Informational only — not medical advice. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider or pharmacist before taking any medication. In case of overdose call Poison Control: 1-800-222-1222 (US) or 911.
About Tylenol covers the story of the brand rather than dosing or medical advice: where the name came from, when the product launched, the events that reshaped how all medicines are packaged, and the corporate history that leads to today’s owner. Tylenol is a brand name for acetaminophen (called paracetamol outside North America), and understanding the brand helps put the product’s long safety record — and its rare, headline-making moments — in context.
This hub is an independent reference. It is not the official Tylenol website and is not affiliated with the brand or its owner. For anything involving investing or legal action, treat the pages here as background only — not financial or legal advice.
Start here
- When did Tylenol come out? — the 1955 launch of “Tylenol Elixir for Children,” how the name was coined, and a timeline of the milestones that followed.
- The Chicago Tylenol murders (1982) — a neutral, factual account of the cyanide tampering that killed seven people, the recall, and the tamper-evident packaging that resulted.
- Who makes Tylenol? (parent company) — the path from McNeil Laboratories to Johnson & Johnson to the 2023 Kenvue spinoff.
- KVUE stock: Kenvue overview — an informational company profile of Kenvue and its brand portfolio (not financial advice).
- Tylenol lawsuit: what to know — a plain-English summary of the acetaminophen-autism litigation status (not legal advice).
Why the brand’s history matters
Few consumer products have shaped their entire industry the way Tylenol did. The brand launched in the 1950s as a gentler alternative to aspirin, marketed first to parents dosing feverish children. Within a generation it became a household name. Then, in the autumn of 1982, a criminal poisoning case turned Tylenol into a byword for corporate crisis response — and led directly to the tamper-evident seals now standard on nearly every bottle in the pharmacy aisle.
The company behind the brand has changed hands within the same corporate family over time. McNeil, the original maker, became part of Johnson & Johnson in 1959. In 2023, Johnson & Johnson separated its consumer-health business into a new, independent public company called Kenvue, which now owns Tylenol along with brands such as Neutrogena, Listerine, Band-Aid, and Aveeno.
If you came here for the medicine itself rather than the brand story, start with what acetaminophen is or the dosage hub. For questions about safety, see Tylenol overdose and liver damage. Parents can find weight-based guidance in the children’s dosage hub.
A note on sources and neutrality
The pages in this hub aim to report widely published, verifiable facts — launch dates, corporate transactions, court filings, and public safety events — without speculation. Where a topic is genuinely unresolved, such as ongoing litigation or an unsolved crime, we say so plainly rather than implying a conclusion. Dates on these pages are static and reflect when the article was written or last reviewed; corporate and legal situations can change, so verify time-sensitive details against primary sources before you act on them.
All about guides
When Did Tylenol Come Out?
When did Tylenol come out? Tylenol launched in 1955 as a children's elixir. Here's the full origin story, the name's meaning, and a milestone timeline.
The Chicago Tylenol Murders (1982)
The Chicago Tylenol murders killed seven people in 1982 with cyanide-laced capsules. A factual account of the case, the recall, and tamper-evident packaging.
KVUE Stock: Kenvue Overview
KVUE stock explained: an informational overview of Kenvue — the company behind Tylenol — its brands, structure, and history. Not financial advice.
Who Makes Tylenol? (Parent Company)
Who makes Tylenol? McNeil makes it, now under Kenvue — spun off from Johnson & Johnson in 2023. The full ownership history from 1955 to today, explained.
Tylenol Lawsuit: What to Know
The Tylenol lawsuit explained: a neutral overview of the acetaminophen-autism MDL litigation, its status, and what it means. Not legal advice.
