An Orange Crush should smell like a just-cut orange before you taste the vodka. It should be cold, juicy, sparkling, and bright enough to feel like a beach-bar drink instead of plain vodka with orange soda. This version uses fresh-squeezed orange juice, vodka or orange vodka, triple sec, crushed ice, and just enough bubbles to keep every sip lively.
It is the kind of drink that works because it feels simple: squeeze, pour, fizz, sip. The same build is easy enough for one glass after work and bright enough for a whole tray of summer drinks.
If a Screwdriver is vodka and orange juice, an Orange Crush is the fresher, louder cousin. It adds orange liqueur, crushed ice, and soda, so the glass lands citrusy, cold, and easy to sip without feeling heavy.
This is the cocktail version, not the soda cake. You will get the classic drink first, then the choices that matter: regular vodka or orange vodka, triple sec or Cointreau, lemon-lime soda or club soda, one glass or a pitcher, plus frozen, lighter, shot, and mocktail versions.
Quick Answer: What Is an Orange Crush?
An Orange Crush is a fresh orange vodka cocktail made with fresh-squeezed orange juice, vodka or orange vodka, triple sec or another orange liqueur, lemon-lime soda or club soda, and crushed ice.
The best starting ratio is 2 oz / 60 ml vodka, 1 oz / 30 ml triple sec, 3–4 oz / 90–120 ml fresh orange juice, and 2–3 oz / 60–90 ml lemon-lime soda or club soda. Build it over crushed ice, add the soda last, and serve it while the glass is still cold and bubbly.

Make One Now
Fill a highball, Collins, or pint glass with crushed ice. Add 2 oz / 60 ml vodka, 1 oz / 30 ml triple sec, and 3–4 oz / 90–120 ml fresh orange juice. Stir briefly, top with 2–3 oz / 60–90 ml lemon-lime soda or club soda, stir once more, garnish with orange, and drink while the ice is still crisp.
If the first sip tastes like orange first and alcohol second, you are in the right place. From there, adjust the next glass sweeter, drier, stronger, or more orange-forward.
Start here before you customize: vodka or orange vodka, triple sec, fresh-squeezed orange juice, lemon-lime soda, and a full glass of crushed ice.
Three things ruin the drink fast: warm juice, soda added too early, and finished cocktails sitting in a pitcher with ice.
| Want this? | Use this |
|---|---|
| Classic beach-bar Orange Crush | Orange vodka + lemon-lime soda |
| Cleaner, less sweet drink | Plain vodka + club soda |
| Stronger orange flavor | Orange vodka + Cointreau |
| Lighter party pour | Club soda + extra fresh orange |
| Mocktail | Fresh orange juice + lemon or lime + soda |
You are not chasing a syrupy orange soda drink here. You want fresh citrus, cold ice, clean vodka, orange depth, and a bubbly finish.
Recipe Card: Orange Crush Cocktail
This is the balanced house version: cocktail-strength, orange-forward, bubbly, but not sticky. It is built to taste like fresh orange first, not lemon-lime soda first.
| Prep time | 5 minutes |
| Cook time | 0 minutes |
| Total time | 5 minutes |
| Servings | 1 |
| Yield | 1 cocktail |
| Method | Built in the glass |
| Glass | Highball, Collins, or pint glass |
| Equipment | Citrus juicer, jigger or measuring cup, bar spoon |
Ingredients
- 3–4 oz / 90–120 ml fresh orange juice
- 2 oz / 60 ml vodka or orange vodka
- 1 oz / 30 ml triple sec or Cointreau
- 2–3 oz / 60–90 ml lemon-lime soda, club soda, or orange sparkling water
- Crushed ice, enough to fill the glass
- Orange wheel or wedge, for garnish
Instructions
- Juice the oranges and measure 3–4 oz / 90–120 ml fresh orange juice.
- Fill a highball, Collins, or pint glass with crushed ice.
- Add vodka, triple sec, and fresh orange juice.
- Stir for 5–10 seconds, just enough to chill and combine.
- Top with lemon-lime soda, club soda, or orange sparkling water.
- Stir gently once or twice, garnish with orange, and serve immediately.
Notes
- Orange vodka gives a stronger coastal bar-style orange flavor.
- Plain vodka keeps the drink cleaner and less sweet.
- Lemon-lime soda gives the classic finish.
- Club soda or orange sparkling water makes it drier.
- Add the soda last and serve right away.
In This Recipe
What You Need
You only really need a citrus juicer, a jigger or small measuring cup, a tall glass, and crushed ice. A bar spoon helps, but a regular spoon is fine. Shakers are optional; use one only for the vodka, orange liqueur, and juice, never the soda.
A hand press makes the drink feel especially beach-bar style, but any citrus juicer works. What matters most is measuring the alcohol, filling the glass with enough ice, and adding the bubbles at the end.
Why This Ratio Works
A good Orange Crush is not vodka hidden under orange soda. It is fresh orange juice sharpened with vodka, deepened with orange liqueur, and lifted with bubbles.
Remember the Orange Crush rule: fresh orange carries the drink, orange liqueur deepens it, and soda only lifts it.

This house ratio starts a little less sweet on purpose. You can always add more soda, but you cannot rescue a sticky glass once it is built.
The 2 oz / 60 ml vodka pour keeps it cocktail-strength, while 3–4 oz / 90–120 ml orange juice gives enough citrus to make the glass taste juicy instead of sharp. For a sweeter crush, add a little more orange liqueur or lemon-lime soda. To make a drier one, reduce the liqueur to ½ oz / 15 ml and use club soda.
Ingredients That Make the Drink Work
Because the cocktail is so simple, there is nowhere for dull juice or flat bubbles to hide. Good oranges and the right topper matter more than expensive bar tools.
Fresh orange juice
Fresh juice gives you that little burst of orange oil and perfume before the glass even reaches your mouth. That is the difference between a bright Orange Crush and a flat vodka-orange drink, and it is what bottled juice never quite gives you. Pulp is fine if you like a fuller texture.

One juicy orange may be enough for one drink, but plan on 1–2 oranges per cocktail so you are not short. Measure the juice and aim for 3–4 oz / 90–120 ml per glass. If one orange gives you less than 3 oz, squeeze another half.
Navel oranges are easy to find and usually sweet. Valencia oranges are especially juicy. Cara Cara oranges make a softer, sweeter pink-orange drink. Blood oranges also work, but they change the color and add a deeper berry-like edge.
If you bought a bag of oranges and have more citrus than you need for drinks, save a few for this orange marmalade recipe; it uses the same bright flavor in a slower, spoonable way.
Vodka or orange vodka
You do not need to buy a special bottle for one drink, but the vodka choice does change the mood of the glass. Plain vodka keeps the cocktail clean and citrus-led; orange vodka makes it taste more like the beach drink people remember.
Sweet, fragrant oranges are enough for plain vodka to work beautifully. When the fruit is mild, orange vodka helps the flavor along.
| Vodka choice | Best for | What it does |
|---|---|---|
| Plain vodka | A cleaner Orange Crush | Lets fresh orange juice stay in front |
| Orange vodka | Beach drink flavor | Adds stronger orange aroma |
| Neutral vodka | Easy home mixing | Keeps the drink simple and crowd-friendly |
| Vanilla or whipped vodka | Dessert-style drink | Can taste creamsicle-like, but turns sweet quickly |
Start with plain vodka and good oranges if you are unsure. The second glass can always get louder with orange vodka.

Triple sec or orange liqueur
Orange liqueur is helpful, but it can take over fast. Measure it once, taste the drink, then adjust the next glass.
Triple sec adds sweetness and orange depth. Cointreau gives a cleaner orange flavor. Grand Marnier is richer and heavier, so use it when you want a rounder cocktail rather than the lightest possible glass.
| Orange liqueur | Flavor | Best use |
|---|---|---|
| Triple sec | Sweet, simple, classic | Standard Orange Crush |
| Cointreau | Cleaner, stronger orange | Premium but still bright drink |
| Grand Marnier | Richer, deeper, slightly brandy-like | Rounder cocktail; use lightly |
The safest first pour is still 1 oz / 30 ml. Once the drink is in your hand, you will know whether it needs more orange depth or less sweetness.

If you want another drink where orange liqueur has to stay balanced instead of taking over, this spicy margarita recipe uses that same sweet-citrus logic with lime, tequila, and heat.
Soda or sparkling water
The topper decides the mood of the glass: classic and sweet, clean and dry, or full-on orange soda. This is where many homemade versions go wrong. Too much sweet fizz, and the fresh orange disappears.
| Topper | Result | Use it when |
|---|---|---|
| Sprite, 7UP, or lemon-lime soda | Sweet, sparkling, classic | You want the beach-bar drink |
| Club soda | Dryer and lighter | You want less sugar |
| Orange sparkling water | Citrusy but not syrupy | You want orange flavor without extra sweetness |
| Orange soda | Very sweet and candy-like | Use only for a soda-style twist |
Start with less topper than you think. You can always add a splash more, but you cannot take sweetness back out.

Crushed ice
Crushed ice is part of the drink’s personality. It chills fast, softens the vodka, and gives the glass that loose, beach-bar feel you do not get from a few hard cubes.

Ready to mix? jump to the method · recipe card · back to top
How to Make It
The easiest home method is also the best one: build the drink right in the glass. It is fast, clean, and keeps the soda lively.

- Juice first. Squeeze the oranges right before mixing if you can.
- Ice the glass. Fill the glass with crushed ice, not just a few cubes.
- Add the base. Pour in vodka, triple sec, and orange juice.
- Stir briefly. You want the base cold and even, not overworked.
- Add fizz last. Top with soda or sparkling water.
- Serve immediately. The drink is best before the bubbles fade and the ice melts.
Once the soda goes in, the drink is alive for a short window. The best sip is the first one: cold glass, sharp ice, orange aroma, and bubbles still lifting the citrus.
Add Soda Last for Better Fizz

If you prefer a colder, slightly frothier drink, shake only the vodka, orange liqueur, and orange juice with ice for 10–15 seconds. Pour over crushed ice, then add the soda. Do not shake carbonated soda.
Fresh Orange Juice vs Bottled Orange Juice
Fresh orange juice gives the drink its best aroma. You smell the orange before the first sip, and the cocktail tastes juicy instead of flat. Bottled juice can make a decent quick drink, but it will not give the same just-cut orange aroma.
Choose chilled 100% orange juice with no added sugar if you use bottled juice. Club soda is usually the better topper there, because it keeps the glass from turning too sweet.

When making one or two drinks, squeeze the oranges. In a large party pitcher, bottled juice can be practical, but just-squeezed citrus still gives the best flavor.
Beach-Bar Style Orange Crush
For an Ocean City-style Orange Crush, use orange vodka, fresh-squeezed orange juice, triple sec, lemon-lime soda, and a full glass of crushed ice. Build it fast, keep it cold, and serve it while the fizz is still lively.

Beach-bar style is about cues, not fussy technique: orange scent first, crushed ice to the top, fizz added last, and enough soda to lift the drink without turning it into candy.
- Orange smell first: fresh juice is doing its job.
- Crushed ice to the top: the texture should feel cold, casual, and fast-melting.
- Bubbles added last: the drink stays lively.
- Orange vodka optional: use it for stronger coastal-bar flavor.
- Not too much soda: the glass should still taste like orange, not candy.
The Easy Parts Formula
Once that ratio makes sense, you can scale the drink without doing bar math every time.
2 parts vodka + 1 part orange liqueur + 3–4 parts fresh orange juice + 2–3 parts soda.
For one drink, 1 part can be 1 oz. When batching, 1 part can be 1 cup. Use a smaller “part” for one drink and a larger “part” for a pitcher, but keep the soda separate until serving so the drink stays fizzy.
Pitcher Recipe
A pitcher should make hosting easier, not give everyone a flat drink. Mix the vodka, orange liqueur, and orange juice ahead. The pitcher should sit cold in the fridge; the fizz should happen in the glass.
Orange Crush Pitcher Amounts
| Servings | Vodka | Triple sec | Fresh orange juice | Soda to add at serving |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 oz / 60 ml | 1 oz / 30 ml | 3–4 oz / 90–120 ml | 2–3 oz / 60–90 ml |
| 4 | 8 oz / 240 ml | 4 oz / 120 ml | 12–16 oz / 360–480 ml | 8–12 oz / 240–360 ml |
| 6 | 12 oz / 360 ml | 6 oz / 180 ml | 18–24 oz / 540–720 ml | 12–18 oz / 360–540 ml |
| 8 | 16 oz / 480 ml | 8 oz / 240 ml | 24–32 oz / 720–960 ml | 16–24 oz / 480–720 ml |
Keep the Pitcher Fizzy
Best party setup: Chill the orange-vodka base in a pitcher, then set out crushed ice, orange wedges, lemon-lime soda, and club soda so guests can finish each glass sweeter or drier.

Keep the base cold and let guests finish their own glasses; that way every pour still has fresh fizz instead of tasting like it waited around. For bigger party math, this jungle juice recipe has 1, 2, and 5 gallon guidance, including the same useful rule: add fizzy mixers near serving time.
Just-squeezed juice is still best for pitchers. Bottled juice can help when you need volume, but choose a good chilled 100% orange juice and use club soda or a lighter hand with the lemon-lime soda.
For a lighter pitcher, use the lower end of the vodka range or let guests top each glass with extra club soda. Serve pitcher drinks responsibly, especially because orange juice and soda can make the cocktail taste lighter than it is.
Variations: Frozen, Lighter, Shot, and Mocktail
Once the classic glass tastes right, the variations are just small turns of the same dial: colder, lighter, stronger, or alcohol-free.

Frozen Orange Crush
Blend 4 oz / 120 ml fresh orange juice, 2 oz / 60 ml vodka, 1 oz / 30 ml triple sec, and 1 to 1¼ cups crushed ice, about 120–150 g, until slushy. If your oranges are tart, add ½ oz / 15 ml simple syrup. Pour into a cold glass and finish with a small splash of soda.
Add soda after blending, not before. Too much soda in the blender loses its fizz and can foam up.
If you like frozen cocktails but hate icy, watery texture, this frozen strawberry daiquiri recipe goes deeper into blender balance, fruit body, and slushy texture.
Lighter Orange Crush
For a lighter, skinny-style drink, use plain vodka, reduce triple sec to ½ oz / 15 ml if needed, and top with club soda or orange sparkling water instead of lemon-lime soda. Keep the orange juice at 3–4 oz / 90–120 ml so the drink still tastes full.
Orange Crush Shot
Shake 1 oz vodka or orange vodka, ¼ oz triple sec, and ¾ oz fresh orange juice with ice. Strain into one large shot glass, or split between two smaller shot glasses. Add only a tiny splash of soda if you want fizz.
This keeps the shot in the same fresh-orange family as the cocktail instead of turning it into a candy-style party drink.
Orange Crush Mocktail
Combine 4 oz / 120 ml fresh orange juice, ½ oz / 15 ml lemon or lime juice, crushed ice, and 2–3 oz / 60–90 ml lemon-lime soda, club soda, or orange sparkling water. For a sweeter mocktail, add a little orange simple syrup. To keep it cleaner, use club soda and a little orange zest.
The mocktail should still taste like fresh orange with bubbles, not just a glass of orange soda.
For more light, refreshing drinks that do not feel heavy, this guide to coconut water cocktails has easy ideas that sit closer to the clean, cooling side of the drinks table.
Maryland, Ocean City, and Delaware
The Orange Crush belongs to Mid-Atlantic beach culture: Ocean City bars, crushed ice, fresh-squeezed juice, seafood tables, and a friendly Maryland-Delaware argument over who gets to claim it.
It has beach-bar DNA. This is not meant to be slow or precious. The drink is a fast-built glass: fresh orange squeezed in, vodka or orange vodka, orange liqueur, crushed ice, and lemon-lime fizz.
That regional pride is part of why the drink has stayed so specific. Fresh-squeezed orange, orange liqueur, cold ice, and a quick build are the identity.
Maryland’s official state-symbol page lists the Original Maryland Orange Crush as its state cocktail, and Delaware’s General Assembly page records HB 444 designating the Orange Crush as Delaware’s state cocktail. You can read those official notes from the Maryland State Archives and the Delaware General Assembly.
Orange Crush vs Screwdriver vs Mimosa
These three drinks all use orange juice, but they serve different moments.
| Drink | What it is | Main difference |
|---|---|---|
| Orange Crush | Vodka, orange liqueur, fresh orange juice, soda, crushed ice | Sparkling, fresh, summer-bar style |
| Screwdriver | Vodka and orange juice | Simpler, no fizz, no orange liqueur |
| Mimosa | Sparkling wine and orange juice | Brunch drink, lighter, wine-based |
A Screwdriver is the simplest vodka-orange drink. Make a Mimosa when you want a wine-based brunch drink. Choose an Orange Crush when you want fresh orange juice, vodka, orange liqueur, fizz, and crushed ice in one bright summer glass.
Fixes for a Drink That’s Too Sweet, Flat, or Watery
If the drink misses, it usually misses in one of a few predictable ways: too sweet, too flat, too watery, or not orange enough. Fix the glass before you start over.

| Problem | What happened | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Too sweet | Too much lemon-lime soda or orange liqueur | Use club soda and reduce triple sec to ½ oz / 15 ml |
| Too weak | Too much soda or juice | Use less soda or add ½ oz / 15 ml more vodka |
| Too boozy | Alcohol is louder than the orange | Add more fresh orange juice and a little more soda |
| Too flat | Soda was added early or stirred too hard | Add soda last and stir gently |
| Too watery | The drink sat too long over crushed ice | Serve immediately and do not make finished drinks ahead |
| Not orange enough | Mild oranges or plain vodka | Use orange vodka, better oranges, or Cointreau |
| Too bitter | Pith got into the juice | Juice gently and avoid crushing the white pith |
The fastest rescue: add more orange juice if it tastes too boozy, club soda if it tastes too sweet, or a small splash of orange liqueur if it tastes thin.
Still tuning the glass? check the topper · check the ratio · recipe card
What to Serve With It
Think salty, spicy, grilled, and creamy. Orange Crush cocktails have enough sweetness to soften heat, enough citrus to cut through richness, and enough bubbles to keep snack food from feeling heavy. For a full summer-style plate, shrimp tacos with slaw and creamy cilantro-lime sauce are an easy pairing because the citrusy drink cuts through the creamy sauce and warm spices.

- Grilled shrimp, fish, or chicken
- Tacos, nachos, or quesadillas
- Crab cakes or seafood snacks
- Salty chips, pretzels, and party mixes
- Spicy appetizers
- Fruit, cheese, and brunch boards
- Guacamole or creamy dips for a rich contrast
If you are keeping the food snackier, a bowl of fresh mango salsa works with chips, tacos, fish, shrimp, and grilled chicken. For a sharper citrus cocktail at the same table, the Lemon Drop Martini brings more tartness, while the Orange Crush stays tall, juicy, and easygoing.
Make-Ahead Tips for Parties
An Orange Crush is best made right before serving, but you can prepare the parts ahead.

- Fresh orange juice: Juice a few hours ahead and keep chilled.
- Pitcher base: Mix vodka, triple sec, and orange juice ahead, then refrigerate.
- Soda: Add only when serving.
- Crushed ice: Add to glasses, not the pitcher.
- Finished cocktail: Do not store it. The soda goes flat and the ice waters it down.
If serving a group, keep the chilled base in a pitcher and let guests top their own glasses. That keeps every drink cold, sparkling, and adjustable.
FAQs
What alcohol is in an Orange Crush?
An Orange Crush usually contains vodka or orange vodka plus triple sec or another orange liqueur. It also includes fresh orange juice, soda, and crushed ice.
Is an Orange Crush the same as a Screwdriver?
No. A Screwdriver is vodka and orange juice. An Orange Crush adds orange liqueur, soda, and crushed ice, which makes it more sparkling and layered.
Is an Orange Crush made with Orange Crush soda?
The classic cocktail is usually made with fresh orange juice, vodka or orange vodka, orange liqueur, and lemon-lime soda or club soda. Orange Crush soda can make a sweeter twist, but it tastes more like candy orange and less like the fresh beach drink.
Fresh orange juice or bottled orange juice — which is better?
For one or two drinks, fresh-squeezed juice is best because you can taste the difference: brighter aroma, cleaner citrus, and less boxed sweetness. Bottled 100% orange juice can work for speed or pitchers, especially if it is well chilled.
Can you make it with regular vodka?
Yes. Regular vodka works well, especially with fresh orange juice. Orange vodka gives a stronger beach-bar orange flavor, but it is not required.
Do you need triple sec?
Triple sec is strongly recommended because it gives the drink orange depth, not just sweetness. Cointreau makes the flavor cleaner, while Grand Marnier makes it richer.
Sprite or club soda — which should you use?
Lemon-lime soda such as Sprite or 7UP gives the classic sweet finish. Club soda makes the drink drier, cleaner, and less sugary. Orange sparkling water sits between the two.
How do you make an Orange Crush less sweet?
Use club soda or orange sparkling water instead of lemon-lime soda, and reduce the triple sec to ½ oz / 15 ml. Keep enough fresh orange juice so the drink still tastes full.
How strong is an Orange Crush?
With 2 oz vodka and 1 oz orange liqueur, an Orange Crush is a real cocktail, not a low-alcohol spritz. The fresh juice and bubbles make it easy to sip, so use 1½ oz vodka or extra club soda if you want a lighter glass.
How many oranges do you need for one drink?
One juicy orange may be enough, but plan on 1–2 oranges per drink so you are not short. Measure the juice and aim for 3–4 oz / 90–120 ml per cocktail.
What makes it a Maryland or Ocean City Orange Crush?
The Ocean City-style identity comes from fresh-squeezed orange juice, vodka or orange vodka, triple sec, lemon-lime soda, and crushed ice. Maryland beach bars helped make it famous, and Delaware beach towns keep the same drink close to their own summer culture.
Is this the same as Orange Crush soda cake?
No. This recipe is for the fresh orange vodka cocktail. Orange Crush soda cake is a separate dessert usually made with orange soda and cake mix or cake batter.
Final Sip
Make the first glass classic. Use fresh orange juice, vodka, triple sec, lemon-lime soda, and enough crushed ice to make the glass properly cold. Then taste and adjust from there.
A sweeter Orange Crush, a drier one, a pitcher, frozen drink, or mocktail all come from the same simple rule: let the orange lead, keep the bubbles lively, and serve it before the ice wins.
Try the classic glass first, then tell us which version became yours: sweeter, drier, stronger, or alcohol-free.
