From Home Delivery to Happy Hour: The Complex Alcohol Laws in South Carolina

Published On:
From Home Delivery to Happy Hour: The Complex Alcohol Laws in South Carolina

South Carolina’s alcohol laws balance a three-tier system (producers, wholesalers, retailers) with recent expansions for delivery and happy hour flexibility. While home delivery of beer, wine, and liquor gained traction via 2025 reforms like Bill H.3857, strict ID checks, age limits, and no-drop-off zones near schools or churches apply.

Delivery Rules

Licensed retailers can now offer curbside pickup and hire third-party services (e.g., DoorDash) for sealed beer, wine, or liquor deliveries statewide, requiring biennial permits from the SC Department of Revenue. Deliveries must verify recipients are 21+, sober, and at eligible addresses—no churches, schools, dorms, or on-premise bars (hotels exempt); returns happen same-day for failed checks. Chilled products and drive-thrus remain banned for safety.

Happy Hour Details

Happy hours are legal with limits: no unlimited drinks, no free alcohol, and time caps (e.g., 14 hours max daily across all promotions) per S.C. Code §61-6-1590. Bars/restaurants can discount drinks 2–10 p.m. weekdays or until midnight weekends, but “two-for-one” or loss-leader pricing is prohibited to curb overconsumption. Sunday sales start at noon (not 10 a.m. like some states).​

Key Restrictions

  • Local options: 21 counties remain dry; check county status for purchases.​
  • Penalties: Violations like underage delivery risk license revocation and fines up to $25,000.​
    These rules reflect post-2025 modernization amid your interest in SC community affairs.[memory]​

SOURCE

Leave a Comment