There are many different reasons why people decide not to try the so-called non-alcoholic beer if they wanted to remain sober. Avoiding temptation is the reason most often offered.

The Power of the Smell of Beer

In one research study, a team of California scientists reports that smell may be enough to trigger cravings and a subsequent relapse among certain alcoholics. In their laboratory experiments, rats were trained to self-administer alcohol or a bitter, white substance called quinine when they smelled either orange or banana. The smell of banana was used when the rats consumed alcohol, while the smell of orange was presented to them when the rats tasted quinine. Both alcohol and the anticipation of alcohol may raise levels of a brain chemical called dopamine, which plays a role in feelings of elation and pleasure, according to the investigators. The researchers found increases in dopamine in the rats’ brains before and after smelling these “alcohol-related cues.”

Same Attitude and Behavior

One danger is developing the same attitudes and behavior while drinking NA beer as you used to do when drinking the real stuff. This finding could help explain that phenomenon. The California study has been cited by scientists as an important step in the possible development of medications that may prevent relapse. As many as 90% of alcoholics will experience one relapse in the four years after they quit drinking, according to statistics from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

Skip Non-Alcoholic Beer

Dr. Friedbert Weiss from The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, said, “This is our study’s significance: it provides a reliable tool that allows us to investigate brain mechanisms and neurochemical systems so that we can embark on a more educated approach to finding effective medications.”

Develop a Drug-Free Lifestyle

One of the ways that recovery experts recommend to avoid relapse and maintain sobriety is to develop a drug-free lifestyle in which the person trying to stay sober substitutes healthy activities for behaviors from the past. Sitting around drinking near beer with the same people in the same places you used to drink, is maintaining your old lifestyle, not developing a new one. “I tell people to avoid the so-called non-alcoholic beer like the plague,” one long-time support-group member told Verywell. “First, it is not truly non-alcoholic, it does contain a small amount of alcohol which alone could trigger a relapse for some.” “Secondly, it’s like playing with fire,” he said. “Sooner or later you are going to get burned. There is a saying, ‘if you hang around the barbershop long enough, sooner or later you are going to get a haircut.’ The same is true for near beer. I’ve seen it happen too many times.”