Food, they say, is the shortest way to a person's heart, and street food, in many ways, is the most authentic expression of a place. That's why street food anchors travel memories in a way museums and landmarks rarely do. You might forget the name of a street or a temple, but you'll remember the taste of something eaten standing up, plastic plate in hand, surrounded by locals. And so, the best journeys are often measured not in miles covered, but in meals savoured, in the sticky sweetness of mango on your fingers at a night market, or the unexpected burst of spice that makes you reach for water while locals smile knowingly.
In this article, we’ll explore the best destinations for street food in the world, share practical ideas for foodies, and explain how to use Avios points to get there.
The Best Street Food Destinations in the World
The world's greatest culinary adventures rarely happen in Michelin-starred dining rooms. Food made out in the open, on carts, stalls, and boats, doesn't have the time for appearance. It's the original fast food, cooked the same way it's always been, for people who eat it every day. These are the kinds of meals that turn into stories. The bowl of noodles you still think about years later. The snack you didn't recognise but ordered anyway. The moment you realised that some of the best food you've ever eaten cost less than a coffee back home.
With that in mind, here are destinations we consistently recommend for travellers who plan their trips around flavour and curiosity.
Thailand

When people think about Thailand, street food is usually one of the first things that comes to mind. It's part of the daily fabric of life there. Down narrow alleyways, beside busy roads, clustered around night markets, or set up outside someone's home. What makes Thai street food so addictive is its balance of sweet, sour, salty, and spicy flavours, often all in the same mouthful.
Thai food comes in a wide variety, depending on how hungry you are and how much you want to eat. The line between full meals, quick snacks, desserts, and drinks blurs into one continuous food culture. Timing never really matters. Early morning markets feed commuters. Late-night stalls cater to night owls.
If you're wondering where to start:
- Bangkok’s street food scene is overwhelming in the best way.
- Chiang Mai leans into Northern specialities like khao soi.
- Phuket adds a coastal edge, with seafood stalls and southern flavours.
Using Avios to Get There
An off-peak return flight costs 110,000 British Airways airmiles plus £450 in Premium Economy, or 220,000 Avios plus £599 in Business Class, making Thailand one of the most rewarding long-haul BA Avios flights for food-focused travellers.
Mexico

Everyone loves Mexican cuisine. Street food, or Comida callejera, is basically a history lesson on a tortilla. There's a strong sense of community and place in every bite. Plus, street food in Mexico changes as you move. Coastal areas lean fresh, with seafood tacos and ceviche, while inland cities go heavier and more obsessed with slow-cooked meats and corn-based staples.
Corn, in all its forms, is the backbone, popping up in tortillas, tamales, tlacoyos, and gorditas, each shaped slightly differently depending on where you are. Add chilli, herbs, acid, and fat, and you get a cuisine that’s endlessly adaptable. With street food being a part of its heritage, it's no accident that Mexican cuisine is UNESCO-recognised.
If you're wondering where to start:
- Mexico City throws everything at you at once: tacos al pastor turning on the spit well past midnight, quesadillas filled with things you didn’t know you wanted, and markets where every stall seems to come from a different part of the country.
- Oaxaca takes the opposite approach. The food is slower and more deliberate, with tlayudas the size of plates, smoky moles, and snacks like chapulines that are far better than they sound.
- The Yucatán Peninsula brings Mayan influences to the street, especially cochinita pibil, a dish where pork is cooked low and slow, sharp with citrus and achiote.
- Baja California is close to the sea, so expect to find lots of fish tacos, seafood cocktails, and fresh ceviche dominating beach towns and border cities alike.
Using Avios to Get There
BA flies from London to both Mexico City and Cancún with excellent British Airways flight rewards availability. An off-peak return booking costs 104,500 Avios plus £400 in Premium Economy, or 198,000 Avios plus £499 in Business Class.
India

As soon as you land in India, the question hits you: what's the glue that holds all that sea of humanity and all that apparent chaos together? And then you bite into a pani puri, or gol gappa, or vada pav, and you understand. Indian street food is the great equaliser that feeds everyone. From students to film stars, it's the edible thread connecting millions of people across vastly different landscapes.
What makes it special is the sheer intensity of flavour packed into affordable, accessible bites. And this variety reflects India's sprawling diversity. Eating street food in India means connecting with the community and the soul of each city.
If you're wondering where to start:
- Delhi is the undisputed chaat capital, and you must not leave without trying aloo tikki, chole bhature, paranthe wali gali's stuffed parathas, and golgappas that define the genre.
- Mumbai runs on vada pav, pav bhaji, bhel puri, and sev puri with the energy of a city in constant motion.
- If you find yourself in Kolkata, don’t miss out on kathi rolls wrapped in flaky paratha, puchkas, and sweets like mishti doi and rasgulla.
- Amritsar serves amritsari kulcha with chole and butter, washed down with thick lassi.
- Lucknow brings nawabi elegance to street food with Tunday Kababs and Malai Gilori.
- Indore pairs poha with jalebi for breakfast, proving that savoury and sweet can coexist beautifully on one plate.
Using Avios to Get There
British Airways operates direct flights from London to Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, Mumbai, and New Delhi, some of the strongest-value BA Avios flights for travellers who like to eat their way through a country. An off-peak return booking in Premium Economy costs 104,500 British Airways airmiles plus £400. Business Class is 198,000 Avios plus £499.
China

Whatever the world stumbles upon, the Middle Kingdom has been doing for centuries already. So why should street food be any different? China's street food feels like the country in miniature: fast, regional, and completely confident in its own flavours.
There are numerous options to choose from: you can bite into a jianbing, dig into a skewer over a paper tray, or be brave and try the stinky tofu. Every region has its own staples, comfort foods, and its own "this is how we do it here" attitude.
If you find yourself in China, don’t miss the classics such as Jianbing (street crepes) made from crisp edges, egg, sauces, herbs, and often something crunchy in the middle. You can't go wrong with Baozi (steamed buns) when you need something warm and reliable. They're inexpensive, comforting, and dangerously easy to eat in large quantities. Skewers (shaokao) are for when the sun goes down. Lamb, chicken wings, squid, corn, brushed with sauce, dusted with cumin and chilli, and eaten while you keep walking.
If you're wondering where to start:
- Hong Kong is a crash course in Cantonese street-snacking and late-night eating, with markets and food streets where you can graze for hours without repeating yourself.
- Shanghai is the place for soup dumplings and refined snacking.
- Regional cities across China (especially in the north and west) are where the "Chinese hamburger" (roujiamo) and spice-heavy noodles really start to make sense.
Using Avios to Get There
British Airways flies from London to Hong Kong and Shanghai, a great example of how to use Avios points for regional food exploration. An off-peak return booking costs 110,000 Avios plus £450 in Premium Economy, or 220,000 Avios plus £599 in Business Class.
Turkey

You don't have to plan a food itinerary here; all you need to do is start walking, and the streets do the rest. Turkey's streets function as an open-air restaurant where sesame-crusted simit bread rings stack high on red carts, fish sandwiches sizzle on boats bobbing in the Bosphorus, and döner kebabs rotate slowly on vertical spits, building layers of crispy, juicy meat.
What sets Turkish street food apart is its commitment to freshness. Vendors work with quality ingredients, fresh mackerel grilled to order, potatoes loaded with butter and toppings until they become kumpir, and mussels stuffed with spiced rice and pine nuts. Döner here tastes different from versions elsewhere because the meat is marinated properly, stacked by hand, and slow-cooked until the edges are crisp and golden. Balık ekmek (which literally means fish bread) combines grilled fish, crusty bread, onions, and lemon, Börek contains layers of thin pastry filled with cheese or spinach, baked until golden, and Gözleme flatbreads get rolled out by hand, filled, then cooked on griddles. Even simple simit becomes something you crave when it's still warm from the cart.
Breakfast might be simit with strong tea. Midday brings pide, the Turkish flatbread often compared to pizza but distinctly its own thing, with toppings like sucuk sausage or minced meat baked in wood-fired ovens. Late nights belong to İslak burgers drenched in garlicky tomato sauce, kept steaming in glass cases at Taksim Square, or kokoreç, grilled lamb intestines that locals swear by. Çiğ köfte wraps bulgur and spices into vegetarian bites with just enough heat. Sweets like baklava and lokma (fried dough balls soaked in syrup) bring things to a sticky, satisfying conclusion.
If you're wondering where to start:
- Istanbul is the essential street-food city. Eat your way from Eminönü to Karaköy, cross to Kadıköy, and consider it a balanced diet.
- Eminönü and the Galata Bridge are famous for balık ekmek, a traditional dish of grilled fish sandwiches served on boats.
- Istiklal Street and Taksim are for late-night fuel: döner, islak burgers (the steamy, sauce-soaked ones are guaranteed to keep you filled).
- Kadıköy Market is the Asian-side answer to the question, "What do locals actually eat?" It's more relaxed, less touristy, and easy to graze through without realising you've had four snacks and a full meal.
Using Avios to Get There
British Airways operates direct flights from London to Antalya, Dalaman, Milas, Istanbul, and Izmir with some of the lowest-cost British Airways flight rewards available for food-focused breaks. An off-peak return booking in Economy costs 30,000 Avios plus £2. Business Class is 53,500 Avios plus £30.






