A standard Sex on the Beach made to IBA volumes lands near 160 calories; bigger pours and sweeter mixers can push it past 200.
Light Build
Standard Glass
Large/Tall
Classic IBA
- 40 ml vodka, 20 ml peach schnapps
- 40 ml orange + 40 ml cranberry
- Built over ice; ~160 kcal
Balanced
Standard Bar
- 1.5 oz vodka, 0.75 oz schnapps
- 2 oz orange + 2 oz cranberry
- Shaken or built; ~190 kcal
Common
Tall Party
- 2 oz vodka, 1 oz schnapps
- 3 oz orange + 3 oz cranberry
- Collins glass; ~260 kcal
Bigger Pour
What Drives The Calorie Count In This Vodka–Peach Classic
Three things add up: the shot of vodka, the peach liqueur, and the juice blend. The official build lists 40 ml vodka, 20 ml peach schnapps, 40 ml fresh orange juice, and 40 ml cranberry juice in a highball with ice—straight from the International Bartenders Association spec. That volume pattern is the baseline most bars riff on.
Alcohol itself carries energy, even with zero carbs. A 1.5-ounce shot of 80-proof vodka is about 97 calories. Fruit juice adds carbs and sugars, which raise the total quickly. The peach schnapps adds both sweetness and calories from sugar.
Ingredients And Calories (IBA Volumes)
This table uses the IBA volumes and widely used calorie benchmarks per fluid ounce drawn from USDA-based references. Totals are rounded to keep the math clean.
| Ingredient | Amount (ml / fl oz) | Calories |
|---|---|---|
| Vodka, 80-proof | 40 ml / ~1.35 fl oz | ~87 |
| Peach schnapps | 20 ml / ~0.68 fl oz | ~34 |
| Orange juice | 40 ml / ~1.35 fl oz | ~19 |
| Cranberry juice (unsweetened) | 40 ml / ~1.35 fl oz | ~20 |
| Estimated total | — | ~160 |
Bars often swap in cranberry cocktail instead of unsweetened juice; the calorie impact is similar per ounce, while the flavor skews sweeter. Once you add ice melt, the drink’s strength drops a touch, but the energy stays the same.
Juice provides natural sugars, so pace the rest of the day’s sweets. If you track daily limits from health guidelines, you’ll hit the mark faster with a couple of these; that’s where setting a daily added sugar limit helps people keep balance without guessing.
Close Variant: Calories In Sex On The Beach Cocktail — Bar-Standard Pour
Plenty of venues pour a full 1.5 oz shot of vodka and stretch the mixer to fit the glass. A common house build is 1.5 oz vodka, 0.75 oz peach schnapps, 2 oz orange juice, and 2 oz cranberry. That version averages about 190 calories. Swap in a tall Collins glass with 2 oz vodka and extra juice, and you land near 260 calories.
If you prefer a lighter glass, trim the schnapps to 0.5 oz and keep the vodka at 1.25 oz, then split 4 oz of juice between orange and a diet cranberry mixer. That sits near 135–140 calories while keeping the same flavor cues.
Where The Numbers Come From
For the build itself, the official spec confirms the 40-20-40-40 split. For the energy math: 80-proof vodka sits at about 97 calories per 1.5 oz; orange juice runs about 112 calories per 8 oz; unsweetened cranberry juice averages roughly 15 calories per ounce; and peach schnapps typically lands near 51 calories per ounce. Those figures are consistent with USDA-derived datasets and clinical resources. You can also confirm the orange and cranberry entries in USDA-based tables used by dietitians.
Want the canonical formula? The IBA keeps a clean record of the recipe. For a quick look at how spirits add energy, MedlinePlus lists common shots with their calorie counts. For orange juice and cranberry values, USDA-powered tables such as MyFoodData are handy.
How To Estimate Your Glass Without A Scale
Step One: Read The Pour Size
If you’re at home, measure the spirits with a jigger: 1 oz (30 ml) on the small side, 1.5 oz (45 ml) on the large side. In bars, a single is often 1.5 oz. The schnapps pour usually runs half to three-quarters of the vodka pour.
Step Two: Count The Juice
Highballs rarely exceed 6–8 oz of total liquid before ice. If your glass looks short and packed with cubes, assume about 4 oz of juice combined. If it’s tall and lightly iced, assume 5–6 oz of juice.
Step Three: Add The Parts
Use this quick rule of thumb: vodka calories ≈ 65 per fl oz; schnapps ≈ 50 per fl oz; orange juice ≈ 14 per fl oz; unsweetened cranberry ≈ 15 per fl oz. Multiply by the pour, then add. You’ll be close enough for day-to-day tracking.
Nutrition Snapshot Beyond Calories
Vodka adds alcohol and water—no carbs, fat, or protein. Peach schnapps brings sugars. Orange juice contributes a little potassium and vitamin C. Cranberry juice adds tartness and carbs. If vitamin C matters to you, the orange fraction carries it, not the spirit.
On strength: the IBA glass holds about 140 ml before ice. With 40 ml of 40% ABV vodka and 20 ml of a ~20% ABV schnapps, that’s near 20 ml of pure ethanol in the mix. Dilution from ice lowers the final strength in the glass, but it doesn’t change the energy.
Swap Ideas To Raise Or Lower Calories
Lower-Energy Tweaks
- Use diet cranberry for half the red portion. You shave a handful of calories while keeping color and tartness.
- Drop schnapps to 0.5 oz and boost the vodka by 0.25 oz only if you want more bite; that trims sugar but keeps body.
- Pack more ice and shake longer. Extra dilution stretches volume without adding energy.
Sweeter Glasses
- Add a splash of pineapple juice; it raises the total quickly.
- Use flavored vodka; check the label, since many add sugar.
- Top with lemon-lime soda; tasty, but you’re adding more carbs.
Common Builds And Estimated Calories
Here are typical patterns you’ll meet at home and at the bar. These totals use the same per-ounce baselines shown earlier.
| Version | What Changes | Estimated Calories |
|---|---|---|
| IBA Classic | 40 ml vodka; 20 ml schnapps; 40 ml orange; 40 ml cranberry | ~160 |
| House Standard | 1.5 oz vodka; 0.75 oz schnapps; 2 oz orange; 2 oz cranberry | ~190 |
| Tall Collins | 2 oz vodka; 1 oz schnapps; 3 oz orange; 3 oz cranberry | ~260 |
| Lighter Build | 1.25 oz vodka; 0.5 oz schnapps; 2 oz orange; 2 oz diet cranberry | ~135–140 |
Practical Tips For Ordering Or Mixing
When You’re At A Bar
Ask for the pour size on the spirit and the split on the juices. A quick “single or heavy?” gets you an answer. If you’d like a leaner glass, request half-ounce schnapps and a splash of diet cranberry.
When You’re Hosting
Use jiggers for consistency. Keep an unsweetened cranberry option and a diet cranberry option so guests can steer the sweetness. For a lower-energy round, shake longer and pour over fresh ice.
Reference Ingredients You Can Trust
The official recipe comes from the IBA recipe. For calorie values on spirits and juices, clinical and USDA-based databases match the figures used here. If you prefer a nutrient table view, check the USDA-powered entry for orange juice. Calorie ranges for shots of spirits, including vodka, are listed at MedlinePlus.
FAQ-Free Quick Answers Inside The Copy
Is The Drink “Low Calorie”?
Not really. It sits between a light beer and a margarita in energy per glass, depending on the pour. Two rounds can match a small dessert.
Does Fresh Orange Lower Calories?
Fresh-squeezed and carton OJ are similar on energy per ounce. The main swing comes from how much goes in the glass.
What About Zero-Sugar Cranberry?
Diet cranberry mixers bring the total down. Flavor stays close if you keep some real juice for color and tang.
Smart Ways To Fit It Into A Day
Plan ahead. If you’re tracking, leave room for one glass in the evening by trimming a snack. Hydrate between rounds to slow the pace. And if sweets are your thing, consider keeping dessert small on the same day.
Want a broader strategy for keeping intake steady all week? You might like our calories and weight loss guide for clean, step-by-step planning.