For serious food lovers, the itinerary in any city often begins with a meal. A city earns its place on your travel list the moment someone says: you have to eat there! And every year, a handful of cities pull so far ahead of the rest that dining out becomes a part of your pilgrimage.
Time Out has just released its definitive ranking of the world’s best food cities for 2026, built on responses from thousands of locals and curated recommendations from food experts across the globe. The results make for compelling reading. And for Indian food lovers, there is one number worth knowing: 13.
Bengaluru Has Entered The Chat
At number 13 on Time Out’s global list sits Bengaluru, which is the only Indian city in the top 15, comfortably placed ahead of culinary heavyweights including
Naples and New York City. The Karnataka capital finds itself in genuinely rarefied company: Lima, Bangkok, Mexico City, London, Barcelona, Osaka. Cities that have spent decades building reputations as places where food is not just sustenance but identity.
Bengaluru’s inclusion in this list comes as no surprise. Still, it is certainly a feat for a city that has often found itself behind destinations like Delhi and Mumbai, which take the spotlight in India. The city’s foundation is its South Indian classics: the crisp-edged dosa, the cloud-soft idli, the dark, fierce filter coffee that no amount of third-wave café culture has managed to displace from local affection. Here, food, breakfast especially, is a ritual, served at neighbourhood shops where breakfast costs less than a bus ticket and the quality has been consistent for decades. That combination of accessibility and excellence is precisely what Time Out’s ranking was designed to capture.
Delhi has its Mughal heritage and its chaat. Mumbai has its vada pav and its seafood. Hyderabad has its biryani. Kolkata has its sweets and its adda culture. Each of these cities has a case to make, and none of them made the top 15 this year.
Bengaluru did. As per Time Out, the best (or most unique) dish to savour here is the Donne Biryani. But the city’s food identity is harder to summarise in a single dish or a single tradition, which may actually be the point. The darshini and the craft brewery. The decades-old Brahmin’s Coffee Bar and the new-wave restaurant pushing fermentation and local sourcing. These things coexist in Bengaluru without tension, and that coexistence is the city’s culinary superpower.
World’s Best Cities For Food 2026
Leading the 2026 ranking is Lima, Peru, a result that will surprise no one who has been paying attention to South American food culture over the past decade. Lima has built one of the world’s most exciting dining scenes on a foundation of extraordinary indigenous ingredients, layered with Spanish, African and Asian influences accumulated over centuries. It is a city where the food is genuinely unlike anywhere else on earth, and where that distinctiveness runs from the finest restaurant tables all the way down to the market stalls.
Bangkok claims second place, a city that has perhaps done more than any other to prove that street food and world-class dining are not separate categories but points on the same continuum. Mexico City at three, London at four and Barcelona at five round out the top tier. The full top 15 makes for an interesting map of where the world’s food energy currently lives: Ho Chi Minh City, Melbourne, Beijing, Athens, Lisbon, Cape Town, Osaka, Bengaluru, Naples and New York. It is a list that skews young, diverse and street-food-forward, which is arguably a more accurate picture of where exciting food actually happens than any Michelin guide,

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