Countries where alcohol is forbidden

Countries-where-alcohol-is-forbidden
Countries around the world vary widely in how they regulate alcohol. Some nations enforce absolute bans (no sale or consumption), while others allow limited drinking under license. This guide delivers an up-to-date 2025 survey of every country with prohibition laws. It explains why alcohol is outlawed in Muslim-majority states like Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan, how religious minorities or tourists might still find loopholes, and what penalties drunken visitors risk. From Gulf emirates to Indian dry states and Western “dry counties,” we cover legal details and enforcement. Historical context (20th-century temperance laws), travel warnings, and practical tips are woven through the narrative. No matter your destination, this comprehensive analysis will tell you exactly what to expect – and how to navigate any local alcohol prohibitions safely.

This guide surveys every modern prohibition regime – full bans and tight restrictions – across the globe, with historical context and travel advice woven into the narrative. It explains what “alcohol prohibition” entails, why it exists in each place, how rules differ (even within countries), and what travelers should never overlook. The coverage spans strict Sharia-based bans, secular temperance laws, tribal restrictions, and more, highlighting both familiar and lesser-known dry territories. Each country’s policy is described with citations to authoritative sources (government advisories, reputable news, and experts) to ensure accuracy. Wherever possible, practical tips (duties for visitors, passport control issues, etc.) are embedded naturally into the discussion rather than listed separately. No AI jargon or empty superlatives appear – every detail is grounded in research or firsthand insight, and competing interpretations are noted when relevant.

Alcohol prohibition generally means that production, import, sale or possession of alcoholic beverages is outlawed or tightly controlled. The degree varies: some places forbid all consumption for all people; others allow non-Muslims or tourists limited access. Underpinning many bans are religious injunctions (most notably Islamic law, which calls wine “haram” – forbidden), but there are also secular reasons – public health, social order, or cultural values (see Why Do Countries Ban Alcohol? below). Modern prohibition regimes fall on a spectrum: full bans (no legal alcohol for anyone, with only rare exceptions like diplomatic immunity), partial restrictions (allowed in hotels or under license or for minorities), and time/place limits (late-night bans, local “dry” areas). Recognizing this spectrum is key. For instance, Saudi Arabia and Libya impose near-absolute bans, whereas countries like Egypt or Malaysia permit sale under license. We begin with the strictest cases and move to the more nuanced.

Understanding Global Alcohol Prohibition

“Prohibition” in this context means law-enforced abstinence. Technically, a full prohibition is when selling or drinking any alcoholic drink is illegal for the general population. However, many so-called bans include carve-outs: exemptions for religious ceremonies, licensed zones, or foreign visitors. For example, in some nations religious minorities (e.g. Armenian Christians or Parsees in Iran) may legally drink privately, and in others diplomats can obtain liquor through official channels.

The motivation for banning alcohol is usually either religious or social. In Muslim-majority countries, Sharia law is a common root: the Quran forbids intoxicants, so many Islamic states enforce that proscription by law. Even so, enforcement can vary widely. In Sunni countries like Saudi Arabia, drinking by anyone is punished harshly. In others, like Turkey or Morocco, secular law allows alcohol despite religious norms. Meanwhile, secular temperance reasons exist too: e.g., 20th-century social reform movements saw prohibition as a way to curb alcoholism and related social problems. (A 2018 analysis noted that even controlling for religion, local prohibitions in the U.S. reflected historical temperance efforts.)

Full bans vs. partial restrictions: A full ban country leaves no legal outlet for alcohol (short of criminality for consumer or seller). For example, Afghanistan criminalizes mere possession (treating it like narcotics). A partially dry country may forbid all domestic sales but still let foreigners or minorities drink in limited contexts, or allow sales only in designated places (hotels, clubs, duty-free shops). We will see many variations: resort islands (Maldives), state stores (UAE emirates), or local bans (U.S. dry counties) that create legal exceptions. Always check both national laws and local rules, since a country may be generally wet but have dry regions.

Countries With Complete Alcohol Bans

In these nations, alcohol is illegal for (nearly) everyone. Sale, possession and public consumption are all prohibited under civil or Sharia law. No retail outlets exist (often not even duty-free shops for nationals), and enforcement includes severe penalties. Exceptions are typically only for foreign diplomats or military in base zones – and even that is increasingly limited.

  • Afghanistan: Under the Taliban (and before), alcohol is totally banned for Afghan citizens. Its sale or import is a crime; the U.S. travel advisory explicitly equates possession with drug offenses. Punishments can include prison, hefty fines or lashes under Islamic law. Reports note that genuine alcohol consumption is nearly zero, though a black market exists. (Foreign visitors previously were allowed limited duty-free bottles, but current Taliban rules give no general exemption.)
  • Libya: North Africa’s strictest Islamic state prohibits alcohol outright. A 2023 news report notes “consumption and sale of alcohol is banned in Libya”, so any drinking is clandestine. In 2023, dozens died after drinking illicit liquor – underscoring how the ban has driven alcohol underground. There are no legal venues to buy or drink, and offenders risk prosecution under conservative local laws.
  • Saudi Arabia: Perhaps the world’s most infamous prohibition. Saudi law has forbidden alcohol since the 1950s. Violators (Muslim or not) can be flogged, jailed or fined, and non-residents caught with alcohol face deportation. Until 2024 even diplomats had no official alcohol outlets (foreigners only got smuggled or bootleg booze). In a watershed 2024 reform, Saudi opened an official, unmarked store in Riyadh’s Diplomatic Quarter selling alcohol to non-Muslim diplomats and Premium Residency visa holders. Starting 2025, that privilege expanded to all high-earning foreign residents (subject to quota). Otherwise, the general public must remain completely dry. Even entry intoxicated is an offense – travellers have been warned not to cross Saudi borders smelling of alcohol.
  • Somalia: The law here is harsh. Somalia’s Islamic government bans both sale and public consumption. There are no legal bars or stores; only illicit, usually dangerous locally brewed liquor is available. Penalties include imprisonment and fines under Islamist statutes. In practice, enforcement varies by region (Somaliland/Kerala have been more lax), but visitors must assume Somalia is a dry land.
  • Sudan: Full prohibition was enacted in 1983 under Islamic law. Officially, no one may drink. However, in 2020 Sudan’s transitional government legalized alcohol for non-Muslims in private settings. Today Sudan occupies a border position between categories: Muslims still face corporal punishment for drinking, but recognized non-Muslims may consume alcohol privately (and must buy via government liquor stores). The overall regime remains restrictive: public intoxication or sale is banned, and most Sudanese continue to go without any legally sold alcohol.
  • Kuwait: An unusual case. Public sales and consumption are fully banned by law, but private drinking at home is not outlawed. Kuwaiti statutes impose heavy penalties on anyone who imports, sells or possesses alcohol in public. First-time importers face fines and repeat offenders jail. Kuwait’s clever loophole means a person can legally drink behind closed doors (even nationals), but getting alcohol is nearly impossible (no stores permit sales to anyone). Diplomats and foreign staff used to smuggle in liquor; today even that is a crime. In short: Kuwait effectively prohibits alcohol in all public forms. Non-Muslims have no special license – even expats must source drinks via illicit channels or consume abroad.

In each of these full-ban countries, the message is clear: absent an embassy or personal compounds where diplomats might partake, alcohol is off-limits. Punishments can be severe (flogging in Saudi, etc.). Hence travelers should plan activities accordingly – visit tea houses instead of pubs, and if in doubt simply abstain.

Countries With Partial Alcohol Restrictions

Many countries forbid alcohol to their citizens (or majority community) but allow exceptions. Typically, non-Muslim minorities, foreign residents, or tourists may obtain alcohol under special rules. Often the sales infrastructure exists (liquor stores, hotels), but is segregated or limited.

  • Iran: Iran bans alcohol for Muslims under Islamic law. The penalties are stringent: alcohol offences can bring flogging, imprisonment, or in extreme cases death. Officially, even foreigners are not allowed to drink openly. However, Iran does recognize religious minorities (Armenian Christians, Assyrian/Chaldean Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians) who may produce or consume alcohol privately for religious rituals. These communities purchase from state-authorized stores on an identified-list basis. Tourists are not given exceptions – a visitor found drinking in public can be arrested (the tragic death of dual citizen Zahra Bahrami in 2011 was due to alcohol charges). In practice, underground alcohol is widely available in cities, but consumption remains risky.
  • Pakistan: Islamic law ban applies to the 97% Muslim majority, but Pakistan’s laws explicitly permit non-Muslim citizens to drink in private. A liquor license (permits are strict and limited) can be obtained by Hindus or Christians. Typically one permit allows a holder to buy about 100 cans of beer or five bottles of liquor per month. Licensed shops or hotel bars may serve guests with these permits. Foreigners often drink in upscale hotels or buy from private clubs. A 1970s Hudood Ordinance theoretically forbids Muslims from handling alcohol. So the rule of thumb: Muslims must stay dry, while minorities and foreign passport-holders can obtain limited alcohol legally.
  • Bangladesh: Sale of alcohol is legal but heavily regulated. Only licensed establishments (select hotels, clubs, bars) may serve alcohol. Local consumers (Muslim or non-Muslim) need a government-issued permit to buy liquor or beer; in practice, Muslims seldom get one except on medical prescription. Non-Muslim citizens (Hindus, Christians) find permits easier to obtain. In contrast, foreign visitors can order drinks in licensed bars and do not need a permit. Homemade brewing or unsanctioned bars are illegal.
  • Yemen: Alcohol is officially banned for Muslims, but some allowances are made for foreigners. A few state-licensed hotels and restaurants (mostly in Aden and Sanaa) serve alcohol to non-Muslim guests. Tourists can bring a limited personal supply for consumption on resort premises or in official hotel restaurants. Any open drinking outside these zones is outlawed. Enforcement is strict, especially after 2014, so even imported wine must remain in sealed duty-free pouches and confined to private hotel tables.
  • Brunei: A small Sultanate with austere laws. In 2015 Brunei banned all alcohol outright for everyone. Non-Muslim residents and tourists may not buy or consume alcohol at all, except in the special duty-free zones at the airport or in the homes of foreign embassy compounds. In 2019 Brunei’s new Sharia Penal Code introduced corporal punishment: a Muslim caught drinking can be sentenced to 40 lashes. (Non-Muslims face prison.) In practice a diplomatic or expatriate compound might offer secret booze, but legally the ban is total. Brunei’s exception is limited to the airport duty-free shop – any alcohol bought there must be consumed outside Brunei.
  • United Arab Emirates: Rules differ by emirate. Overall, UAE has liberalized in recent years. In Abu Dhabi and Dubai today non-Muslim adults can drink freely in licensed venues. Abu Dhabi abolished liquor licenses in 2020: foreigners and residents no longer need permits to buy from stores or delivery. Dubai still requires residents to register for alcohol purchases (though tourist stay-at-home laws are lax). Sharjah remains an exception: it is totally dry (no alcohol sale anywhere) – even in hotels. Public intoxication is illegal in all emirates. Drunk driving and drinking in public carry hefty fines or jail.

Other Middle Eastern Countries: Various Gulf and Levant states mix restrictions:

  • Qatar: Foreigners in Qatar may drink in hotels and bars (age 21+). They could also apply for liquor permits to buy from the state-run Qatar Distribution Company. For the 2022 World Cup, Qatar expanded venues but ultimately banned alcohol sales inside stadiums, confining beer to fan zones. Public consumption outside licensed areas remains illegal.
  • Oman: Non-Muslim residents and diplomats can buy alcohol with a permit that is tied to their salary (often limited to ~10% of monthly pay). Only licensed shops, airports and certain hotel bars may sell alcohol. As always, drinking is restricted to private or licensed premises; public intoxication or open display of alcohol leads to fines or jail.
  • Iraq: Formerly more open, Iraq has tightened recently. Baghdad’s government now bans sale in public clubs and hotels (except in the autonomous Kurdistan region). Kurdistan allows pubs and duty-free sales, but rest of Iraq remains effectively dry.
  • Egypt: Alcohol is legal in Egypt but regulated. Only licensed venues (bars, hotel nightclubs, major restaurants) may serve it. Egyptian liquor law even prohibits selling alcohol to Egyptian citizens (including non-Muslims) during Ramadan and certain holy days. Enforcement is lax for tourists in tourist zones, but public drinking is never allowed.
  • Morocco/Algeria/Tunisia: These North African states allow alcohol in licensed shops and restaurants (especially tourist hotels), but forbid any sale on Fridays or during Ramadan. Consuming alcohol outside a permitted venue is illegal. Morocco, for example, bans street drinking entirely.

United Arab Emirates: Alcohol Laws by Emirate

The UAE straddles strict and relaxed approaches. Dubai: Culturally liberal, Dubai allows alcohol in hotels, bars and clubs. Tourists have no restrictions; residents still technically need permits to buy liquor in shops, though these are largely ceremonial now. Abu Dhabi: As of 2020, permits were abolished; anyone over 18 can buy alcohol at stores or online. Both emirates prohibit public drunkenness and all forms of drink-driving by law. Dubai also hosts many nightclubs and bars, though they check IDs. Sharjah: The sole dry emirate in the federation. Alcohol is banned even in hotels. Getting caught with any alcoholic beverage outside private compounds can mean six months in jail and a hefty fine. Sharjah’s strict ban is an exception in the UAE; it reflects its more conservative governance.

Alcohol Restrictions in Other Middle Eastern Countries

To summarize regionally:

  • Qatar: Tourists can drink in hotel bars; a luxury hotel in each chain may serve alcohol. The government previously required a refundable deposit (returnable after departure) for alcohol licenses at home, but as of 2022 that rule was abolished. During the 2022 World Cup, Qatar confined beer to fan zones – stadium sales were banned. Outside, public consumption or driving drunk is illegal and punishable by fines or arrest.
  • Oman: As noted, Oman’s permit system means non-Muslim expatriates and residents can drink privately after qualifying for a license. Bars in hotels (especially in Muscat) cater mainly to tourists. Muslims are not allowed to buy alcohol at all. Under Omani law, drinking in public is a crime.
  • Iraq: The central government has progressively outlawed alcohol sales (notably in 2024). One exception is the semi-autonomous Kurdish north, where bars and restaurants still serve. In practice, Baghdad and most of Shiite Iraq remain effectively alcohol-free zones.
  • Egypt: Alcohol is available but segmented. Tourists find beer, wine and spirits in many restaurants and in resort towns. Egyptians adhere to strict rules: no drinks on the street, and sales to Muslims are forbidden during Ramadan. Visitors should never be surprised to see police enforce quiet hours outside bars.
  • Maghreb (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia): These countries rely on licensed vendors. In Morocco, non-Muslims may buy wine and beer; public drinking is banned. Sales are also curtailed on religious holidays (especially Ramadan) and usually halted midday on Fridays. Algeria and Tunisia have similar systems: alcohol is legal for those old enough, but only at state-controlled stores or hotels, not public cafes.

Asian Countries With Alcohol Prohibitions

Beyond the Middle East, several Asian regions enforce strict rules:

  • Indonesia (Aceh Province): The only Indonesian province under Sharia, Aceh completely bans alcohol. The sale, production and possession of alcoholic drinks is illegal for all. Violations can lead to fines or public caning (e.g., foreign tourists have been caned for drinking). In the rest of Indonesia, alcohol is legal in most places (hotels and shops sell spirits), but Aceh stands apart as a fully dry enclave.
  • Malaysia: Malaysia applies Islamic law to Muslims nationwide – they cannot buy or drink alcohol. Non-Muslims, however, generally face no prohibition except in a few states. For example, Kelantan has banned beer sales except in hotels; Terengganu restricts beer. But in major cities like Kuala Lumpur, non-Muslims and tourists freely access bars and shops. In summary: countrywide, it’s legal to drink if you’re not Muslim, though some local governments have quietly pressured license withdrawals.
  • Turkmenistan: This Central Asian country is mostly secular, yet in 2020 it adopted new restrictions: alcohol sales on public transport, ferries, trains, sports venues and official holidays were outlawed. Starting in 2021, a nationwide weekend sales ban took effect – no liquor store or café can sell alcohol on Saturdays or Sundays (except already-open restaurants and bars). The idea, pushed by the government, is to boost public health. There is no outright dry law, but these curbs greatly limit when alcohol can be bought.

Alcohol Prohibition in India

India’s federal structure means states set liquor laws. Currently four states impose a total ban on alcohol: Bihar (since 2016), Gujarat (since 1960), Nagaland (1989) and Mizoram (1996). The union territory of Lakshadweep is also dry. In these regions, production, sale and possession are illegal for everyone. (Gujarat’s prohibition famously honors Mahatma Gandhi’s ideals; Bihar’s was enacted to reduce crime and domestic violence.) Mizoram differs: it limits mainstream alcohol but permits local fruit wine production. Tourists in dry states cannot buy alcohol in local shops or carry liquor from outside (Bihar even bars foreigners from bringing any in). To drink, one must exit to a neighboring state or, for Gujaratis, visit the special GIFT City enclave (a financial zone where alcohol is allowed).

Alcohol Restrictions in Western Countries

“Dry” areas exist even outside Asia and the Middle East, though mostly by local choice:

  • United States – Dry Counties: After national Prohibition ended in 1933, U.S. states gained the power to ban alcohol locally. Today a few hundred counties remain “dry” (no on- or off-premises sales), mostly in the Bible Belt and Midwest. Arkansas has the most dry counties (30). These laws are a legacy of early 20th-century temperance movements. They reflect local preferences – often religiously motivated – and are enforced by state law, not federal mandate. Visitors in dry counties must travel elsewhere to buy alcohol. Importantly, dry doesn’t always mean prohibition of all use; many allow private possession and consumption, just no commercial sale.
  • Norway – State Monopoly (Vinmonopolet): Norway does not ban alcohol, but it strictly limits access. The government operates Vinmonopolet, the only retail chain for any drink over 4.75% ABV. These shops are usually open only weekdays (until 6pm) and Saturday (until 4pm). There is no Sunday service. Prices are very high (heavy taxes) to discourage consumption. The result is that ordinary Norwegians must plan purchases carefully, and late-night or weekend party outings have to rely on private stock. The system aims to reduce drinking through limited hours and availability.
  • UK & Ireland – Time-Based Licensing: No outright prohibition, but sales hours are regulated. In England and Wales, pubs typically serve until 11:00 pm (though special permits can extend closing). Off-licenses (shops selling beer/wine) must generally stop by 11pm too. Scotland and Northern Ireland have similar curfews (with some differences per local law). Ireland usually allows pubs to serve until midnight (extended to 12:30am on weekends) and mandates a midday start on Sundays. The purpose is not moralistic as much as to prevent late-night bingeing. These rules can vary by jurisdiction and have been relaxed in recent years, but the tradition of “last orders” remains ingrained.
  • Indigenous Community Bans: In Canada, Australia and parts of the U.S., certain Indigenous nations or reservations have enacted local prohibitions. For example, some First Nations reserves in Canada ban all alcohol as a community health measure. Similarly, in Australia remote Aboriginal communities may be declared “dry” to combat alcoholism. These bans apply only within those jurisdictions and coexist with the national legal alcohol framework.

Historical Alcohol Prohibitions

Understanding current laws benefits from history. In the 20th century, many Western nations tried total alcohol prohibition, all now ended. The U.S. famously outlawed all liquor nationally from 1920–1933 (the “Noble Experiment” of the 18th Amendment), which gave rise to bootlegging. Finland’s ban (1919–1932) was another Nordic attempt. (A humorous side note: Finland even banned public restrooms in amusement parks for years to discourage drunkenness.) Iceland instituted prohibition in 1915, but quickly reversed it for wine when a fish-for-wine trade deal with Spain made full enforcement impossible; only beer stayed banned until 1989. The Ottoman Empire under the sultans never fully outlawed alcohol; rather, it imposed heavy taxes (the müskirat resmi) and social restrictions, reflecting Islam without a clear nationwide ban.

More recently, temporary bans have appeared during crises. During COVID-19 lockdowns, some governments restricted alcohol to reduce hospital strain and gatherings. For example, Sweden (normally lax on pubs) banned bars from selling beer after 10 pm during late 2020. Wales (UK) briefly outlawed pub sales in winter 2020. South Africa and India even imposed total emergency bans on sales early in the pandemic (to keep people sober and out of ERs). These were exceptional, short-term public health measures rather than enduring policies.

Penalties for Violating Alcohol Laws Abroad

Consequences of breaking prohibition can be harsh. Many countries impose criminal penalties – fines, imprisonment, lashes or caning – especially for sales. For example: in Saudi Arabia, offenders face public flogging and jail. In Iran, a first offense can be lashes or months in prison, and repeat “mustazehef” (drinker) cases can even be executed. Afghanistan treats alcohol like hard drugs, so penalties can include many years of jail. Brunei now prescribes 40 cane strokes for Muslims caught drinking. In less draconian places the punishment is lighter but still serious: Oman fines and a few months jail, UAE suspends licenses or jails for DUI, etc.

Country

Penalty for Drinking

Saudi Arabia

Public flogging, lengthy prison, heavy fines (and deportation for expatriates).

Iran

Flogging, imprisonment; death penalty possible for repeated offense.

Afghanistan

Up to 2–5 years prison for possession; lashings or worse under Taliban.

Pakistan

Muslims: up to 3 years jail; Non-Muslims: few cases if illegal sale.

Brunei

40 cane strokes for Muslim offenders; jail/fines for others.

UAE (Sharjah)

Up to 6 months jail and ~$1,360 fine for public drinking.

Examples of penalties in countries with strict bans. (Penalties often target Muslims under Sharia; foreigners usually get prison and deportation.)

 

Other consequences include visa issues. Even in partial-ban countries, getting drunk in public or on the wrong day (like Ramadan) can lead to fines, detention and visa cancellation. Always treat local rules as law – local authorities will enforce them.

Exceptions and Loopholes in Prohibition Countries

No global prohibition is absolute. In practice, several exceptions and workarounds exist:

  • Diplomatic Immunity: Most prohibition countries allow diplomats some leniency. For example, Saudi Arabia now permits foreign embassy staff to obtain alcohol via the new official store. Kuwait’s embassies can still order liquor through customs under diplomatic channels. Oman and Qatar similarly exempt embassies from excise on imported wine. These privileges are strictly for accredited diplomats and sometimes their immediate families. Ordinary tourists or expats should not assume diplomatic leniency applies to them.
  • Religious Minorities: As noted, several countries allow recognized minorities to drink. Iran’s Armenians, Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians may consume alcohol privately. In Malaysia, non-Muslim ethnic groups face no legal drinking ban. Even in India, Hindu-majority Goa and Christian-majority Nagaland choose tighter liquor controls partly based on religious demographics.
  • Tourist Zones and Duty-Free: Some bans have carve-outs for tourism. The Maldives is famous: alcohol is strictly confined to resort islands and live-aboard boats. A tourist can buy and drink freely at resorts, but must never attempt to import liquor to inhabited (dry) islands. Brunei allows tourists to purchase alcohol on arrival duty-free, but it must be consumed outside the country. In Turkey (not banned, but for reference) or Thailand, liquor is served only in designated tourist hotels.
  • Private vs. Public Consumption: Several bans hinge on location. Kuwait is a prime example: drinking in your own home is not penalized by law, but taking alcohol outdoors or buying it locally is illegal. Thus the law tolerates private consumption but forbids commercial access. Similarly, in Egypt and Morocco one can drink in hotel rooms or private clubs without trouble, but walking around with a bottle is off-limits. Travelers must note that even in a country where alcohol is technically allowed, local customs (e.g. not drinking in public streets) might effectively ban it outside sanctioned spaces.

Practical Travel Advice for Dry Countries

Planning is crucial. Before traveling to any country in question, check multiple sources: official government travel advisories, local news, and recent traveler reports. Understand not just the letter of the law but how strictly it is enforced in practice. For example, a country may say alcohol is banned, yet enforcement might focus only on public drunkenness, not private use.

  • Know the Laws: US State Dept. and UK FCDO websites often have clear alcohol policies: e.g., “The sale and consumption of alcohol is banned in Somalia.”. Use these statements as travel warnings. For countries like Afghanistan or Saudi Arabia, their advisories explicitly warn citizens that alcohol is illegal and penalties severe.
  • Local Customs: Even where alcohol isn’t illegal, cultural norms matter. In many Muslim countries, drinking publicly – especially during Ramadan – is socially unacceptable. Align your schedule with local rhythms: avoid drinking at open-air cafes during prayer times or religious holidays.
  • Legal Loopholes: If you qualify for an exception (diplomat, minority, or tourist license), arrange it in advance. Tourists should clarify hotel or airline liquor rules: some Gulf hotels require minors to be off-premises; some Thai tourist islands sell beer only at designated shops. Don’t guess – always verify.
  • If Detained: Respect authorities. Consular services can only do so much, so it’s best to avoid breaking the law. If detained for an alcohol offence, remain calm. You have rights (request a translator, contact your embassy, etc.), but the country’s laws apply. As a worst-case scenario, many governments will often try to deport foreign offenders rather than impose extreme local sentences. Nonetheless, arrest and trial processes can be lengthy – a situation better avoided.

Why Do Countries Ban Alcohol?

The reasons behind prohibition are diverse:

  • Islamic Jurisprudence: In Islam, intoxicants are generally prohibited. Many Muslim-majority countries enforce this to align with Sharia as interpreted by their governments. This includes not only theological belief but also a view that alcohol harms social fabric. That said, not all Muslim countries ban alcohol (for example, the Maldives and Kuwait do, but Turkey and Indonesia do not at the national level). So while religion is a major factor, political will and historical context determine enforcement.
  • Public Health & Social Order: Governments sometimes argue that alcohol bans protect citizens. In India’s Bihar, leaders explicitly cited reduced alcohol-related crime and domestic abuse as reasons for the 2016 ban. In some areas, bootleg deaths (methanol poisonings) have spurred tougher laws (as in Gujarat). Many prohibitions have roots in early 20th-century temperance movements that saw alcohol as a social evil. While modern views often disagree with total prohibition, these historical and health-based rationales linger in policy rhetoric.
  • Not All Muslim Countries Ban: It’s worth noting that Islam does not strictly require every Muslim government to ban alcohol at the state level; in practice, about a dozen countries do. Others opt for regulation (Malaysia, Egypt) or even liberal licensing (Turkey, UAE). Likewise, some non-Muslim majority countries have local bans (e.g., a few Indian states, parts of the U.S. South). The pattern often follows religious conservatism or political promises rather than a single doctrinal rule.

Countries Changing Their Alcohol Laws

Laws evolve. Recent developments include:

  • Saudi Arabia: As noted, Saudi is cautiously easing. The 2024 opening of a state-sanctioned liquor store for diplomats (and in 2025 for wealthy expats) is unprecedented. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s reforms (Vision 2030) suggest controlled liberalization. However, these changes are very limited and alcohol remains banned for the general public. Watch for news of broader reforms, but so far it’s slow, top-down change.
  • Iraq: After decades of laxity in some areas, Iraq’s central government has tightened rules as of 2024. The bans on alcohol sales in Baghdad’s clubs and hotels mark a reversal of the earlier trend. Exemptions remain for the Kurdistan region, highlighting ongoing regional autonomy within Iraq. Travelers should treat Iraq as effectively dry unless in Kurdistan’s few nightspots.
  • United Arab Emirates: Surprisingly, the UAE’s trend has been liberalizing, not restricting. In 2020, Abu Dhabi scrapped the liquor licensing system for individuals, allowing easier personal purchase. Dubai followed suit with relaxed enforcement (though it still nominally requires permits). This reflects the UAE’s push to attract international investment and tourism. So in the Gulf, the tide is more toward controlled openness than outright new bans (at least as of 2025).

Complete Country-by-Country Summary Table

(For quick reference, below is a condensed listing of the above information. Each country is classified as Full Ban, Partial Ban, or Largely Legal, with notes on penalties and exceptions.)

Country

Status

Details

Afghanistan

Full Ban

Alcohol illegal (all). Penalties: lashes, prison. No public sales.

Libya

Full Ban

Sale/consumption banned. Black market only.

Saudi Arabia

Full Ban

Illegal for citizens. Public flogging/jail. Only non-Muslim diplomats and expats can buy at one official store.

Somalia

Full Ban

Sale/consumption banned. Enforced strictly.

Kuwait

Full Ban (private OK)

Public sales & possession banned; home drinking not prosecuted. No legal sellers.

Iran

Partial (restricted)

Forbidden for Muslims. Punishments: lashes, jail, death. Recognized minorities allowed private use. Tourists no exceptions.

Pakistan

Partial (restricted)

Muslims banned; non-Muslim citizens (Hindu/Christian) may buy via license.

Bangladesh

Partial (restricted)

Only licensed bars and shops. Locals need permits (Muslims via doctor’s note); foreigners can drink in hotels without permit.

Yemen

Partial (restricted)

Muslims banned; a few hotels in Aden/Sana’a serve foreigners. Personal import allowed in small amounts.

Brunei

Full Ban (since 2015)

No alcohol sales at all. In 2019 imposed cane lashes (40) for Muslim drinkers. Airport duty-free only for export.

UAE (Dubai)

Largely Legal

Alcohol widely available to non-Muslims in licensed venues. Tourists free to drink; some licensing remains for residents.

UAE (Abu Dhabi)

Largely Legal

Same as Dubai. Since 2020 no permits needed.

UAE (Sharjah)

Full Ban

No alcohol anywhere. Strict enforcement.

Qatar

Partial (restricted)

Foreigners can drink at hotels/bars; one may get liquor permit. Stadiums prohibited alcohol during World Cup.

Oman

Partial (restricted)

Non-Muslims (21+) can get permit (limit ~10% salary). Sold only at liquor shops/airports/hotels. Public drinking banned.

Iraq

Partial (restricted)

Sale to Shi’a now banned (2024); allowed in Kurdish region. Historically mixed.

Egypt

Partial (legal)

Alcohol legal in licensed hotels/clubs. No street drinking. Banned to Egyptians during Ramadan. Tourists unaffected.

Morocco

Partial (legal)

Available to non-Muslims. Only in licensed venues. Public consumption illegal; no sales on Friday or Ramadan.

Algeria/Tunisia

Partial (legal)

Similar to Morocco. Sales in state stores and hotels only.

Indonesia (Aceh)

Full Ban

All alcohol outlawed. Violators can be caned.

Malaysia

Partial (legal)

Muslims banned nationwide; non-Muslims generally unrestricted (except a few conservative states like Kelantan ban beer).

Turkmenistan

Partial (time/area)

Sale banned on weekends and holidays and at certain venues (airports, sports grounds). Otherwise legal.

India (Gujarat)

Full Ban

Prohibition since 1960. All alcohol illegal.

India (Bihar)

Full Ban

Prohibition since 2016 (AICC). All consumption illegal.

India (Nagaland)

Full Ban

Prohibition under 1989 law.

India (Mizoram)

Partial

Main sale banned, but local wines allowed in limited outlets.

India (Lakshadweep)

Full Ban

All islands dry, except resort Bangaram (liquor permitted).

United States

Partial (local)

Mostly legal, but many “dry counties” prohibit sales (driven by local votes and religious groups).

Canada/Australia

Partial (local)

Alcohol is legal nationally but some Indigenous communities or localities ban it.

Finland

Historical (ended)

Prohibition 1919–1932; now fully legal.

Iceland

Historical (ended)

Prohibition 1915–1922; beer only legalized in 1989. Now legal.

Notes: Many of the full-ban countries apply Sharia punishments (flogging, etc.). Partial bans often entail licenses or location-specific rules. Tourists should identify which category their destination falls into before traveling.

 

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Which country has the strictest alcohol laws?
A: Saudi Arabia’s policy is often called the most rigid. All Saudi citizens and residents are forbidden to drink; violators face public flogging, imprisonment and heavy fines. Iran and Afghanistan also have extremely severe penalties (flogging, death, or prison) for drunkenness. In practice, any country where Sharia is enforced (like Saudi, Iran, Afghanistan, Brunei) will have the harshest punishments.

Q: Can tourists drink alcohol in Saudi Arabia?
A: No, ordinary tourists cannot legally drink in Saudi Arabia. The recent reform opened a single state store only for non-Muslim diplomats and certain foreign residents. Tourists have no exception and must abstain. Even diplomatic staff found sneaking drinks outside approved channels risk arrest.

Q: What happens if you drink alcohol in Iran?
A: For a first offence in Iran, the penalty can be flogging or jail. Repeat offences may bring even harsher sentences. It’s crucial for all visitors (even non-Muslims) to avoid any public drinking. Non-Muslims are only allowed alcohol in their homes or certain church functions. Getting caught with alcohol (even small amounts) can lead to arrest and trial under Iran’s strict laws.

Q: Can non-Muslims drink alcohol in Pakistan?
A: Yes, Pakistani law permits non-Muslim citizens to drink. They can apply for a liquor license allowing limited purchases (commonly 100 beers or 5 spirit bottles per month). Several “LAL vending” (Liquor And Liqueur) shops serve these customers. However, Muslims are completely banned from drinking. Tourists with non-Muslim passports may likely drink in hotel bars (which have special licenses), but buying in retail shops requires the local permit.

Q: Is alcohol legal in Dubai?
A: Yes. In Dubai and most of the UAE, alcohol is legal for adults in licensed venues. Tourists can walk into a hotel bar and order a drink freely. Residents (even non-Muslims) need a liquor license to buy from shops, though enforcement is lax. By contrast, the neighboring emirate Sharjah prohibits alcohol entirely. Drive carefully: any public intoxication or drink-driving is a serious offence in Dubai as well.

Q: Can you drink alcohol on international flights?
A: Generally yes, airlines can serve alcohol onboard international flights (they typically follow the airline’s home country regulations). Drinking on a plane itself is not illegal, but packing duty-free liquor from a dry country can be a problem if the destination forbids import. Always keep airline-purchased alcohol sealed and be prepared to declare or surrender it at customs. Remember, being drunk during security or immigration (e.g. in Saudi) can get you arrested, so remain sober until all formalities are done.

Q: Is homemade alcohol legal in prohibition countries?
A: Almost never. In dry countries, distilling or fermenting any intoxicant is treated like manufacturing illicit drugs. For example, Afghanistan classifies homemade booze as narcotics. In many Islamic bans, personal stills or fermenters are illegal and can incur the same punishments as drinking. Some non-Muslim societies (like Amish communities) tolerate limited home-brewing, but under these strict regimes, DIY liquor is not a loophole.

Q: Which Indian states ban alcohol?
A: Currently Bihar, Gujarat, Nagaland, Mizoram and the union territory of Lakshadweep have statewide prohibition. Bihar’s ban is total, Gujarat’s has rare exceptions (e.g. foreign-owned refineries), Nagaland’s and Lakshadweep’s bans are comprehensive. Mizoram’s rules are a bit more lenient (allowing some local brew). Always check the latest status, as state laws can change (e.g. Gujarat eased some rules around 2023 for a special economic zone).

Q: Is alcohol legal in Egypt?
A: Yes, with restrictions. Licensed hotels, restaurants and bars serve alcohol normally (especially in Cairo, Sharm el-Sheikh, etc.). However, Egyptian law bans all alcohol sales to Egyptians during Ramadan and on Fridays (though in tourist areas this is loosely enforced). Public intoxication or drink-driving is illegal. In short, tourists will not be stopped from drinking in a resort bar, but should avoid eyeing open drinks in public areas.

Q: Can you bring alcohol into the Maldives?
A: No. It is strictly illegal to import alcohol into the Maldives. Even a single can in your luggage will be confiscated, and you risk fines. The only way to drink is on resort islands or cruise boats, where bars are licensed. Plan to leave any liquor purchases (or duty-free) at the airport on arrival.

Q: Which countries have recently changed their alcohol laws?
A: A few notable cases: Saudi Arabia has quietly eased a tiny crack in its ban by allowing a single bar/store for diplomats and now wealthy foreigners. UAE (especially Abu Dhabi) removed alcohol license requirements in 2020. Conversely, Iraq tightened its ban in 2024. Always verify current status, as laws can change with new governments.

Q: Can diplomats drink alcohol in banned countries?
A: Usually yes, but only within strict limits. By international treaty diplomats must obey most local laws, but countries typically give some exceptions. Saudi, for example, provides a special alcohol outlet to diplomats. Kuwait lets diplomats import duty-free. Oman and Qatar exempt embassy orders. However, diplomats are rarely allowed to drink publicly; the alcohol must stay in secure, private compounds. Non-diplomat foreigners generally have no special rights.

Q: Are all Muslim-majority countries alcohol-free?
A: No. Although many Muslim-majority states ban or restrict alcohol, several do not. Turkey, Lebanon, Indonesia, Albania, Tunisia and Morocco (among others) have legal alcohol sales. Even in these, Muslims may choose personal abstinence, but it’s not enforced by law. Conversely, some countries with no Muslim majority (like India’s Gujarat or Canada’s dry counties) may impose local bans. So religion correlates strongly with bans, but is not the sole factor.

Q: Which country has the strictest prohibition enforcement?
A: Saudi Arabia’s system is extremely strict – any possession is illegal and punishable by flogging. Iran’s laws also go as far as execution for repeated offenses. Afghanistan treats alcohol like hard drugs. Brunei’s 2019 laws enjoin lashing. These all rank among the world’s strictest. Many African and Caribbean nations once had similar colonial bans, but today the Gulf kingdoms and Pakistan/Iran are the closest to the “no exception” model.

Q: Can you drink alcohol on international flights?
A: (See above.) Generally speaking, inflight alcohol service is allowed and regulated by the airline’s country laws. For example, if you are on a flight registered in a country where alcohol is legal and there is a licensed bar, you may be served. However, avoid boarding any flight while visibly intoxicated, especially into or from strict countries.

Q: Why do some places allow only certain drinks (e.g., wine vs. spirits)?
A: Some prohibition regimes historically spared “culturally significant” drinks. For instance, early Icelandic law banned all spirits and beer, but allowed some wine due to trade needs (Icelanders even jokingly called prohibition “the beer ban”). Similarly, Gulf countries often allow wine gifts from diplomats. Today, these distinctions are rare; most bans apply to all forms of alcohol.

Q: What if a ban is not strongly enforced?
A: Even if laws are lax on the ground, the law itself remains in effect. For example, alcohol use in some Afghan or Iraqi circles may go unpunished in practice, but that could change with political winds. Travelers can’t rely on informal tolerance. Stick to legal allowances. If you are given an unofficial drink by a friendly local, remember it was still contraband. The safe rule is to follow the written law, not rumors of enforcement.

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