What to Do If Someone You Love Is Concealing Their Alcohol Use

If your loved one is hiding alcohol, you’re not alone. Learn how to respond with empathy, protect yourself, and support their path to recovery.

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If your loved one is hiding alcohol, you’re not alone. Learn how to respond with empathy, protect yourself, and support their path to recovery.

Discovering that your spouse or someone you love is hiding alcohol can stop you in your tracks. Maybe you find bottles tucked away in places they don’t belong, or you notice stories that don’t quite add up. In that moment, a flood of emotions often follows: worry, fear, confusion, even betrayal. You may wonder if this means your loved one is struggling with alcohol use disorder or if it’s “just a bad habit” they don’t want you to see.

The secrecy itself can feel as heavy as the drinking, because concealment usually signals shame, fear of judgment, or a deeper struggle beneath the surface. It’s a confusing and painful place to be. But it’s important to understand what this behavior might mean, and how to respond so you can navigate the uncertainty with compassion and clarity.

When You First Discover Hidden Alcohol Use

Before taking any steps, it’s important to recognize a few things:

  • Hiding alcohol doesn’t always mean someone is struggling with addiction, but it can signal that the person is ashamed, worried about being judged, or knows that their drinking has gotten out of hand.
  • Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) is a medical condition recognized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5). It involves patterns of drinking that lead to significant impairment or distress. Symptoms include being unable to stop drinking despite wanting to, spending excessive time drinking and recovering from the effects of drinking, failing to fulfill obligations because of drinking, and experiencing withdrawal when trying to quit drinking (APA / NIAAA).

Understanding that AUD is a spectrum—mild, moderate, or severe—can help you approach the situation without assuming the worst while also not dismissing the signs of a deeper struggle.

What the Research Tells Us: Evidence-Based Insights

It’s natural to feel hurt, betrayed, or blindsided—and in those moments, emotions often take the driver’s seat. You might want to confront your loved one right away, raise your voice, or push for immediate answers. While those reactions are completely natural, they can also cause the person to pull back, shut down, or deny what’s happening, making it even harder to have the honest conversation you need.

These research findings shed light on just how important it is for partners and loved ones to respond with empathy, compassion, and support (rather than accusations or defensiveness) when they’re concerned about their loved one’s alcohol use:

  1. Family + partner involvement helps: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials found that including partners or family members in treatment for substance use disorders improves outcomes, reducing drinking frequency, quantity, and related problems (Recovery Research Institute, 2020).
  2. Recovery is possible with treatment and/or medications: Systematic reviews and randomized controlled trials show that FDA-approved medications such as naltrexone and acamprosate, when combined with behavioral treatments, are effective in improving alcohol use disorder outcomes compared with placebo (Jonas et al., JAMA, 2014).
  3. Even brief interventions can be effective: Systematic reviews indicate that brief interventions delivered in health care settings can help reduce heavy drinking among people who may not yet meet the criteria for alcohol use disorder (National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, n.d.).
  4. Early intervention and treatment matters: A cohort study found that initiating alcohol use disorder medications at hospital discharge lowered the risk of readmission or emergency department return within 30 days, compared with those who did not receive medication (Walley et al., JAMA Network Open, 2023).
  5. You matter, too: NIH and MedlinePlus emphasize that while family support plays a critical role in addiction recovery, it is equally important for loved ones to practice self-care, set boundaries, and maintain realistic expectations (National Institutes of Health, MedlinePlus Magazine, 2022).

How to Respond Strategically + Compassionately

This step-by-step guide—grounded in research and therapeutic best practices—can help you approach your loved one about their drinking in a way that preserves respect, maintains safety, and increases the possibility of positive change.

StepWhat to DoWhy It Helps
1. Educate yourselfLearn about AUD: its symptoms, treatment options (medications, behavioral therapies, mutual-support groups), prognosis, risk factors. Understand that relapse or setbacks are common and do not mean your loved one can’t reach recovery again.Being informed allows you to approach with understanding—not with blame or shame. It helps you know what options to suggest.
2. Reflect on your feelingsBefore speaking, try to sort out how you feel (hurt, scared, betrayed, hopeful, angry, etc.). Writing down your thoughts or talking with a trusted friend or therapist can help.Approaching with steadier emotions helps the conversation go more smoothly, reduces defensiveness, and lets you communicate more clearly.
3. Choose the right time & settingPick a sober moment when the person you love is alert, calm, and less likely to be defensive. A private, comfortable space without distractions is ideal.Research on communication in couples and substance treatment shows that setting matters: safer, respectful communication is more effective.
4. Use “I” statements & express concernRather than “You are hiding alcohol / you are lying,” try “I’ve noticed … I’m worried about you … because I care / because I love you.” Be factual (what you’ve observed) rather than accusatory.This reduces blame, keeps the conversation in the present, invites openness.
5. Listen without interrupting & try to understandGive space for the spouse to share what’s underneath: shame, fear, dependency, mental health issues, stress. Often, hiding alcohol is not about deception alone but about coping, guilt, or feeling trapped.Empathy opens pathways to trust. Many people with AUD mention stigma and shame as reasons for hiding.
6. Suggest professional help / treatment options togetherShare what you learned about evidence-based treatments (medications, therapy, couple/family-based therapy). Offer help in exploring options—finding a therapist, checking insurance, going together if they’d like.Research shows that partner or family involvement boosts outcomes. (Recovery Research Institute)
7. Set & maintain boundariesFigure out what you need for your own safety and well-being. That might mean boundaries around behavior, responsibilities, finances, or living arrangements. Define what is and isn’t acceptable and how you will respond if your boundaries are violated.Boundaries protect you from being emotionally or physically harmed, prevent enabling of harmful behaviors, and signal seriousness to your loved one.
7. Support small steps & celebrate progressEven small reductions in drinking or being honest about use are signs of positive movement. Celebrate these victories. Encourage them gently.Positive reinforcement is key psychologically. It nourishes hope; evidence supports that recognizing small wins helps sustain change.
8. Prepare for resistance or relapseIt’s common for the person to deny or minimize the issue or relapse after a period of sobriety. Have patience. Seek professional help if the situation worsens or becomes unsafe.Science is clear: AUD is often treated by multiple strategies, and relapse doesn’t mean failure; it means the treatment approach may need adjustments. (JAMA Network)
9. Take care of yourselfSeek support (personal therapy, support groups like Al-Anon or family support), make time for your own physical and mental health, maintain your own social contacts. Your health matters too.Loved ones often suffer secondary stress, health issues, emotional burden. The better you are emotionally and physically, the more you can help (and protect yourself). MedlinePlus and NIH emphasize family care and supporting yourself. (NIH MedlinePlus Magazine)

Knowing Your Limits: When Enough is Enough

Even with compassion, there are times when you’ll need to make difficult decisions about how much you can continue to be involved, how much you can tolerate, and how to protect yourself or others (children, etc.).

These are some situations where you may need to escalate your response to a loved one’s alcohol use:

  • If alcohol use becomes dangerous (driving when under the influence, endangering one’s own health, threatening or engaging in violence)
  • If alcohol hiding becomes persistent, lying escalates, or trust is repeatedly broken
  • If your own mental or physical health is deteriorating significantly
  • If there is neglect of responsibilities, neglect or danger to children, or neglect of personal safety
  • If attempts to get help are repeatedly refused and the person is unwilling to engage in treatment or even to acknowledge the problem

In such cases, seeking guidance from a professional (a therapist or counselor specializing in addiction, or a couples therapist) can be crucial. Intervention might then include a higher level of care (residential rehab, PHP, or IOP addiction treatment) in a more structured environment.

Treatment for Alcohol Use Disorder That Supports the Whole Family

It can be difficult to process the realization that your loved one is struggling with alcohol dependence. Even if they agree to go into treatment, the list of fears and unknowns can feel like it’s a mile long and getting longer every day. It is a physically and emotionally demanding time, and no one should have to go through it alone—including you. At STR Silver Pines, we care for your loved one with evidence-based, medically supervised addiction treatment — and we care for you, too.

From alcohol detox and residential rehab to PHP, IOP, and aftercare, we provide comprehensive support for your loved one and you.

Whether you’re looking for guidance, clarity, or just a listening ear, we’re here to help.

Contact our admissions team today to learn more about our addiction treatment programs and how we support both clients and their families.


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