On 13 December 1920, the company Haribo was entered in the Bonn commercial register by the company founder Johann "Hans" Riegel. The company name is an acronym and is derived from the first two letters of his first and last name and the first two letters of the location (Hans Riegel Bonn). According to company information, the starting capital was a sack of sugar, a copper kettle, a marble slab, a stool, a brick hearth and a roller. Two years after the company was founded, Hans Riegel invented the forerunner of the Gold Bear, then called the "Tanzbär" (“dancing bear”). However, this was not only bigger than today's gummy bears, but also softer, as gum arabic was used in its production instead of the gelatine that is common today.
After Johann Riegel's untimely death in March 1945, the company was initially run by his wife. After his sons Hans and Paul returned from war captivity in 1946, they took over the management. Hans Riegel junior represented the company externally, while Paul Riegel was in charge of research and product development and hardly ever appeared in public.
In October 2003, Hans Riegel junior announced that one of his nephews, Hans-Jürgen Riegel (* 1956), was to be his successor. He ran the business in France until 2005, when he fell out with his uncle and left the company. Co-owner Paul Riegel died unexpectedly in the night of 3 August 2009.
After the break in the good relationship with his nephew, Hans Riegel decided to leave the question of succession open. This led to a conflict of the Haribo family lines, as his sons continued a complaint to the Chamber of Industry and Commerce initiated in summer 2008 by Paul Riegel to clarify the legally complex issues. After its suspension in the meantime, an amicable overall solution was finally worked out and presented in 2010.
Subsequently, Haribo-Holding GmbH & Co. KG was newly founded. Paul Riegel Familienholding and Hans Riegel Holding, which was newly founded for this purpose, each hold half of the shares.
Hans-Guido (* ~1966), Paul Riegel's son from his first marriage, became managing director for production and technology like his father alongside his uncle Hans, who continued to look after marketing and sales. Hans-Arndt (* ~1968), son from the second marriage, took over the chairmanship of a new four-member supervisory board. Andreas Nickenig (* ~1968), a long-time employee who was considered Hans Riegel's "foster son" and at the same time got on well with Paul's sons of the same age, was also given a strong role in managing the foreign business.
Due to succession problems in the past, the Hans Riegel Foundation was then founded in 1987, headed by Reinhard Schneider, Hans Riegel's authorised signatory and long-time employee. Thus, after the sudden death of Hans Riegel on 15 October 2013, the continuation of the company could be secured and the success of the company ensured.