Red Bull is a brand of
energy drinks created and owned by the Austrian company
Red Bull GmbH. With a
market share of 43%, it is the most popular energy drink brand as of 2020,[8] and the third most valuable
soft drink brand, behind
Coca-Cola and
Pepsi.[9] Sinсe its launch in 1987, more than 100 billion cans of Red Bull have been sold worldwide,[10] including over 12 billion in 2023.[11]
Red Bull was derived from a similar drink called
Krating Daeng which originated in Thailand and was introduced by the pharmacist
Chaleo Yoovidhya. While doing business in Thailand,
Dietrich Mateschitz purchased a can of Krating Daeng and claimed it cured his
jet lag. Mateschitz sought to create a partnership with Yoovidhya and formulated a product that would suit the tastes of Westerners, such as by carbonating the drink.[18] In 1984, the two founded Red Bull GmbH in
Fuschl am See,
Salzburg, Austria.[19] When branding their new product, Mateschitz referenced Krating Daeng's name: in
Thai, daeng means red, and a krating (known in English as a
gaur) is a large species of wild
bovine native to the
Indian subcontinent. In 1987, the company sold its first can of Red Bull in Austria. In 1996, Red Bull began operation in the United States, and has seen steady growth ever since.[20] Both Red Bull and Kraeting Daeng use the same red bull on yellow sun logo while continuing to market their drinks separately in the Thai and Western markets.
History
In 1967,
Chaleo Yoovidhya introduced a drink called
Krating Daeng in Thailand,[21] which means "red
gaur" in English. It was popular among Thai truck drivers and labourers. While working for German manufacturer
Blendax (later acquired by
Procter & Gamble) in 1982,
Dietrich Mateschitz travelled to Thailand and met Chaleo, owner of T.C. Pharmaceutical. During his visit, Mateschitz discovered that Krating Daeng helped cure his
jet lag.[22] In 1984, Mateschitz co-founded
Red Bull GmbH with Yoovidhya and turned it into an international brand. Each partner invested US$500,000 of savings to fund the company. Yoovidhya and Mateschitz each held a 49 percent share of the new company. They gave the remaining two percent to Yoovidhya's son,
Chalerm, but it was agreed that Mateschitz would run the company.[23] The product was first launched in Austria on 1 April 1987.[24]
In Thailand,
energy drinks are most popular with
blue-collar workers. Red Bull re-positioned the drink as a trendy, upscale drink, first introducing it at Austrian
ski resorts.[25] Pricing was a key differentiator, with Red Bull positioned as a
premium drink[26][27] and Krating Daeng as a lower cost item. In many countries, both drinks are available, dominating both ends of the price spectrum.[25] The flavouring used for Red Bull is still produced in
Bangkok and exported worldwide.[25]
During the 1990s, the product expanded into Hungary, Slovenia, Germany, the United Kingdom, Australia, and the United States.[28] It entered Germany and the UK in 1994, the United States (via California) in 1996,[20] the
Middle East in 2000 and the
Philippines in 2012.[28] In 2008, Forbes magazine listed both Chaleo and Mateschitz as the 250th richest people in the world with an estimated net worth of US$4 billion.[29][30]
Red Bull GmbH is headquartered in
Fuschl am See, an Austrian village of about 1,500 inhabitants near
Salzburg. The company is 51 percent controlled by the Yoovidhya family who, for technical reasons, own the trademark in Europe and the US.[25]
Claims about the drink's effects and performance have been challenged on various occasions, with the UK's
Advertising Standards Authority imposing advertising restrictions in 2001 in response to complaints recorded as early as 1997.[38]
Energy drinks have the effects that
caffeine and sugar provide, but experts still argue about the possible effects of the other ingredients.[39] Most of the effects of energy drinks on cognitive performance, such as increased attention and reaction speed, are primarily due to the presence of caffeine.[40] There is evidence that energy drinks can increase mental[41][42][43] and athletic[44][45] performance. A study funded by Red Bull GmbH, which did not include a caffeine-only control group, found that performance during prolonged driving is increased after consumption of Red Bull.[43] Other tests for physical performance showed results such as increased endurance and power. Red Bull energy drink increased upper body muscle endurance during repeated
Wingate tests in young healthy adults.[46] Excessive or repeated consumption of energy drinks can lead to cardiac and psychiatric conditions.[47][48]
The
European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) concluded that exposure to
taurine and glucuronolactone at the levels presently used in energy drinks is not a safety concern.[49] In a separate analysis, they also concluded that there is insufficient evidence to support a number of commercial health claims about taurine.[50] A review published in 2008 found no documented reports of negative or positive health effects associated with the amount of taurine used in energy drinks, including Red Bull.[51]
Caffeine content
The
caffeine content of a single 250 ml can of Red Bull is approximately 40–80 mg / 250 ml (15–32 mg / 100 ml).[52][53][31] The caffeine level in Red Bull varies depending on country, as some countries have legal restrictions on how much caffeine is allowed in drinks. As is the case with other caffeinated beverages, Red Bull drinkers may experience
adverse effects as a result of overuse. Excessive consumption may induce mild to moderate euphoria primarily caused by stimulant properties of caffeine and may also induce agitation, anxiety, irritability and insomnia.[54][55][40]
The general population of healthy adults is not at risk for potential adverse effects from caffeine if they limit their consumption to 400 mg per day, which is provided by 5 standard 250 ml cans.[56] Consumption of a single energy drink will not lead to excessive caffeine intake.[57][58] Adverse effects associated with caffeine consumption in amounts greater than 400 mg include nervousness, irritability, sleeplessness, increased urination, abnormal heart rhythms (
arrhythmia), and
dyspepsia. Consumption also has been known to cause
pupil dilation when taken with certain antidepressants or
SSRIs.[58][59] Caffeine dosage is not required to be on the product label for food in the United States, unlike drugs, but some advocates are urging the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to change this practice. (Red Bull voluntarily lists the caffeine content in each can along with the ingredient list.)[60]
Variants
Over the years, Red Bull has offered many variations of its drink, all based on the same formula but differing in taste and colour.[61]
Red Bull began offering variations on its drinks in 2003 with a sugar-free version of the drink with a different flavor from the original, called Red Bull Sugarfree.[62] In 2012, Red Bull released Red Bull Total Zero, a variant with zero calories.[63] In 2018, the company released Red Bull Zero, a different sugar-free formulation designed to taste more like the original flavor.[64]
In 2009, Red Bull unveiled a highly concentrated variant of its drink called Red Bull
Energy Shot,[65] supplied in 2 oz (60 ml) cans.[66]
The company began expanding its flavor offerings in 2013 with the launch of Red Bull Editions. Initially available in cranberry, lime, and blueberry,[67] the Editions line has expanded to include a variety of flavours, including some available only during specific seasons or in certain regions:[68][69]
Red Bull Sugarfree (2003–present) – a sugar-free, low-calorie version[70]
Red Bull Zero (2012–present) – A sugar-free version with zero calories. Formerly known as Total Zero; reformulated in 2018.[71]
Red Bull Red Edition (Cranberry) (2013–2020) – a cranberry-flavored version[72]
Red Bull Red Edition (Watermelon) (2020–present) – a watermelon-flavored version
Red Bull Blue Edition (2013–present) – a blueberry-flavored version[72]
Red Bull Silver Edition (2013–2015) – a dry lime-flavored version[72]
Red Bull Yellow Edition (2015–present) – A tropical-flavored version. Originally offered as a limited-time Summer Edition in 2014.[73]
Red Bull Coconut Edition (2019–present) – A coconut and berry-flavored version. Originally offered as a limited-time Summer Edition in 2018.
Red Bull Orange Edition (2016–present) – a tangerine-flavored version
Red Bull Peach Edition (2019–present) – a peach-flavored version
Red Bull Green Edition (Dragon Fruit) (2022–present) – A dragonfruit-flavored version. Originally offered as a limited-time Summer Edition in 2021.[74]
Red Bull Green Edition (Kiwi Apple) (2017–2021) – A kiwi apple-flavored version. Originally offered as a limited-time Summer Edition in 2016 as "Kiwi Twist".
Red Bull Purple Edition (Sugar-Free) (2017–2020) – an acai-flavored version
Red Bull Lime Edition (Sugar-Free) (2017–2020) – a limeade-flavored version
Red Bull Amber Edition (2022–present) – A strawberry apricot-flavored version. Originally offered as a limited-time Summer Edition in 2022.[75]
Red Bull Sea Blue Edition (2023–present) – A juneberry-flavored version. Originally offered as a limited-time Summer Edition in 2023.
Red Bull Summer Edition (Grapefruit Twist) (2017) – a summer-themed flavor released for a limited time
Red Bull Summer Edition (Beach Breeze) (2019) – a summer-themed flavor released for a limited time
Red Bull Summer Edition (Curuba Elderflower) (2024) – an upcoming summer-themed flavor released for a limited time[76]
Other products
Red Bull released a
cola drink, called Simply Cola, in 2008. A new version of the cola was released in 2019, as part of Red Bull's Organics line.
In 2018, the company launched Organics by Red Bull, a line of
organic sodas with four flavours; bitter lemon, ginger ale, tonic water, and a new version of Red Bull Simply Cola.[77]
Regulatory approval and legal status
Authorities in France, Denmark, and Norway initially did not permit the sale of Red Bull.[78] However, as of 2021[update], it is on sale in all 27
member states of the European Union and in 171 countries around the world.[79][80]
The French food safety agency was concerned about
taurine; a Red Bull drink that did not contain taurine was introduced. The French refusal of market approval was challenged by the European Commission, and partially upheld by the
European Court of Justice in 2004.[78] The French food safety agency relented in 2008, because it was unable to prove a definite health risk, taurine-related or not.[81]
Litigation
In 2013, Red Bull told the Redwell Brewery, a
Norfolkmicro brewery, to change its name or face legal action, because it sounded too similar to Red Bull. The eight-man brewery in
Norwich was told its name could "confuse" customers and "tarnish" its trademark.[82] The two companies reached a settlement permitting Redwell to continue using its name.[83]
In 2014, Red Bull entered into a US$13 million settlement to resolve two consumer class action lawsuits in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.[84] Named as plaintiffs were Benjamin Careathers, David Wolf, and Miguel Almarez,[85] who had sued the company claiming breach of express warranty and unjust enrichment, saying that Red Bull falsely asserted performance-enhancing benefits from the drink's ingredients that were unsubstantiated by scientific studies.[86] On 1 May 2015, the Court approved the settlement, giving customers who had submitted claims the opportunity to receive a US$10 cash reimbursement or US$15 in Red Bull products[87] within 150 days of affirmance on any appeal.[88] Contrary to reports from some news outlets, the plaintiffs had not alleged that the drink did not give consumers actual wings.[89]
Advertising, sports team ownership, and sponsorships
Since 1992, Red Bull is known for making a series of animated commercials under the slogan "Red Bull gives you wings.", featuring squint-eyed-large-nosed characters who grow a pair of wings after drinking the product. To this day, the campaign has been broadcast in over 170 countries worldwide. The commercials were directed by artists
Tibor Hernádi and Horst Sambo with the collaboration of Johannes Kastner, the owner of German-based agency Kastner & Partners.[90]
Red Bull owns football teams, with clubs in Austria,[113] Germany,[114] the United States,[114] and Brazil[115] featuring the Red Bull trademark in their names. By associating the drink's image with these activities, the company seeks to promote a "cool" public image and raise brand power. The energy drink has created a market for over 150 related types of products.[116]
In the
PlayStation 3's social gaming platform,
PlayStation Home, Red Bull developed
its own in-game island, specifically advertising its energy drink and the
Red Bull Air Race event (for which the space is named) released in January 2009.[117] In late November 2009, Red Bull produced two new spaces, the
Red Bull Illume space, and the Red Bull Beach space featuring the Red Bull Flugtag, both released on the same day.[118] In January 2012, Red Bull released its first personal space called the "Red Bull House of Skate" featuring an indoor skate park.[119]
In 2022, Red Bull announced a full-on production of a hypercar called RB17, also designed by Newey.[121]
Red Bull Arts
Red Bull Arts is an art
fellowship program launched by Red Bull in 2013 under the name Red Bull House of Arts.[122][123] The program has multiple locations, including Detroit, Michigan; São Paulo, Brazil; and formerly New York City.[122][124][125] The program typically consists of a three-month period during which six to eight participants create new artwork to be displayed at a final exhibition.[124][126] During the fellowship, artists receive unlimited access to the galleries and a stipend for art supplies.[127] Some of the artwork has been used in Red Bull advertising campaigns.[122][128]
Sports and esports sponsorships
Red Bull has used sports sponsorships as an advertising vehicle for most of its existence. The company first started sponsoring athletes in 1989, initially focusing on
Formula One racing and
extreme sports such as
windsurfing and
hang gliding, and later growing to include more mainstream sports such as basketball and soccer.[129][130][131] As of 2016, the company sponsored more than 750 individual athletes and more than a dozen teams in various disciplines, including
motorsports, soccer, and
esports.[132]
The first team sponsored by Red Bull was
ice hockey's
EC Salzburg during the
1987–88 season.[143] Red Bull acquired the club outright in 2000.[143] Since 2014, Salzburg has also hosted the company's joint ice hockey and soccer academy.[144] Red Bull became the title sponsor of
DEL team
EHC München in 2012, and took full ownership the following year.[145] It also financed the team's new
arena,
SAP Garden.[146]
In 1995, Red Bull sponsored its first motorsports team, the Swiss Formula One team
Sauber and in 1999 started sponsoring the
Flying Bulls, a Czech
aerobatics team.[147][148]
In the 2000s, the company expanded its sporting team ownership to include several soccer teams, including the
Austrian Bundesliga team SV Austria Salzburg (rebranded as
Red Bull Salzburg), the
Major League Soccer team the New York MetroStars (rebranded as the
New York Red Bulls) in 2006, and the fifth-tier German team SSV Markranstadt (rebranded as
RasenBallsport Leipzig) in 2009, which the company sought to move to the top of the
German Bundesliga.[130] RB Leipzig has been divisive and the subject of protests by some fans but has also experienced rapid success, climbing through the German soccer divisions to get a place in the top-flight German Bundesliga and earning berths in the
UEFA Champions League in
2017–2018 and 2019–2020, the latter trip ending with a semi-final loss to
Paris St. Germain.[130][149] The company also sponsors the
Los Angeles ClippersNBA team and Red Bull 3X, a series of men's and women's
3x3 basketball tournaments.[150][151]
In the 2010s, Red Bull began sponsoring gamers and esports organizations, including
OG,
G2 Esports and
Cloud9, and founded the Red Bulls League of Legends team.[152][153][154]
^Kuehlwein, JP; Chaefer, Wolf (Spring 2017). "How modern prestige brands create meaning through mission and myth". Journal of Brand Strategy. 5 (4).
ISSN2045-855X
^
abcdNivatpumin, Chiratas; Treeraponpichit, Busrin (28 December 2015).
"Red Bull still charging ahead". Bangkok Post.
Archived from the original on 17 October 2020. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
^
ab"Red Bull Nutrition Facts"(Red Bull states values declared on labels may vary slightly depending on production locations.). Red Bull. 27 September 2021.
Archived from the original on 27 September 2021. Retrieved 27 September 2021.
^National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine; Health and Medicine Division; Food and Nutrition Board; Committee to Review the Dietary Reference Intakes for Sodium and Potassium (2019). Oria, Maria; Harrison, Meghan; Stallings, Virginia A. (eds.).
Dietary Reference Intakes for Sodium and Potassium. The National Academies Collection: Reports funded by National Institutes of Health. Washington (DC): National Academies Press (US).
ISBN978-0-309-48834-1.
PMID30844154.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)
^
abvan den Eynde F, van Baelen PC, Portzky M, Audenaert K (2008). "[The effects of energy drinks on cognitive performance]". Tijdschrift voor Psychiatrie. 50 (5): 273–81.
PMID18470842.
^Baum M, Weiss M (1 January 2001). "The influence of a
taurine containing drink on cardiac parameters before and after exercise measured by echocardiography". Amino Acids. 20 (1): 75–82.
doi:
10.1007/s007260170067.
PMID11310932.
S2CID26927022.
^Geiß KR, Jester I, Falke W, Hamm M, Waag KL (February 1994). "The effect of a taurine-containing drink on performance in 10 endurance-athletes". Amino Acids. 7 (1): 45–56.
doi:
10.1007/BF00808445.
PMID24185972.
S2CID33259003.
^Forbes SC, Candow DG, Little JP, Magnus C, Chilibeck PD (October 2007). "Effect of Red Bull energy drink on repeated Wingate cycle performance and bench-press muscle endurance". International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism. 17 (5): 433–44.
doi:
10.1123/ijsnem.17.5.433.
PMID18046053.
^Sanchis-Gomar F, Pareja-Galeano H, Cervellin G, Lippi G, Earnest CP (May 2015). "Energy drink overconsumption in adolescents: implications for arrhythmias and other cardiovascular events". The Canadian Journal of Cardiology. 31 (5): 572–5.
doi:
10.1016/j.cjca.2014.12.019.
hdl:11268/3906.
PMID25818530.
^Petit A, Karila L, Lejoyeux M (March 2015). "[Abuse of energy drinks: does it pose a risk?]". Presse Médicale. 44 (3): 261–70.
doi:
10.1016/j.lpm.2014.07.029.
PMID25622514.
^"Scientific Opinion on the substantiation of health claims related to taurine and protection of DNA, proteins and lipids from oxidative damage (ID 612, 1658, 1959), energy-yielding metabolism (ID 614), and delay in the onset of fatigue and enhancement of P". EFSA Journal. 7 (10): 1260. 2009.
doi:
10.2903/j.efsa.2009.1260.
^Clauson KA, Shields KM, McQueen CE, Persad N (2008). "Safety issues associated with commercially available energy drinks". Journal of the American Pharmacists Association. 48 (3): e55–63, quiz e64–7.
doi:
10.1331/JAPhA.2008.07055.
PMID18595815.
^Lazare, Lewis (28 February 2013).
"Red Bull introduces new flavors". American CIty Business Journals.
Archived from the original on 9 August 2020. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
^Hanson, Angela (28 October 2013).
"Innovation Alley". Convenience Store News.
Archived from the original on 28 September 2021. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
^(PWA), Professional Windsurfing Association.
"Red Bull Storm Chase". PWA World Tour.
Archived from the original on 9 March 2017. Retrieved 8 March 2017.