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Wine Matches Beer in U.S. Drinkers' Preferences This Year

For only the second time in two decades, beer is not the dominant choice when U.S. drinkers are asked whether they most often drink liquor, wine, or beer. Gallup now finds nearly as many U.S. drinkers naming wine (35%) as beer (36%), while ...

Beer Is Americans' Adult Beverage of Choice This Year

Beer leads wine as the drink of choice among Americans who consume alcohol, by as big a margin as Gallup has seen in six years. The percentage of Americans who report consuming any alcohol is now 64%, similar to recent levels.

Majority in U.S. Drink Alcohol, Averaging Four Drinks a Week

Two in three U.S. adults drink alcohol, with drinkers consuming just over four drinks per week, on average. Beer is still Americans' preferred drink, but wine is a close second. And, 22% of drinkers say they sometimes drink too much.

Americans Still Favor Beer Over Other Alcoholic Beverages

Americans who drink alcohol continue to say they most often choose beer (42%) over wine (34%) and liquor (19%). Beer has recovered from its popularity slump earlier this decade.

Is Your Vendor Relationship Strategic?

How well do you work with your suppliers and vendors? Learn strategies from The Golden Thread to improve these vital business relationships.

Older Men Drink More Regularly, but Younger Men Drink More

Among U.S. men who drink alcohol, those aged 50 and older are the most likely to report imbibing in the past 24 hours. However, younger men report consuming more drinks per week.

Drinking Habits Steady Amid Recession

Despite some talk that the recession could be changing Americans’ drinking patterns, Gallup finds no real shift in the prevalence of drinking alcohol among U.S. adults (now 64%) or in how much Americans say they drink. Beer beats out wine, 40% ...

Drinking Highest Among Educated, Upper-Income Americans

Roughly eight in 10 upper-income Americans and U.S. college graduates say they drink alcohol, compared with only about half of lower-income Americans and those with a high school diploma or less.

U.S. Drinking Rate Edges Up Slightly to 25-Year High

Sixty-seven percent of U.S. adults drink alcohol, a slight increase over last year and the highest reading recorded since 1985 by one percentage point. Beer remains the favorite beverage among drinkers, followed by wine and then liquor.

Forty Percent of Young Men Say They Sometimes Drink Too Much

About one in five U.S. drinkers say they sometimes drink more alcoholic beverages than they should, according to a recent Gallup Poll. Men under age 30 are significantly more likely than older men or women of any age to say they sometimes drink ...
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