A standard gin-and-tonic ranges from ~140 to ~200 calories depending on the pour, tonic type, and garnishes.
Diet Mixer
Classic Build
Double + Regular
Light & Crisp
- 1.5 oz gin
- Diet tonic or club soda
- Lime wedge
Lowest kcal
Pub Standard
- 1.5 oz gin
- 5 oz tonic
- Ice-forward build
Balanced
Tall & Citrus
- 2 oz gin
- 6–8 oz tonic
- Extra lime
More kcal
Calorie Count In A Classic G&T: What Drives The Number
Two things set the energy total: the ethanol in the spirit and the sugar in the mixer. A 1.5-ounce shot of 80-proof gin contributes about 97 calories from alcohol alone, and that never changes with brand flavorings. Regular tonic adds the rest through sugar. Pour more spirit or use a sweeter mixer and the total climbs; go lighter or switch to diet tonic and the total drops. The ice, bubbles, and lime barely move the needle.
Typical Builds And Real-World Totals
Bars pour differently. Home glasses vary too. Use these common builds as a quick yardstick. The ranges reflect different brands and glass sizes, yet they land close for most pours.
Common Gin–Tonic Builds
| Build | Estimated Calories | What’s In The Glass |
|---|---|---|
| Light Highball | ~120–140 | 1.5 oz gin + 4 oz light tonic |
| Classic Highball | ~150–170 | 1.5 oz gin + 5 oz regular tonic |
| Tall Pub Pour | ~170–200 | 1.5 oz gin + 6–7 oz regular tonic |
| Diet Mixer Version | ~95–110 | 1.5 oz gin + diet tonic or soda |
| Double Pour | ~220–260 | 3 oz gin + 5–6 oz regular tonic |
Hitting a target is easier once you know your daily calorie needs. Set your number, then pick the build that fits your night.
Why Gin Adds ~97 Calories Per Shot
Spirits don’t carry carbs, protein, or fat in meaningful amounts. All the energy comes from ethanol at ~7 kcal per gram. A standard 1.5-ounce pour of 40% ABV contains about 14 grams of pure alcohol, which works out to roughly 97 kcal. Public-health resources define that pour as a “standard drink,” so the math stays consistent across brands.
For a primer on standard pours and pure alcohol content, see the CDC standard drink sizes. And for a plain chart of calories by spirit strength, the MedlinePlus table lists “gin (80 proof), 1.5 fl oz: 97 kcal,” right in line with the math.
What About Higher Proof?
Stronger bottles carry more ethanol per ounce. A 94-proof pour pushes the spirit portion over 110 kcal. Up the proof, up the energy—before you even add the mixer.
How The Tonic Changes Everything
Regular tonic is a sweetened soft drink with quinine’s bite. Sugar content varies by brand, but a 12-ounce serving often sits near the 110–125 kcal range. That means every 4–5 ounces adds roughly 40–50 kcal to the glass. Switch to a diet version and the mixer contribution drops close to zero while the flavor stays bright and bitter.
Club Soda Vs. Diet Tonic
Club soda brings fizz and minerals without sugar. Diet tonic keeps the quinine note minus sugar. If you’re counting, both routes keep the build near the spirit-only number, with only a few calories from citrus.
Lime, Bitters, And Fancy Garnishes
A lime wedge adds a couple of calories. Even a hearty squeeze rarely tops 5 kcal. A few dashes of aromatic bitters add trace carbs and alcohol, but the totals stay negligible at home-bar amounts.
Practical Ways To Trim The Total
You don’t need a different drink—just small tweaks. These swaps shave energy without losing the snap that makes this highball so refreshing.
Simple Swaps That Work
- Pick diet tonic or club soda for most pours.
- Use a jigger so the spirit stays at 1.5 oz.
- Choose a highball with plenty of ice to stretch each sip.
- Brighten with citrus and herbs instead of sugary syrups.
Smart Order At The Bar
Ask for a single with diet tonic, tall glass, and extra lime. If the venue serves heavy, request a measured shot. That single request keeps the spirit at the standard pour, which anchors the energy near the mid-range values above.
Serving Sizes, Proof, And Mixers: The Math You’ll Use
Here’s a quick formula you can use anywhere. Start with ~97 kcal for 1.5 oz of 80-proof spirit. Add ~8–10 kcal per ounce of regular tonic you plan to pour. That’s it. Use it at home or when ordering and you’ll land inside a reliable window.
Worked Examples
- Single + 5 oz regular tonic: ~97 + ~45 = ~142 kcal (brand-to-brand can push this into the 150–170 band).
- Single + 6 oz regular tonic: ~97 + ~55 = ~152 kcal (often reads ~160–180 in large glasses).
- Single + diet tonic: ~97 + ~0 = ~97–110 kcal depending on citrus and bitters.
- Double + 6 oz regular tonic: ~194 + ~55 = ~249 kcal.
Nutrition Snapshot Beyond Calories
There’s no protein or fiber here. Sodium stays modest in most mixers, while sugars in regular tonic make up nearly all of the carb count. If you’re watching added sugars, the diet route is the straightforward fix. For a general overview of energy in alcoholic drinks and why the numbers add up fast, the NHS page on calories in alcohol sums up the basics cleanly.
Mixer Choices And Estimated Energy
| Mixer (Per 5 oz) | Estimated Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Regular Tonic | ~45–60 | Sugar-sweetened; varies by brand. |
| Diet Tonic | ~0–5 | Non-nutritive sweeteners; near zero kcal. |
| Club Soda | 0 | Carbonated water with minerals. |
| Slimline “Light” Tonic | ~10–20 | Reduced sugar; taste differs by brand. |
| Tonic + Fresh Lime | +2–5 | Citrus adds minimal energy, big aroma. |
Portion Control At Home
Use a 1 oz/1.5 oz jigger, count the pull, and pour the mixer last. If you like a tall glass, add more ice and soda water to stretch the drink without piling on sugar. This keeps flavor bright and energy steady.
Tracking With Purpose
When you’re logging, record the spirit, proof, and exact mixer volume. You’ll match the estimate on the first table quickly. Over time that habit removes guesswork from social nights and helps you budget for snacks or dessert.
When You Want The Lowest Number
Keep the spirit to a single shot and switch to diet tonic or soda. Ask for a squeeze of lime and, if you like herbal notes, a sprig of mint or rosemary. You’ll keep the refreshment while trimming sugar from the build.
Safety, Standards, And Sensible Habits
Energy math is just one piece. Public-health guidance classifies one 1.5-ounce, 40% ABV pour as a single drink, which helps you pace your evening and stay within your plan. If you’re aiming for fewer calories over the week, spacing drinks with water and choosing diet mixers delivers the biggest win with the least effort.
Wrap-Up: Make The Highball Work For You
Now you’ve got the numbers and the swaps. Pick the build that fits your goals, measure the spirit, and choose the mixer that suits your plan. If you’d like a deeper strategy for weight control, try our calorie deficit guide for step-by-step planning.