The World’s Wildest Eating Contests Are Not For The Faint Of Stomach

The World’s Wildest Eating Contests Are Not For The Faint Of Stomach


January 14, 2026 | Jack Hawkins

The World’s Wildest Eating Contests Are Not For The Faint Of Stomach


A Fork, A Clock, And No Regrets

Around the world, eating isn’t always about savoring flavors or sharing a meal with friends. Sometimes, it’s about speed, excess, bravery, and a willingness to embarrass yourself in front of cheering strangers. From pies eaten by the dozen to foods that actively fight back, eating contests have become some of the weirdest, loudest, and most unforgettable travel experiences you can stumble upon.

Rss Thumb - World's Wildest Eating Contests

Advertisement

Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest – USA

Held every Fourth of July at Coney Island, this is the undisputed Super Bowl of competitive eating worldwide. Contestants inhale dozens of hot dogs and buns in just 10 minutes while a roaring crowd chants, counts, and gasps at every bite. It’s patriotic, chaotic, oddly strategic, and deeply American in a way that defies all logical explanation.

File:NathansHotDog-4 (48034163488).jpgAjay Suresh from New York, NY, USA, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Poutine Eating Championship – Canada

Cheese curds, fries, and gravy don’t sound dangerous—until you’re racing against the clock and gravity. This Canadian contest turns comfort food into a serious test of endurance, jaw strength, and stomach space, with competitors battling salt, grease, and rapidly cooling gravy under intense pressure.

File:Matt Stonie.jpgAtomicred, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The Glutton Bowl – Australia

Part athletic event, part food-fueled circus, the Glutton Bowl combines multiple eating challenges into one punishing competition. Contestants face pies, burgers, desserts, and mystery foods in rapid succession, all while spectators cheer on absolute madness and questionable life decisions.

File:USMC-111026-M-UP717-078.jpgSlick-o-bot, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

La Tomatina Eating Challenge – Spain

La Tomatina is famous for throwing tomatoes, but some brave souls take it further by actually eating them competitively. It’s slippery, acidic, and surprisingly exhausting, with contestants emerging soaked, smiling, and questioning why tomatoes sting so much after the twentieth bite.

File:La Tomatina (25.08.2010) - Spain, Buñol 29.jpgflydime, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The Cooper’s Hill Cheese Roll Feast – England

After chasing a wheel of cheese down a terrifyingly steep hill, participants celebrate by eating it proudly. The contest isn’t about speed—it’s about survival, bruises, sprained ankles, and consuming victory cheese while questioning your long-term mobility.

File:CheeseRolling.jpgDave Farrance, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Oyster Eating Championship – Ireland

Raw oysters, swallowed whole, one after another, define this briny battle of wills. Texture alone scares most travelers away, but champions can down dozens in minutes. It’s slimy, salty, oddly elegant, and incredibly impressive—if you don’t think too hard about it.

The World Oyster Eating Championship – IrelandHugh R Hastings, Getty Images

Advertisement

The Sonora Hot Chili Pepper Eating Contest – Mexico

This fiery showdown dares contestants to eat increasingly hot chili peppers without milk, bread, or mercy. Tears flow freely, faces turn dangerously red, and quitting is common. Finishing earns bragging rights, applause, and a deep respect for capsaicin-fueled pain.

File:Red hot chilli peppers.jpgTomascastelazo, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The Krystal Square Off – USA

A Southern fast-food staple becomes the centerpiece of this relentless burger-stacking contest. Competitors attempt to eat dozens of tiny sliders while keeping buns, onions, and pickles under control. It’s deceptively brutal, shockingly strategic, and incredibly greasy.

File:KrystalSquareOffComp.jpgSean Russell from Knoxville, TN, USA, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Haggis Eating Championship – Scotland

Haggis may already test your culinary courage, but eating it competitively raises the stakes significantly. Contestants race through plates of the savory pudding while crowds cheer in true Highland style, celebrating stomach strength and national pride simultaneously.

The World Haggis Eating Championship – ScotlandANDY BUCHANAN, Getty Images

Advertisement

The Deep-Fried Eating Challenge – Texas, USA

Everything is bigger—and fried—in Texas, including this stomach-defying contest. Competitors tackle deep-fried butter, Oreos, Twinkies, and other curiosities. The real challenge isn’t eating fast; it’s not questioning the laws of physics, nutrition, and common sense.

File:Deep-fried butter at State Fair of Texas 2009a.jpgCollin Harvey from Grand Prairie, Texas, USA, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Ice Cream Eating Contest – Italy

Speed meets brain freeze in this deceptively painful frozen showdown. Contestants devour massive bowls of gelato while battling headaches, numb tongues, and watery eyes. It’s beautiful, joyful, painful, and unmistakably Italian in spirit and presentation.

The World Ice Cream Eating Contest – Italyvastateparksstaff, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The Chitlins Eating Contest – Southern USA

Chitlins—pig intestines—are an acquired taste, and this contest turns them into a public spectacle. Smells linger heavily in the air, reactions are dramatic, and winners earn serious respect from anyone brave enough to watch without flinching.

Worst Thing Eaten FactsWikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Curry Eating Championship – England

Heat builds with every bite as contestants shovel down increasingly spicy curries at alarming speed. Sweating is inevitable, quitting is common, and the applause grows louder with every tear wiped away and glass of water refused.

Woman hand serving tomato rasam curry hot spicy soupSanthosh Varghese, Shutterstock

Advertisement

The Donut Hole Eating Contest – USA

No chewing allowed—contestants must swallow donut holes whole as quickly as possible. It’s a strange combination of speed, strategy, and mild choking hazards, with judges watching closely for any forbidden nibbles or suspicious jaw movements.

The Donut Hole Eating Contest – USAJesse Grant, Getty Images

Advertisement

The World Pie Eating Championship – England

No hands, no utensils, just face-first pastry chaos in its purest form. Contestants plunge into fruit-filled pies while crowds laugh and cheer loudly. It’s messy, classic, oddly charming, and guaranteed to ruin at least one shirt permanently.

File:World Pie Eating Championship 2024.jpgControl-alt-delete, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Frog Leg Eating Championship – France

This French delicacy becomes a competitive sport as contestants race through piles of frog legs. Bones slow things down, technique truly matters, and spectators watch with equal parts fascination, disbelief, and gastronomic curiosity.

File:2012 Froschschenkel anagoria.JPGAnagoria, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Garlic Eating Contest – China

Garlic lovers rejoice—or immediately run away from the venue. Competitors eat raw garlic cloves in massive quantities, filling the air with a smell that lingers long after the winner is crowned and social interactions become difficult.

File:Laba Garlic.jpgYupeng Wu from sydney, Australia, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Sushi Eating Championship – Japan

Precision meets speed in this elegant contest of rice, fish, and wasabi discipline. Contestants must balance clean technique with rapid consumption, proving that competitive eating can still involve skill, respect, and an impressive mastery of chopsticks.

Utopix Pictures PicturesUtopix Pictures Pictures, Pexels

Advertisement

The Cabbage Eating Contest – Germany

Plain, crunchy, and surprisingly tough, raw cabbage becomes the unexpected enemy here. Contestants chew relentlessly while trying to avoid jaw fatigue, boredom, and the creeping realization that cabbage is far more filling than expected.

Dumbest FactsPixabay

Advertisement

The World Sausage Eating Contest – Germany

A sausage lover’s dream and nightmare rolled into one festive event. Competitors race through links of bratwurst while crowds chant enthusiastically and beer flows freely. It’s loud, filling, celebratory, and deeply German to its core.

The World Sausage Eating Contest – GermanyMediaNews Group, Getty Images

Advertisement

The World Worm Charming & Eating Festival – USA

Yes, worms—fried, seasoned, and served to brave contestants who must overcome serious texture issues. It’s part dare, part tradition, and entirely unforgettable for both participants and squeamish spectators standing just close enough to watch.

File:Willaston - Worm Charming.jpgGraham Shaw, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Balut Eating Contest – Philippines

Balut—fertilized duck egg with a visible embryo—is not for the faint of heart. Contestants eat as many as possible while keeping composure, making this one of the most mentally challenging eating contests on the planet.

File:Raul Arellano eating Balut.jpgMarshall Astor from San Pedro, United States, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The World Pickle Eating Contest – USA

Crunch meets speed as competitors devour jar after jar of pickles under strict time limits. Vinegar burns the throat, jaws ache badly, and hydration becomes a serious concern long before the final pickle disappears.

The World Pickle Eating Contest – USASteve Russell, Getty Images

Advertisement

The World Kimchi Eating Contest – South Korea

Fermented, spicy, and powerfully pungent, kimchi tests both stomach capacity and sinus endurance. Contestants shovel it down at astonishing speed while fans cheer loudly and judges carefully inspect plates for leftovers.

The World Kimchi Eating Contest – South KoreaChung Sung-Jun, Getty Images

Advertisement

The World Chocolate Eating Championship – Switzerland

A sweeter challenge—at least at the beginning. Large quantities of rich Swiss chocolate quickly overwhelm even the biggest fans. Winners prove that too much of a good thing really is possible, even in chocolate paradise.

The World Chocolate Eating Championship – SwitzerlandMediaNews Group, Getty Images

Advertisement

Why We Can’t Look Away From Competitive Eating

Eating contests are absurd, excessive, and strangely universal. They blend culture, humor, and human limits into spectacles that attract locals and travelers alike. Whether you’re watching someone eat 70 hot dogs or bravely sampling garlic cloves by the handful, these events remind us that travel isn’t just about landmarks—it’s about stories you’ll tell forever. Just maybe don’t eat beforehand.

File:Eating Comp 21aug2005.jpgBrian Chu, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

READ MORE

We only get one vacation per year and I want to go on a cruise, but my wife wants to go to an all-inclusive resort. Which is better?

Vacations are precious—we only get so many days a year to escape the grind. So, when one partner wants a cruise and the other is dreaming of an all-inclusive resort, how do you choose?
August 28, 2025 Jesse Singer
Tanis, Egypt

New evidence from the Tanis tombs suggests a pharaoh was buried in another king’s tomb, revealing a royal cover‑up.

Tanis, once a powerful Delta capital, has long fascinated archaeologists. Its royal necropolis yielded treasures nearly as famous as those from the Valley of the Kings, but a new discovery has flipped ancient burial customs on their head—and possibly revealed a royal cover-up.
January 14, 2026 Penelope Singh

The Most Dangerous Selfie Spots In The World

With selfie sticks and front facing cameras the world is our selfie oyster. But some oysters are safer than others. These are some of the most dangerous selfie spots around the globe.
September 25, 2024 Jesse Singer

Historical Mysteries We've Only Solved In Recent Years

History is full of unsolved mysteries, but sometimes, new technology leads historians to answers. Here are some historical mysteries that we’ve recently figured out.
May 13, 2025 Tom Miller

Archaeologists Find Ancient God In A Sewer

Archaeologists in Bulgaria unearthed a significant historical treasure hidden in the sewer system below an ancient city—but its discovery is not what’s making history.
April 3, 2025 Allison Robertson
The Hindenburg disaster occurred on May 6, 1937, as the German passenger airship LZ 129 Hindenburg caught fire and was destroyed during its attempt to dock with its mooring mast at Naval Air Station Lakehurst in Manchester Township, New Jersey, United States.

The Twisted Secret We Know About The Hindenburg Disaster

The Hindenburg disaster was an infamous tragedy—but recently discovered documents reveal the untold, chilling truth about that fateful evening.
November 14, 2024 Samantha Henman