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If Dry January is too much for you, try its more lenient cousin—Damp January
Fortune · Viktoriya Kraynyuk—Getty Images

A new year rolls around, and a chorus of people band together to give sobriety a go—that is, for the month of January. Dry January, the month some people abstain from drinking as part of a New Year’s ritual, has grown in popularity since the term was first coined about a decade ago.

About 35% of legal aged adults in the U.S. participated in Dry January in 2022, an uptick from the 21% in 2019, according to CGA, which provides data on the [hotlink ignore=true]food and drink industries.

What was once a simple New Year's resolution has become trendy and even glorified on social media as something to try, whether for health-related reasons or pure curiosity. The world has caught on too, as many restaurants and bars increasingly offer more mocktail options for those who want to join in on the after-work spritz without feeling out of the loop.

But as overly ambitious New Year’s resolutions too often get broken, some have opted for Dry January’s more lenient cousin: Damp January.

Damp vs. Dry January 

Similar to Dry January, Damp January offers participants the chance to reflect on their relationship with alcohol.

“It can become a very reflective moment,” Dr. Akhil Anand, a psychiatrist with Cleveland Clinic's Drug and Recovery Center, tells Fortune. “Any reduction of alcohol is really important,” adding that many people who make an effort to limit or forgo alcohol tend to find they don’t need it to enjoy life like they once thought.

As its name implies, the damp option doesn’t require you to stop drinking altogether. You decide what boundaries to set. With Damp January, people make rules around alcohol consumption, ultimately limiting their intake over 31 days.

For example, if you typically have 15 drinks a week, you may aim to cut out a handful of those each week during the month and slowly curb your alcohol consumption. Alternatively, you may choose drinks with lower alcohol content. Someone may keep their glass of wine with dinner but forgo alcohol in work or social settings. Others may drink on certain days or times of the week. It’s a personal decision, Vedant Pradeep, the CEO and co-founder of Reframe, an alcohol reduction app, tells Fortune, which can be empowering.

“You're making a choice to cut back and to kind of prioritize your health,” he says. “That is a really good step in the right direction.”

Does Dry or Damp January improve health? 

Excessive drinking like binge drinking, which has increased during the pandemic, has long-term health consequences including developing an alcohol-use disorder, alcohol dependence, heart problems, a development of certain cancers, memory problems, depression and anxiety, and social problems, like family and job-related issues, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).