You cannot safely drink any kind of wine while pregnant; current medical guidance is to avoid all alcohol completely during pregnancy, including red, white, sparkling, and cooking wine.

Key medical guidance

  • Major medical bodies state there is no known safe amount of alcohol at any point in pregnancy.
  • This applies to all types of alcohol: wine, beer, cider, liquor, mixed drinks, and ā€œjust a sip.ā€
  • A standard glass of wine contains about the same alcohol as a beer or a shot, so it is not a ā€œsaferā€ choice.

Why wine is risky in pregnancy

  • Alcohol crosses the placenta, so the baby is exposed to roughly the same level of alcohol as the pregnant person.
  • Alcohol exposure can contribute to miscarriage, stillbirth, premature birth, low birth weight, and sudden infant death syndrome.
  • It can also cause fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs), which involve lifelong learning, behavioral, and physical difficulties.

ā€œJust one glassā€ and differing opinions

  • Some individual doctors or older cultural norms may suggest an occasional small glass is probably low risk, especially later in pregnancy, but this is based on risk tolerance, not proof of safety.
  • The problem is that no exact ā€œsafe doseā€ has been identified, so official recommendations stay on the strict side and say to avoid alcohol altogether.

What you can drink instead

If you miss the ritual of wine, many people lean on alcohol-free options:

  • Dealcoholized wine or alcohol-free sparkling grape juice (check labels to ensure 0.0% or as close as possible).
  • Mocktails using soda water, citrus, herbs, and bitters that are pregnancy-safe (avoid alcohol-based bitters unless approved by your clinician).
  • Herbal teas and flavored sparkling waters; always confirm specific herbs with your doctor if using them frequently.

These alternatives can give some of the ā€œspecial drinkā€ feeling without exposing the baby to alcohol.

Practical takeaways

  • The medically safest answer to ā€œwhat kind of wine can you drink while pregnantā€ is: none that contain alcohol; choose alcohol-free alternatives instead.
  • If you have already had some wine before knowing you were pregnant, discuss it honestly with your clinician; occasional early exposure often leads to reassurance and monitoring rather than panic, but only a professional who knows your history can guide you properly.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.