NEW FBI DATA: Americans 50+ lost $11.3 billion to fraud in 2025 — a record high — see the full report →

Drink Spiking

A serious safety risk in nightlife areas: someone adds a drug or extra alcohol to your drink to rob or harm you. Here's how to protect yourself and what to do if it happens.

✓ What the scam is
✓ How to avoid it
✓ Where it happens

Drink spiking is one of the few entries in our guides that's about your safety rather than your wallet. It happens when someone secretly adds drugs or extra alcohol to your drink to leave you confused, drowsy, or unconscious — usually to rob or harm you. It can happen anywhere there's nightlife, and the risk rises away from secured resort areas and late at night. None of it is ever the victim's fault, and a few simple habits make it far harder to do. This is information to keep you safe, not to frighten you.

What Drink Spiking Is

Spiking means a substance is added to your drink without your knowledge — an extra shot of alcohol, or a sedative drug that's often colorless, odorless, and tasteless. The aim is to make you vulnerable, and the consequences can include theft, assault, or a medical emergency. It can be done with a drink left unattended for a moment, a drink handed to you by someone you've just met, or in rarer cases by someone working at a venue. Because the substances are hard to detect by taste, prevention is about protecting the drink itself rather than spotting the spike.

Where the Risk Is Highest

In nightlife settings, especially away from secured areas:

  • Nassau and the Bahamas: bars and clubs outside the well-secured resort corridors, particularly late at night.
  • Nightlife anywhere you travel: the risk exists in bars, clubs, and party destinations worldwide.

The Warning Signs

If you've been spiked, the effects usually come on faster and stronger than your actual drinking would explain. Watch for, in yourself or a friend:

  • Feeling far drunker, dizzier, or more confused than your intake accounts for.
  • Sudden drowsiness, nausea, or trouble standing and speaking.
  • A drink that tastes or looks unusual.
  • Memory gaps or "lost time."

If a friend who'd had only a little to drink suddenly seems very unwell, don't write it off as "just drunk" — treat it seriously.

How to Protect Yourself

  • Keep your drink in sight at all times, and never leave it unattended — if you lose track of it, get a fresh one.
  • Don't accept open drinks from strangers; watch yours being poured or opened, and consider sticking to bottles you open yourself.
  • Go out with people you trust, agree to look out for one another, and have a plan to get back safely together.
  • Favor busier, well-run, secured venues, and trust your instincts about a place or a person.

Bars in these areas have also been reported to pad bills with large, unapproved gratuities, so review your receipt before signing — our bar & clip-joint guide covers the overcharging side.

What to Do if You Suspect Spiking

Treat it as an emergency. If you or a friend show the signs above, stay with people you trust, do not leave alone or go anywhere with someone you don't know, and get help immediately — tell venue security or staff, and call local emergency services (in the Bahamas, 911 or 919) or get to a hospital. Tell medical staff you suspect your drink was spiked, since that guides their care, and if you can, keep the drink for testing. Report it to the police afterward. Above all, prioritize getting yourself or your friend somewhere safe with trusted people — and know that being targeted is never your fault. If you're affected and need support after the fact, our guide on what to do after an incident can help you find the right resources.

🧭
Heading to a specific destination?

See the full destination guides for the scams and safety issues you'll meet on the ground, area by area.

Tourist scams & safety in Nassau →

Frequently Asked Questions

It's when someone secretly adds a drug or extra alcohol to your drink without your knowledge, to leave you confused, drowsy, or unconscious — usually so they can rob or harm you. The substances used are often colorless, odorless, and tasteless, so they're hard to detect.
Keep your drink in sight and never leave it unattended; if you lose track of it, get a fresh one. Don't accept open drinks from strangers, watch yours being poured or opened, go out with people you trust, and stick to busier, secured venues.
Feeling far drunker, dizzier, or more confused than your intake explains; sudden drowsiness, nausea, or trouble standing or speaking; a drink that tastes odd; or memory gaps. If a friend who barely drank suddenly seems very unwell, treat it as a possible spiking, not just drunkenness.
Treat it as an emergency: stay with people you trust, don't leave alone or with a stranger, tell venue staff or security, and call local emergency services (911 or 919 in the Bahamas) or get to a hospital. Tell medical staff you suspect spiking, keep the drink for testing if you can, and report it to police. Being targeted is never your fault.