We already know San Francisco is a town full of drunks (we were named the 18th drunkest city in an least one click-bait-y survey earlier this year), but our collective drinking habit might also be taking a toll on something other than your liver. According to a new study from the Centers for Disease Control, excessive drinking amongst Californians cost the Golden State $32 billion in a single year.

Binge drinking, as you probably learned in health class, is defined by the CDC as five or more drinks in one occasion for men and four or more for the ladies. According to the study's authors, the costs associated with excessive drinking are the result of "losses in workplace productivity" (working hungover) and "health care expenses" (getting sick because you drank too much). They also factored in criminal justice expenses like dealing with DUIs and property damage caused by drunk assholes. The study, which used data from 2006, the most recent available, also adds somewhat depressingly:

Researchers believe that the study’s findings are underestimated because it did not consider a number of other costs, such as those due to pain and suffering by the excessive drinker or others who were affected by the drinking.

Ouch.

Heavy drinking actually costs Washington D.C. $1,662 per person — the highest in the nation — but as the country's most populated state, California takes the honor of spending the most money to deal with our citizenry's drinking habits.

Another thing to drink to at happy hour tonight.

[CDC]