Alcoholism
How to Keep Your Friendships When You Stop Going to Bars
The 3-part formula for turning down bar invites without losing your friends.
Posted August 2, 2025 Reviewed by Margaret Foley
If you’ve outgrown the drinking scene but your friends haven’t—this is for you.
“I want to stay friends…but I don’t want to keep going to bars.”
This is one common struggle ex-drinkers face when they have decided to leave alcohol behind. How do you honor your path without losing the people you care about? That’s what we're going to cover in this blog.
When You Stop Drinking—But Still Want Connection
Before we get to the practical part, I want to tell you a quick story about one impressionable “no” that taught me it’s OK to reset expectations.
Growing up, my whole family spent Spring Festival at Aunt Xu’s house. She made the best festival dishes, and her home was always perfectly decorated. It was the family tradition for as long as I could remember.
Then, the year Aunt Xu turned 50, she surprised everyone. Three months before the holiday, she sent a message to the whole family:
“I’ve loved hosting everyone in the past. But going forward, I want to prioritize more quality time with my family during the holidays. I’ll be taking a break from hosting—but I’d love to bring everyone’s favorite steamed fish.”
Of course, people were surprised. But what stayed with me wasn’t the surprise—it was the respect I felt. She was the first woman to show me that we’re allowed to say no to something, even if we’ve always said yes in the past. The same applies when we stop drinking but still want connection.
Redefining Connection: Saying No to Bars Without Saying No to Friends
Honoring your new path without losing the people you care about is essentially about saying no to old expectations. It’s easy to confuse the activity we do with someone for the relationship itself. They’re so intertwined, we sometimes forget that declining an old activity isn’t the same as rejecting the person. Only when we separate the activity from the relationship can we find the courage and compassion to communicate our new needs—and then, all we need are the right tools.
The 3-Part Formula for Turning Down Bar Invites With Grace
In my other post, 7 Graceful Ways to Say No to a Drink — Without Saying the Word ‘No,’ I walked through seven ways to turn down a drink—without even saying the word “no.” The same skills can also be applied to turning down a bar invitation.
Except, I believe the most effective way to gracefully decline drinking-related invites is to combine these three key components:
- Validate the invitation and/or relationship.
- Set new expectations with a soft no.
- Offer an alternative with “I can’t do this, but I would love to…”
This is the exact formula Aunt Xu used when she gently declined to keep hosting the family during the holidays:
- Validate the invitation and/or relationship: “I’ve loved hosting everyone in the past.”
- Set new expectations with a soft no: “But going forward, I want to prioritize more quality time with my family during the holidays.”
- Offer an alternative: “I’ll be taking a break from hosting, but I’d love to bring everyone’s favorite steamed fish.”
To apply the same formula to turning down a drinking invitation could look like:
“I had so much fun in the past drinking together. But moving forward, I want to spend more time on non-drinking-related activities. I’ll be taking a break from bars and events that involve too much alcohol, but I would love to spend time together over a hike, picnic, or quiet hangout at my place sometime soon. Let me know what a good time is for you.”
Leading by Example: The Unexpected Power of Your “No”
Many people don’t realize that having the courage and skill to say no gracefully is its own form of leadership. Like my aunt’s “no” years ago—it planted the permission in me to one day do the same.
I’ve been surprised by how often people have told me that my decision to say no to something inspired them to do the same in their own lives. This happens more often than you might think, especially with drinking-related activities.
In a culture where alcohol is glorified, many people quietly feel pressured to “drink like everyone else,” even when drinking isn’t actually how they’d prefer to spend their free time.
By giving yourself permission to say no, you unconsciously give others permission to do the same. That’s what makes you a real-life role model.
Saying “no” for a thriving alcohol-free life
At Sober Curiosity, we believe that truly breaking free from alcohol’s hold—and building a thriving alcohol-free life—takes more than just “stopping drinking.” It takes four pillars to create a sustainable sobriety system:
- Pillar One – Value: your whys behind choosing sobriety
- Pillar Two – Belief: the story you’ve been told about alcohol and yourself
- Pillar Three – Action: breaking the drinking pattern and replacing alcohol with more empowering options
- Pillar Four – Result: embracing the full journey—both the wins and the setbacks
Saying no with grace is a key skill that belongs to the Action pillar and supports the Value pillar. It asks us to develop the ability to say no and reset expectations. As with any new skill, we may fumble and feel uncomfortable at first, but over time, we get better.
Only when we learn to turn down what no longer aligns with the life we want can we make space for what does—the people, experiences, and values that bring us true fulfillment and meaning. If you’d like to explore this further, check out my 7 Graceful Ways to Say No to a Drink scripts.