10 winning photos from the World Food Photography Awards 2026

BBC Travel
News imageMarco Rutten/ World Food Photography Awards Fishermen pull in nets from a small boat at sunrise on the Hooghly River under Kolkata's Howrah Bridge (Credit: Marco Rutten/World Food Photography Awards)Marco Rutten/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Marco Rutten/ World Food Photography Awards)

From a Soviet-era sanatorium to a floating market in Bangladesh, this year's World Food Photography Awards capture the many ways food shapes daily life around the world.

The 2026 competition, sponsored by Tenderstem® Bimi® Broccolini, drew nearly 9,000 entries from more than 50 countries, immortalising harvests, markets, family kitchens, street food, celebrations and survival. With just one click, food photographers around the world created a global portrait of food culture, showing not just what people eat, but how food is woven into everyday life.

Here are some of this year's most striking winning images.

News imageJo Kearney/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Jo Kearney/ World Food Photography Awards)Jo Kearney/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Jo Kearney/ World Food Photography Awards)

Overall winner: Jo Kearney, UK

British photographer Jo Kearney's winning shot captured a solitary moment in the canteen of a Soviet-era sanatorium in Tajikistan – a reminder that food photography can be as much about evoking memory and place as it is about whetting appetite. At Khoja Obi Garm in the mountains of Tajikistan, guests still gather for simple, hearty meals between prescribed treatments. Built on radon-rich hot springs, the vast concrete "health hotel" once offered workers two weeks of annual rest. Today, its low cost continues to draw local Tajiks, visitors from neighbouring Central Asian countries and the occasional backpacker.

News imagePingyao Song/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Pingyao Song/ World Food Photography Awards)Pingyao Song/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Pingyao Song/ World Food Photography Awards)

Winner, Food for Celebration: Pingyao Song, China

At a hotpot festival in China, hundreds of diners gather around a vast communal banquet. The red broth, rich with chilli, Sichuan peppercorn, fermented bean paste, beef tallow and spices, becomes both meal and spectacle as guests eat, film and livestream the feast.

News imageAlbert González/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Albert González/ World Food Photography Awards)Albert González/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Albert González/ World Food Photography Awards)

Winner, Cream of the Crop: Albert González, Spain

In Ine, a fishing village in Kyoto Prefecture, Japan, squid dries in the sun using the traditional technique of himono. The preservation method, used for fish and seafood, draws flavour from salt, air and time, linking the village's food traditions to the sea that sustains it.

News imageMarco Rutten/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Marco Rutten/ World Food Photography Awards)Marco Rutten/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Marco Rutten/ World Food Photography Awards)

Winner, Bring Home the Harvest: Marco Rutten, Netherlands

At sunrise beneath Kolkata's Howrah Bridge, a small crew hauls in nets from the Hooghly River. Their catch will be sold in nearby markets and cooked that same morning in Bengali homes. The image captures a quiet harvest taking place beneath one of the city's busiest crossings.

News imageKara Baird/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Kara Baird/ World Food Photography Awards)Kara Baird/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Kara Baird/ World Food Photography Awards)

Winner, Street Food: Kara Baird, Australia

In Kyoto's Nishiki Market, a fleeting moment is captured through the crush of shoppers, steam, heat and movement. Known as "Kyoto's kitchen", the market has long been one of the city's great food thoroughfares, where street snacks, pickles, seafood and sweets are packed into narrow lanes. This image catches the intensity of the market at its busiest.

News imageJuan Miguel Ortuño Martinez/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Juan Miguel Ortuño Martinez/ World Food Photography Awards)Juan Miguel Ortuño Martinez/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Juan Miguel Ortuño Martinez/ World Food Photography Awards)

Winner, Louis Jadot Wine Photographer of the Year: Juan Miguel Ortuño Martinez, Spain

Inside an underground wine tank, a worker cleans away the traces of the previous vintage with pressurised water. After the walls and floor are washed, his partner lowers a small bucket with a sponge inside to collect what remains in the lowest corner. The image reveals the hidden labour behind winemaking that is far from the romance of the glass.

News imageMichela Balboni and Federico Borella/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Michela Balboni and Federico Borella/ World Food Photography Awards)Michela Balboni and Federico Borella/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Michela Balboni and Federico Borella/ World Food Photography Awards)

Winner, Food for the Family: Michela Balboni and Federico Borella, Italy

In Samarkand, Uzbekistan, a child reaches towards hot non bread fresh from the family tandoor. Dense and round with a thick chewy crust, always marked at the centre with black sesame seeds, Samarkand non is one of the city's defining foods.

News imageIndigo Larmour/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Indigo Larmour/ World Food Photography Awards)Indigo Larmour/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Indigo Larmour/ World Food Photography Awards)

Winner, Jamie Oliver Youth Prize 13-17: Indigo Larmour

During Chhath Puja in West Bengal, India, devotees stand in water holding food offerings to Surya, the Sun god. The festival, observed largely by women, is rooted in gratitude, purification and devotion.

News imageKazi Mohammad Golam Quddus/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Kazi Mohammad Golam Quddus/ World Food Photography Awards)Kazi Mohammad Golam Quddus/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Kazi Mohammad Golam Quddus/ World Food Photography Awards)

Winner, Food for Sale: Kazi Mohammad Golam Quddus, Bangladesh

In Bogra, Bangladesh, a vegetable market comes to life in the early morning. Farmers bring their freshly harvested cabbages by rickshaw van before traders buy the produce and send it on to Dhaka and other major cities.

News imageLehóczki Balázs/ World Food Photography Awards (Credit: Lehóczki Balázs/ World Food Photography Awards)Lehóczki Balázs/ World Food Photography Awards
(Credit: Lehóczki Balázs/ World Food Photography Awards)

Winner, The Philip Harben Award for Food in Action: Lehóczki Balázs

Hungarian photographer Lehóczki Balázs had imagined this portrait of his grandparents for years but felt unworthy of capturing them. His grandmother went to the hairdresser and his grandfather shaved before he set up his studio equipment in their kitchen. When she saw the finished image, his grandmother called him an artist.

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