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Johnson & Johnson Faces UK £1 Billion Lawsuit Over Talcum Powder and Cancer Claims

October 19, 2025

07:03

Johnson & Johnson Faces UK £1 Billion Lawsuit Over Talcum Powder and Cancer Claims

TL;DR

Johnson & Johnson talc-based baby powder contained asbestos and caused cancers such as ovarian cancer and mesothelioma. The law firm KP Law is leading the case in London, seeking more than £1 billion (~US $1.3 billion). J&J denies the products contain asbestos or cause cancer and says the talc was safe. This marks the company’s first major group action of this kind in the UK, though it has faced tens of thousands of lawsuits in the US.

What’s At Issue?

What are the claimants alleging?

  • The UK case claims that J&J knew as far back as the early 1960s (or at least several decades ago) that its talc‐based powders contained dangerous fibres fibrous talc, tremolite, and actinolite, which are classified as types of asbestos.
  • Despite this alleged knowledge, the claimants say the company did not sufficiently warn consumers and continued to sell the talc-based baby powder in the UK until 2023.
  • The law firm states the product “contained carcinogenic fibers, including asbestos … for more than 50 years,” and that profit was prioritized over safety.
  • The diseases cited in the claim include ovarian cancer, peritoneal cancer, fallopian-tube cancer, and mesothelioma (a cancer almost exclusively linked to asbestos exposure).

What is J&J’s position?

  • J&J and its offshoot for consumer health products (Kenvue) say the talc used in its baby powder “did not contain asbestos” and that the product does not cause cancer.
  • The company has publicly stated the product was compliant with regulatory standards.
  • J&J ceased selling talc-based baby powder in the U.S. in 2020 and in the UK in 2023.

Why Does This Matter?

Corporate liability and precedent

This UK case is significant because it is the first major group action in Britain brought against J&J for talc-related claims. The scale of the claim—over 3,000 people, and damages of more than £1 billion—makes it one of the largest consumer product legal actions in UK history.

If the claimants succeed, it may set a precedent for other lawsuits in the UK and elsewhere, potentially increasing pressure on J&J and other manufacturers of talc-based products.

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Health and regulatory implications

  • Talc is a mineral often used for moisture absorption and in personal-care products; asbestos is a known carcinogen (linked to mesothelioma, lung cancer etc.). When talc deposits are near asbestos, contamination may occur. (Mesothelioma.com)
  • The classification of talc and related products is under scrutiny. In July 2024 the World Health Organization’s cancer agency classified talc as “probably carcinogenic to humans.
  • The fact that J&J continued selling the talc product in the UK until 2023 (three years after ceasing in the U.S.) raises questions about global product rollout and risk management.

Financial and business impact

Beyond reputational risk, there is serious financial exposure. The UK claim alone is valued at over £1 billion (≈ US $1.3 billion). In the U.S., J&J has already faced thousands of claims, multi-billion-dollar potential liabilities, and bankruptcy maneuvering.

In short: this is not a small reputational matter—it could affect product strategy, liability exposure, and consumer trust worldwide.

How Did We Get Here?

The science and the allegations

  • Talc and asbestos are minerals that can occur together underground; mining talc may inadvertently pick up asbestos fibers. When cosmetic talc is used (especially in genital areas or inhaled), there’s concern about long-term exposure.
  • Internal documents and litigation in the U.S. suggest J&J was aware of possible asbestos in its talc supplies decades ago. Some reports allege testing in the 1970s found “rather high” levels of asbestos in its baby powder.
  • The UK claimants’ lawyers cite these findings and argue that J&J should have warned consumers or changed the product earlier.

The global regulatory and corporate timeline

  • U.S.: J&J switched to cornstarch-based baby powder in 2020.
  • UK: J&J stopped talc-based baby powder sales in 2023. Note the three-year lag compared to the U.S.
  • Litigation: J&J attempted to settle many U.S. claims via bankruptcy strategies (the so-called “Texas Two-Step”), but U.S. courts rejected this most recent attempt in April 2025.
  • Now in October 2025, the UK case has formally been filed.

What’s Next?

Legal proceedings

  • The UK case will be heard in the English High Court. Unlike U.S. juries, UK civil claims are judged by a judge (except in very rare cases).
  • The outcome will depend on whether claimants can prove that the powder indeed contained asbestos or equivalent carcinogenic fibers and that their disease was caused by that exposure.
  • Trial timelines in group litigation can stretch for years; this is likely just the opening salvo.

Corporate responses

  • J&J and Kenvue will need to manage this alongside their U.S. exposure. Even if they defend the UK case successfully, the reputational and regulatory costs are significant.
  • Consumer trust in talc-based products might shift further toward alternatives (e.g., cornstarch).
  • Regulatory agencies will come under pressure to revisit testing standards for talc contamination and asbestos in cosmetics. For example, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration has proposed tougher testing rules for cosmetics that may contain asbestos.

For consumers

  • If you or a loved one used talc-based baby powder (especially for many years) and were later diagnosed with ovarian cancer, mesothelioma, or peritoneal cancer, this case may raise the question of eligibility for legal claims—though this article is not legal advice.
  • Even non-litigation viewpoints: it’s a reminder to ask about mineral sourcing, contamination risks, and regulatory oversight of consumer products.

Why It’s Worth Watching

  • This case bridges consumer product safety, mineral contamination risk, corporate accountability, and global product rollout ethics.
  • It shows how litigation in the U.S. can influence legal actions in other jurisdictions (here, the UK).
  • A successful outcome for the claimants could reverberate across the personal-care industry, prompting stricter standards, new disclosures, or changes in sourcing practices.
  • From a business-strategy viewpoint, how does a century-old consumer brand recover trust when faced with such large-scale allegations?

Final Take

This is more than a lawsuit about baby powder. It’s a test of how a legacy consumer-health company handles long-term product-safety risk, global regulatory divergence, and mounting legal pressure. The UK action against Johnson & Johnson could shift not just the company’s future, but how personal-care risks are managed worldwide.

If you’d like, I can look into previous U.S. verdicts against J&J or show how talc regulation across countries compares.