A good hot toddy should feel warm before it tastes strong: lemon steam rising from the mug, honey softening the edges, a little whiskey warmth underneath, and enough hot water or tea to make the whole drink smooth and sippable. It is simple, but it should never taste flat, harsh, or thrown together.
This hot toddy recipe starts with the classic whiskey, honey, lemon, and hot water formula, then shows you how to adjust it for the toddy you actually want: softer with bourbon, fuller with tea, fruitier with apple cider, completely alcohol-free, or more aromatic with ginger, cardamom, cinnamon, and clove.
It is the kind of drink you make when you want something slower than a cocktail but more comforting than plain tea. One warm mug, a spoonful of honey, a squeeze of lemon, and a little heat are enough to change the mood of the evening.
Although a hot toddy is often talked about as a cold-weather comfort drink, it is not medicine or a cure. If you are under the weather, taking medication, avoiding alcohol, or serving someone who does not drink, use the non-alcoholic version below with hot tea, honey, lemon, ginger, and warming spices. The alcoholic version is for adults of legal drinking age only.

Quick Answer: Hot Toddy Ratio
For one classic hot toddy, use 1½ ounces / 45 ml whiskey or bourbon, ¾ cup / 180 ml hot water or hot tea, 2 to 3 teaspoons honey, and 2 to 3 teaspoons fresh lemon juice. Stir the honey and lemon into the hot liquid first, then add the whiskey or bourbon and taste before serving.

The finished drink should taste bright at the front, gently sweet in the middle, and warming at the end. If it tastes like only whiskey, only lemon, or only honey, it needs one small adjustment.
- Tastes too strong? Add more hot water or tea.
- Sharp from lemon? Add a little more honey.
- Overly sweet? Add more lemon juice.
- Need it softer? Use bourbon or Irish whiskey.
- Want more body? Use black tea or ginger tea instead of plain water.
- Skipping alcohol? Use tea, honey, lemon, ginger, cinnamon, and cloves.
When the balance is right, it should feel like lemon tea with quiet whiskey warmth, not a mug of hot alcohol.
Need the next step? Jump to the full recipe, measurements, tea version, non-alcoholic hot toddy, or quick flavor fixes.
Hot Toddy Recipe
Classic Hot Toddy
This classic hot toddy is made with whiskey or bourbon, hot water or tea, honey, fresh lemon, and optional warming spices. It is quick, cozy, and easy to adjust in the mug.
| Prep Time | 5 minutes |
| Heating Time | 3 minutes |
| Total Time | 8 minutes |
| Yield | 1 drink |
| Mug Size | 8 to 10 oz / 240 to 300 ml |
| Category | Drink |
| Cuisine | American |
| Method | Stirred hot drink |
Ingredients
- 1½ ounces / 45 ml whiskey or bourbon
- ¾ cup / 180 ml hot water or hot tea
- Honey: 2 to 3 teaspoons / 14 to 21 g
- Fresh lemon juice: 2 to 3 teaspoons / 10 to 15 ml
- Lemon round: 1, for garnish
- Cinnamon stick: 1, optional
- Whole cloves: 2 to 4, optional
- Fresh ginger: 1 thin slice, optional
Equipment
- Heatproof mug or Irish coffee glass
- Kettle or small saucepan
- Spoon
- Jigger or small measuring cup
- Measuring spoons
- Citrus juicer, optional
Glass note: Use a heatproof mug or tempered glass. Avoid pouring very hot liquid into thin decorative glass, which can crack.
Instructions
- Fill your mug with hot water for a minute to warm it, then discard that water.
- Heat fresh water or brewed tea until steaming and just off the boil, about 190–205°F / 88–96°C. No thermometer needed; steam and a just-settled boil are the practical cues.
- Honey and fresh lemon juice go into the warm mug first.
- Pour in the hot water or tea and stir until the honey dissolves fully.
- Add the whiskey or bourbon and stir again.
- Garnish with a lemon round, cinnamon stick, cloves, or ginger if using.
- Taste carefully. Add more honey for sweetness, lemon for brightness, or hot water/tea if the drink is too strong.
- Let it cool for a moment before sipping. It should be steaming, not scalding.
Recipe note: Do not boil the whiskey. Add the spirit after the hot water or tea, so the drink stays smooth and balanced.
The first sip should be lemony, lightly sweet, and warm all the way through, with the whiskey in the background instead of shouting over everything.

Jump to the Part You Need
Make it: Recipe | Best Whiskey | Variations
Customize it: Tea | Non-Alcoholic | Apple Cider
Fix it: Cold/Cough | Substitutions | Fix the Flavor | FAQ
Want to adjust the mug? See the best whiskey choices, browse the hot toddy variations, or jump to how to fix the flavor.
Hot Toddy at a Glance
Keep this nearby for your first mug, then adjust by taste.
| Time | 8 minutes |
| Yield | 1 drink |
| Mug | 8 to 10 oz / 240 to 300 ml heatproof mug |
| Spirit | Whiskey or bourbon |
| Base | Hot water or brewed tea |
| Balance | Honey + fresh lemon |
| Temperature | Steaming, not boiling |
Before You Sip
- Is the honey fully dissolved?
- Does the mug smell lemony, warm, and lightly spiced?
- Is it steaming but not scalding?
- Does it taste balanced, not like straight whiskey?
- Need no alcohol? Use the same honey-lemon-spice base with tea.

Why This Hot Toddy Works
A hot toddy works when it feels like one smooth drink, not four ingredients sitting in the same mug. Honey softens the whiskey, lemon wakes it up, and hot water or tea carries everything without making it taste thin.
- Whiskey or bourbon gives body and warmth.
- Hot water or tea opens the aroma and keeps the drink gentle.
- Honey softens the alcohol and rounds the lemon.
- Fresh lemon juice keeps the flavor bright instead of heavy.
- Warming the mug helps the drink stay hot longer.
- Dissolving the honey first prevents a sticky layer at the bottom.
- Adding whiskey last keeps the spirit from tasting cooked.
The result feels classic, but still gives you room to adjust. Make it with water for a clean whiskey toddy, tea for more body, bourbon for softness, apple cider for a festive twist, or no alcohol when you want the comfort without the spirit.
Avoid These Hot Toddy Mistakes
- Add the whiskey last. Boiling it can make the drink taste harsh.
- Go easy on the lemon at first. You can always add more after tasting.
- Dissolve the honey fully. Otherwise it settles at the bottom instead of sweetening the drink.
- Start with a warm mug. It keeps the toddy cozy longer.
- Do not treat the alcoholic version as medicine. If you are sick or taking medication, make the alcohol-free version.

What Is a Hot Toddy?
A hot toddy is a warm drink usually made with whiskey or bourbon, hot water or tea, honey, lemon, and optional spices. It is served hot and is especially popular as a cozy cold-weather drink.
At its best, it is less like a cocktail and more like a warm, balanced honey-lemon drink with a little spirit underneath. The classic formula is simple: spirit, heat, sweetness, and brightness. Whiskey gives depth, honey softens the edges, lemon keeps it lively, and hot water or tea makes it easy to sip.
You may also see people write it as hot tottie, hottie tottie, hot tati, or hot toddy drink. The standard spelling is hot toddy, and those searches usually point to the same warm whiskey, honey, and lemon drink.
Hot Toddy Ingredients
Because the ingredient list is short, each part matters. Water gives you the cleanest whiskey-lemon flavor. Tea makes the drink feel slower and fuller, especially when you want something closer to an evening mug than a cocktail. Cider turns it sweeter, fruitier, and more seasonal.

Whiskey or Bourbon
Whiskey is the classic choice. Bourbon works beautifully because it is naturally sweeter, with vanilla and caramel notes that blend well with honey and lemon. Irish whiskey makes a smoother, gentler toddy. Rye gives more spice and bite.
You do not need a rare bottle here. Use something you like drinking, but save the most delicate whiskey for sipping neat. Heat, honey, and lemon will soften the fine details.
Hot Water or Hot Tea
Hot water gives you the cleanest classic style. Tea turns it into something you settle into, not just something you mix. Black tea, ginger tea, lemon tea, chamomile, rooibos, chai, and decaf Earl Grey can all work, depending on the mood you want.

Honey
Honey is not just sweetness here. It is what pulls the lemon and whiskey together so the drink tastes smooth instead of sharp. Start with 2 teaspoons if you prefer a cleaner sip, or use 1 tablespoon if you want it sweeter and more soothing.
Fresh Lemon Juice
Lemon juice keeps the drink from tasting heavy or flat. Use fresh lemon when you can, because the recipe is so simple. Bottled lemon juice can taste harsh when there are only a few ingredients involved. The same fresh-lemon balance is what makes a Lemon Drop Martini work in a colder, brighter way.
Cinnamon, Cloves, Ginger, and Other Spices
Spices are optional, but they are what make the mug smell like you meant to slow down. A cinnamon stick is the easiest addition. Cloves give an old-fashioned holiday flavor. Ginger adds gentle heat. Nutmeg, star anise, cardamom, and orange peel can make the drink feel deeper and more wintery.

Small Details That Make a Better Hot Toddy
The recipe card gives you the method. These are the little things that make the difference between a hot drink that tastes fine and one that feels smooth, fragrant, and properly balanced.

1. Warm the Mug
Fill the mug with hot water and let it sit for a minute while you gather the ingredients. Then discard that water. A warm mug keeps the drink hot for longer, especially if you are using glass or sipping slowly.
2. Heat the Water or Brew the Tea
Heat water until it is steaming and just off the boil, around 190–205°F / 88–96°C. Brewing tea first gives you a fuller base; plain water keeps the flavor cleaner. The alcohol goes in at the end, not while the tea is steeping.
3. Dissolve the Honey First
Honey and lemon go into the warm mug first, followed by the hot base. Stir until the honey dissolves fully so the sweetness runs through the drink instead of settling at the bottom.
4. Add the Whiskey Last
Once the honey has dissolved, add the whiskey or bourbon and stir again. This keeps the drink smooth and avoids a cooked-alcohol taste.
5. Taste Before Serving
The finished drink should taste balanced, not sugary or sour. More hot water or tea softens a strong pour. A little honey calms sharp lemon. Another squeeze of lemon wakes up a toddy that tastes too sweet.
Hot Toddy Measurements: Ounces, ML, and Grams
Measure the first one. After that, your taste will tell you whether you want it brighter, sweeter, stronger, or longer. These numbers are not rules; they are starting points for finding the mug you like best.

| Ingredient | US Measure | Metric |
|---|---|---|
| Whiskey or bourbon | 1½ ounces | 45 ml |
| Stronger whiskey pour | 2 ounces | 60 ml |
| Hot water or tea | ¾ cup | 180 ml |
| Long tea-style drink | 1 cup | 240 ml |
| Honey | 2 teaspoons | about 14 g |
| Honey | 1 tablespoon | about 21 g |
| Lemon juice | 2 teaspoons | 10 ml |
| Lemon juice | 1 tablespoon | 15 ml |
Once the classic ratio makes sense, you can make the drink lighter, stronger, or longer without guessing.
| Style | Whiskey | Hot Liquid | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light | 1 oz / 30 ml | ¾ cup / 180 ml | Gentle sipping |
| Classic | 1½ oz / 45 ml | ¾ cup / 180 ml | Balanced hot toddy |
| Strong | 2 oz / 60 ml | ½ cup / 120 ml | Cocktail-forward drink |
| Long & cozy | 1½ oz / 45 ml | 1 cup / 240 ml | Tea-style winter drink |
Best Whiskey for a Hot Toddy
You do not need the fanciest bottle for a hot toddy. The best whiskey is the one that warms the drink without fighting the honey and lemon. If you are unsure, start with bourbon or Irish whiskey. Both are easy to like in a warm honey-lemon drink.

Best Choices Fast
- Classic choice: whiskey, hot water, honey, and lemon.
- Beginner-friendly mug: bourbon, hot tea, honey, lemon, and cinnamon.
- Smoothest option: Irish whiskey with hot water or tea.
- No-alcohol pick: ginger tea, honey, lemon, cinnamon, and cloves.
- MasalaMonk-style version: black tea, ginger, cardamom, cinnamon, clove, honey, and lemon.
| Spirit | Flavor | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Bourbon | Sweet, rounded, vanilla, caramel | Best beginner-friendly hot toddy |
| Irish whiskey | Smooth, mellow, gentle | Best for a softer drink |
| Rye whiskey | Spicy, dry, sharper | Best with ginger, lemon, and clove |
| Blended whiskey | Balanced and affordable | Best everyday choice |
| Canadian whisky | Light, smooth, slightly sweet | Best with honey, lemon, and tea |
| Scotch | Malty or smoky | Best only if you enjoy smoky drinks |
| Dark rum | Sweet, rich, festive | Best with apple cider and cinnamon |
| Brandy or Cognac | Fruity, gentle, old-fashioned | Best with lemon, honey, and orange |
Choosing a bottle only for this drink does not need to be complicated. Pick bourbon for the softest and easiest mug, Irish whiskey for something smooth and mellow, or rye if you want more spice. Save smoky Scotch for people who already enjoy smoky flavors, because heat can make that smoke feel stronger.
If the whiskey-and-lemon balance is your favorite part of this drink, save this Whiskey Sour Recipe for a colder, sharper cocktail later. Love ginger most? The Whiskey Ginger Recipe takes the same warming spirit in a simpler, fizzy direction.
Hot Toddy Variations: Bourbon, Tea, Cider, Non-Alcoholic, Rum, and Brandy
Once the classic ratio makes sense, choose the version by mood. Keep it clean with hot water, make it slower with tea, turn it festive with cider, deepen it with rum or brandy, or skip the alcohol and build the comfort around ginger, honey, lemon, and spice.
Choose your version: Tea | Non-Alcoholic | Apple Cider | Indian-Spiced | Hennessy, Crown Royal, or Vodka | For a Crowd

| If You Want… | Make This | Best Starting Point |
|---|---|---|
| Classic and clean | Whiskey hot toddy | Whiskey, hot water, honey, lemon |
| Softer and sweeter | Bourbon hot toddy | Bourbon, hot water, honey, lemon |
| More body | Tea hot toddy | Black tea or ginger tea base |
| No alcohol | Non-alcoholic hot toddy | Tea, honey, lemon, ginger, spices |
| Festive and fruity | Apple cider hot toddy | Warm cider, bourbon or rum, cinnamon |
| More aromatic | Indian-spiced hot toddy | Ginger, cardamom, cinnamon, clove |
| Sweet and holiday-like | Rum hot toddy | Dark rum, cider, cinnamon, orange |
| Gentle and old-fashioned | Brandy or Cognac hot toddy | Brandy, Cognac, lemon, honey, orange |
| Light and smooth | Canadian whisky hot toddy | Canadian whisky, tea, honey, lemon |
Whiskey Hot Toddy
The whiskey style is the clean, old-fashioned starting point: 1½ ounces / 45 ml whiskey, ¾ cup / 180 ml hot water, 2 teaspoons honey, and 2 teaspoons lemon juice. Add a cinnamon stick or lemon round if you want a simple garnish.
This is the one to make when you want the classic flavor without extra fruit, tea, or spices getting in the way.
Bourbon Hot Toddy
Bourbon is the softest place to start if whiskey usually feels sharp to you. Its vanilla, caramel, and oak notes melt naturally into honey and lemon, so the finished drink tastes rounder without needing much extra sugar. Use 1½ to 2 ounces / 45 to 60 ml bourbon, then begin with 2 teaspoons honey because bourbon already brings sweetness.
It pairs beautifully with cinnamon, orange peel, apple cider, and a small slice of ginger.

Hot Toddy with Tea
A tea hot toddy is richer and more aromatic than one made with plain water. Brew the tea first, then add honey, lemon, and whiskey or bourbon after the tea has steeped.
Tea turns it into a slower evening drink, the kind you can hold for a few minutes while the lemon and spice open up.

- Black tea: classic and strong enough for whiskey.
- Ginger tea: warming, spicy, and good with lemon.
- Chamomile: gentle and floral.
- Rooibos: naturally caffeine-free and slightly sweet.
- Chai: spiced and bold; use less honey.
- Decaf Earl Grey: fragrant and smooth for an evening drink.
Close to bedtime, use decaf black tea, rooibos, chamomile, or ginger tea. For a tea base that tastes more spiced and structured, MasalaMonk’s Masala Chai Masterclass goes deeper into black tea, ginger, cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, and whole-spice balance.
To make one tea-based toddy, use 1 cup / 240 ml brewed tea, 1½ ounces / 45 ml whiskey or bourbon, 1½ to 2 teaspoons honey, and 2 teaspoons lemon juice. If the tea is already spiced or sweet, start with less honey and adjust at the end.
Non-Alcoholic Hot Toddy
The non-alcoholic style should taste complete, not like a whiskey drink with something missing. This is not a lesser version. It is the one to make when you want comfort, warmth, and honey-lemon flavor without alcohol.
Non-Alcoholic Hot Toddy Ingredients
- Hot black tea, ginger tea, lemon tea, or herbal tea: 1 cup / 240 ml
- Honey: 1 tablespoon
- Fresh lemon juice: 1 to 2 teaspoons
- Cinnamon stick: 1
- Whole cloves: 2
- Fresh ginger: 1 thin slice
- Orange slice: 1, optional
How to Make It
Brew the tea with ginger, cinnamon, and cloves. Stir in honey and lemon while the tea is still hot. Taste, then add more lemon for brightness or more honey for sweetness. This style is ideal when you want a soothing honey-lemon drink without alcohol.

For a deeper flavor, use ginger tea or black tea. Prefer a softer evening drink? Use chamomile, rooibos, or decaf tea. A creamier no-alcohol spiced tea path starts with this Chai Latte Recipe, especially if you want a café-style mug instead of a clear tea toddy.
Honey note: Do not give honey to babies under 1 year old. For more food-safety guidance, see the CDC’s foods and drinks to avoid or limit for young children.
Using this for cold-weather comfort? Read the cold, cough, and sore throat note, or jump back to all hot toddy variations.
Apple Cider Hot Toddy
An apple cider hot toddy is the fall and winter style. The cider brings fruit, sweetness, and a little tartness, so the drink feels rounder and more festive than the plain-water version. Bourbon makes it mellow, dark rum makes it richer, and brandy gives it an old-fashioned fruit warmth.

Use sweet, non-alcoholic apple cider here. If your cider is alcoholic, warm it gently and be extra careful not to boil the drink.
- ¾ cup / 180 ml apple cider
- Bourbon, whiskey, dark rum, or brandy: 1½ ounces / 45 ml
- Honey: 1 to 2 teaspoons
- Fresh lemon juice: 2 teaspoons
- Cinnamon stick: 1
- Fresh ginger: 1 thin slice
- Clove or star anise: 1, optional
Warm the apple cider with cinnamon, ginger, and clove until steaming. Let it sit for a few minutes so the spices can infuse. Add lemon juice and the spirit to the mug, then pour in the warm cider and stir. Because apple cider is already sweet, start with less honey and adjust at the end.
This is the mug that smells like cinnamon, citrus, and cold weather coming in from the door. A thin apple slice, orange peel, or cinnamon stick makes it feel finished without adding extra work. If apple drinks are your lane, the Appletini Recipe shows the colder, sharper side of apple and lemon.
Rum Hot Toddy
Dark rum turns the drink richer and more festive, especially with cinnamon, clove, nutmeg, orange, or apple cider. Use the same base ratio: 1½ ounces / 45 ml rum, ¾ cup / 180 ml hot water or cider, 2 teaspoons honey, and 2 teaspoons lemon juice.
Brandy or Cognac Hot Toddy
Brandy gives the drink a gentler, fruitier flavor. Cognac, including Hennessy, works the same way because it is a style of brandy. Use 1½ ounces / 45 ml brandy or Cognac in place of whiskey, then pair it with lemon, honey, orange peel, and a cinnamon stick.

Indian-Spiced Ginger Cardamom Hot Toddy
This is the MasalaMonk version: still a hot toddy, but with the ginger-cardamom warmth of an evening chai. It keeps the honey-lemon base and adds a deeper masala-style fragrance.

For the alcoholic drink: use 1½ ounces / 45 ml whiskey or bourbon with ¾ cup / 180 ml hot water or tea. Alcohol-free: skip the whiskey and use 1 cup / 240 ml hot black tea or ginger tea.
- Honey or brown sugar: 2 teaspoons
- Fresh lemon juice: 2 teaspoons
- Ginger slice: 1 thin piece
- Green cardamom pod: 1, lightly crushed
- Cinnamon stick: 1 small piece
- Whole cloves: 1 to 2
- Star anise: 1 small piece, optional
Simmer the water or tea briefly with ginger, cardamom, cinnamon, and cloves. Strain into a warm mug, stir in honey and lemon, then add whiskey or bourbon if using. This one is especially good when you want the drink to feel fragrant, layered, and quietly spiced.
Already Have Hennessy, Crown Royal, or Vodka?
If the bottle on your shelf is not whiskey or bourbon, you may still be able to make a good toddy. The trick is knowing whether that spirit brings flavor, softness, spice, or just alcohol.

- Hennessy / Cognac: A good choice if you want a softer, fruitier drink. Use it like brandy with honey, lemon, orange peel, and cinnamon.
- Crown Royal / Canadian whisky: Smooth and light, so it works well when you want a gentler drink. Use tea instead of plain water if you want more body.
- Vodka: Not ideal for a classic hot toddy because it adds alcohol without much flavor. If you use it, make the base stronger with tea, ginger, lemon, honey, and spices.
- Tequila or gin: Possible, but not classic. Once you use these, the drink becomes more of a warm cocktail than a traditional hot toddy.
When in doubt, choose the spirit that already tastes good with lemon. That is why whiskey, bourbon, brandy, Cognac, and dark rum feel more natural here than vodka.
Make-Ahead Lemon Ginger Hot Toddy Mix
If hot toddies become your cold-evening habit, this lemon ginger mix makes the next mug almost automatic. Prepare a small jar and you only need hot water, tea, cider, or a splash of whiskey when serving.

Lemon Ginger Hot Toddy Mix Formula
| Ingredient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Honey | ½ cup |
| Fresh lemon juice | ¼ cup |
| Lemon peel | from 1 lemon |
| Fresh ginger | 2-inch piece, thinly sliced |
| Cinnamon sticks | 2 |
| Whole cloves | 8 to 10 |
Combine everything in a clean jar and stir well. Let it sit for at least 30 minutes before using, or refrigerate it for a stronger ginger-spice flavor. This makes about ¾ cup mix, enough for roughly 6 to 12 drinks depending on whether you use 1 or 2 tablespoons per serving.
You can spoon it straight from the jar, or strain out the ginger, lemon peel, cinnamon, and cloves after a day if you want a smoother syrup. Store covered in the fridge for about 5 to 7 days. Use a clean spoon each time and discard the mix if it smells fermented or looks cloudy.
To serve, stir 1 to 2 tablespoons of the mix into hot water, tea, or warm apple cider. Add 1½ ounces / 45 ml whiskey, bourbon, rum, brandy, or Cognac if desired. For a stronger base, warm the mix with water or tea and keep the alcohol separate until serving.
Hot Toddies for a Crowd
At a small gathering, make one warm honey-lemon-spice base and let everyone finish their own mug. Guests can build the drink they want, and you do not have to guess who wants whiskey, who wants rum, and who wants none at all.

6-Drink Hot Toddy Batch Base
| Ingredient | For 6 Drinks |
|---|---|
| Hot water, tea, or apple cider | 4½ cups / about 1 liter |
| Honey | ¼ to ⅓ cup |
| Fresh lemon juice | ¼ to ⅓ cup |
| Cinnamon sticks | 3 |
| Whole cloves | 8 to 12 |
| Fresh ginger slices | 6 to 8 |
| Whiskey or bourbon | 9 oz / 270 ml, added at serving |
Warm the water, tea, or cider with honey, lemon, cinnamon, cloves, and ginger. Keep the base on low heat or the warm setting; it should steam gently, not boil. Add 1½ ounces / 45 ml whiskey or bourbon to each mug, then ladle the warm base over it. For non-drinkers, ladle the same base into a mug without alcohol.
Simple Hot Toddy Bar Ideas
- Hot water, black tea, ginger tea, or warm apple cider
- Honey, maple syrup, lemon wedges, and orange slices
- Cinnamon sticks, cloves, fresh ginger, and cardamom pods
- Whiskey, bourbon, dark rum, brandy, or Cognac
- Non-alcoholic tea base for guests who do not drink
Hot Toddy for Cold, Cough, or Sore Throat?
A hot toddy is often associated with cold-weather comfort because it is warm and contains honey and lemon. That does not make it medicine, and it should not be treated as a cure for cough, cold, flu, or sore throat.
If you are sick, taking cold medicine, allergy medicine, sleep aids, or pain relievers, make the alcohol-free version. Alcohol can interact with some medicines and may not be a good choice when you are unwell. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism has a helpful overview of alcohol and medication interactions.

For a cozy no-alcohol drink, brew ginger tea or black tea, add honey and lemon, and steep it with cinnamon or cloves. You still get the warm honey-lemon comfort without the whiskey.
What to Use If You’re Missing Something
A missing ingredient does not ruin the drink. It just changes the path. Use what you have, then taste and rebalance before serving.

| Missing Ingredient | Use Instead |
|---|---|
| No whiskey | Bourbon, dark rum, brandy, Cognac, or hot tea for no alcohol |
| No bourbon | Whiskey, rum, brandy, or Canadian whisky |
| No honey | Maple syrup, brown sugar syrup, agave, or simple syrup |
| No lemon | Orange juice, lime juice, or a small splash of apple cider |
| No hot water | Hot tea or warm apple cider |
| No tea | Hot water with ginger, cinnamon, or cloves |
| No cinnamon | Clove, ginger, nutmeg, star anise, cardamom, or skip it |
| No fresh ginger | A small pinch of ground ginger |
| No cloves | Cinnamon, nutmeg, star anise, or cardamom |
| Vegan option | Use maple syrup instead of honey |
Already mixed the drink and it tastes off? Use the hot toddy troubleshooting guide to fix it before serving.
How to Fix a Hot Toddy That Tastes Off
The nice thing about this drink is that almost every mistake is fixable before you take the second sip. Most problems can be fixed right in the mug.
| Problem | Fix |
|---|---|
| Overly strong | Add more hot water or tea, 2 tablespoons at a time. |
| Weak or thin | Use 2 ounces / 60 ml whiskey next time, or reduce the hot liquid slightly. |
| Overly sweet | Add another squeeze of lemon juice. |
| Sharp or sour | Add ½ to 1 teaspoon more honey. |
| Watery | Use less hot liquid next time, or add more honey and lemon to rebalance. |
| Flat flavor | Add a tiny pinch of salt, a cinnamon stick, clove, ginger, or more lemon. |
| Honey will not dissolve | Stir honey into the hot liquid before adding alcohol. |
| Cooled too fast | Pre-warm the mug before making the drink. |
| Sharp whiskey edge | Use bourbon or Irish whiskey next time, or add more hot tea and honey. |
| Thin vodka version | Use tea instead of water and add ginger, cinnamon, or orange peel. |
Ready to make another mug? Return to the recipe card, the measurement guide, or the variation table.
How to Serve It Warm and Cozy
Serve a hot toddy in a heatproof mug, tempered glass, or Irish coffee glass while it is still steaming. A lemon round and cinnamon stick are enough, but orange peel, cloves, ginger, cardamom, or star anise make the drink smell more inviting before the first sip.
If you are making several, keep the tea, water, or cider base warm and mix each drink fresh. The toddy tastes best when the citrus is bright, the honey is fully dissolved, and the spirit has not been sitting over heat.
Hot Toddy FAQ
What is in a hot toddy?
A classic hot toddy is made with whiskey or bourbon, hot water or tea, honey, fresh lemon juice, and optional spices like cinnamon, cloves, ginger, or nutmeg.
Is a hot toddy made with whiskey or bourbon?
Both work. Whiskey is the broad classic choice, while bourbon gives the drink a sweeter, softer flavor. Irish whiskey, rye, blended whiskey, Canadian whisky, dark rum, brandy, and Cognac can also be used.
Does tea work in a hot toddy?
Yes. Tea works especially well when you want a fuller, slower hot toddy. Black tea, ginger tea, chamomile, rooibos, chai, and decaf Earl Grey are all good choices.
What is the best non-alcoholic hot toddy?
The best non-alcoholic hot toddy uses hot tea, honey, lemon, ginger, cinnamon, and cloves. Ginger tea or black tea gives the most body, while chamomile or rooibos makes a softer evening drink.
Is a hot toddy good for cough or cold?
A hot toddy is a warm comfort drink, not a cure. Honey, lemon, and hot tea can feel soothing, but alcohol is not necessary and may not be suitable when you are sick or taking medicine. The alcohol-free version is the better choice when you are unwell.
Which whiskey is best for a hot toddy?
Bourbon is the easiest choice, Irish whiskey is smooth and mellow, rye is spicier, and blended whiskey is practical for everyday hot toddies. Use smoky Scotch only if you already enjoy smoky drinks.
Is rum good in a hot toddy?
Yes. Dark rum or spiced rum gives the drink a warmer, sweeter, more holiday-like feel. It is especially good with apple cider, cinnamon, clove, orange, and nutmeg.
Does Hennessy work in a hot toddy?
Hennessy works because it is Cognac, so you can use it like brandy. It pairs well with honey, lemon, orange peel, cinnamon, and hot water or tea.
What replaces lemon in a hot toddy?
Orange juice, lime juice, or a small splash of apple cider can replace lemon. The flavor will change, but the drink still needs brightness to balance the honey and spirit.
What can replace honey?
Maple syrup is the easiest honey substitute, especially with bourbon or apple cider. Brown sugar syrup, agave, or simple syrup also work.
Is it hot toddy or hot tottie?
The standard spelling is hot toddy. Hot tottie, hottie tottie, hot tati, and similar spellings usually refer to the same warm whiskey, honey, and lemon drink.
How strong is a hot toddy?
A classic hot toddy usually has 1½ ounces / 45 ml whiskey or bourbon. For a lighter drink, use 1 ounce / 30 ml. Make it more cocktail-forward with 2 ounces / 60 ml.
Need the basics again? Go back to the quick hot toddy ratio or the full recipe card.
Final Notes
The best hot toddy is not the strongest or the sweetest one. It is the one that tastes balanced in your mug. Start with the classic ratio, use fresh lemon, dissolve the honey properly, add the whiskey last, and adjust before serving.
Once you have the base down, the drink becomes easy to customize. Make it with bourbon for softness, tea for body, apple cider for a festive twist, rum or brandy for a warmer turn, Cognac for a fruitier old-fashioned feel, or skip the alcohol entirely and make a honey-lemon tea toddy instead.
However you make it, the goal is the same: a steaming mug that tastes balanced, smells inviting, and gives you a reason to slow down for a few minutes.
