert itself but the social connection built around sharing it.

Engage In Mindful Downtime To Quiet The Sober Mind

Instead of reaching for an alcohol-based nightcap to sleep, there are other healthier options. The sedative effect of alcohol can be deceptive. It may help you fall asleep faster but it also fragments the deep and REM sleep stages that leave you feeling restored. Here are a few lower-tech alternatives that do the same job without the tradeoff.

Sunset meditation or breathwork

Ten to fifteen minutes of guided meditation or slow, diaphragmatic breathing activates the parasympathetic nervous system that can invoke relaxation. Diaphragmatic breathing reliably increases heart-rate variability, a marker of parasympathetic, "rest and digest" activity, while lowering respiration rate.

Progressive muscle relaxation

The technique, which involves systematically tensing and then releasing each major muscle group, from your feet up to your face, is a well-studied, low-cost tool for physically discharging the tension that accumulates over a long summer day and can be helpful in managing chronic pain or anxiety.

Trading a final scroll through your phone for fiction, a crossword, or a physical book removes the blue light and dopamine-driven stimulation that keeps the mind awake. This makes it easier to fall and stay asleep without the help of alcohol.

Ultimately, none of these interventions require giving up your summer’s social rituals. It’s not about deprivation, it’s about substitution. An herbal iced tea on the porch, a sunset paddle with friends, or fifteen minutes of meditation before bed can deliver the same signal of "I’m off duty" that a drink promises, without asking your liver, your sleep, or tomorrow's version of you to pick up the tab.