Ethylene glycol (EG), commonly used as antifreeze, is frequently ingested accidentally or in suicides, and causes acute renal failure. We report an unusual case of EG poisoning with acute liver injury. After vomiting and loss of consciousness, a 48-year-old male was admitted to the emergency room. Despite prompt conservative treatment for metabolic acidosis, kidney function deteriorated, necessitating the continuous renal replacement therapy. Blood toxicology results, showing EG levels of 510 mg/L, arrived 10 hours after admission. Oral ethyl alcohol therapy commenced 16 hours post-admission. By 36 hours, liver function tests indicated significant liver damage, and the patient died 45 hours upon admission. On autopsy, histological findings were hepatic centrilobular necrosis, cerebral perivascular neutrophilic and lymphocytic infiltration with calcium oxalate deposition, and renal tubular necrosis with calcium oxalate deposition. EG concentrations in the blood and gastric contents were 18.7 mg/L and 45.0 mg/L, respectively. Glycolic acid and oxalic acid, metabolites of EG produced by alcohol dehydrogenase in the liver, cause metabolic acidosis, renal tubular calcium oxalate deposition, and acute renal failure, leading to death. Generally, because fomepizole or ethyl alcohol block alcohol dehydrogenase in the liver, acute liver injury by EG poisoning is rare. To the best of authors’ knowledge, only one relevant report was found in the literature described a case in which EG caused centrilobular necrosis in liver. In the current case, delays in diagnosis and antidote therapy without gastric lavage allowed continued metabolism of EG which led to acute liver injury and acute renal failure.