Because p38α plays a critical role in inflammation, it has been an attractive target for the development of anti-inflammation therapeutics. However, p38α inhibitors showed side effects including severe liver toxicity that often prevailed over the benefits in clinical studies, and the mechanism of toxicity is not clear. Here, we demonstrate that p38α regulates the inflammatory responses in the acute liver inflammation in a tissue-specific manner, and liver toxicity by p38α inhibitors may be resulted from the inhibition of protective activity of p38α in the liver. Genetic ablation of p38α in T and NKT cells protected mice from the liver injury in ConA-induced liver inflammation, while liver-specific deletion of p38α aggravated the liver pathology. We found that p38α deficiency in the liver increased the expression of chemokines to recruit more inflammatory cells, indicating that p38α in the liver plays a protective anti-inflammatory role during acute liver inflammation. Therefore, our results suggest that p38α regulates the inflammatory responses in a tissue-specific manner, and that the tissue-specific p38α targeting strategies can be used for the development of an effective anti-inflammation treatment with an improved side-effect profile.