International Women’s Day 2026: The women leading UK hospitality

The Staff Canteen

Editor 6th March 2026
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International Women’s Day, marked globally on Sunday, March 8, 2026, provides hospitality with more than a symbolic moment.

It is an opportunity to celebrate leadership, recognise progress and reflect on where structural change is still needed.

Across the UK restaurant and hotel sector, women are increasingly visible as chefs, operators, sommeliers and industry leaders.

They are opening restaurants, leading hotel groups, shaping sustainability strategies and influencing national food culture through television and competitions.

Yet representation at the very top remains uneven. Within Michelin-starred kitchens, female head chefs remain a minority. Visibility has improved, but parity is still a work in progress.

International Women’s Day offers a moment not just to recognise achievements but to amplify voices that are shaping the future of the industry.

Women Leading the Way

Across kitchens, hotels and dining rooms, women are occupying positions of authority that were once considered exceptional. Today they are defining modern hospitality leadership.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Together these leaders demonstrate how far the industry has progressed - and how important continued visibility and opportunity remain.

Sally Abé and Amber Francis during Great British Menu finals week in 2025

Women Shaping the National Conversation

Leadership in hospitality today extends beyond restaurants. Women are also shaping the national culinary conversation through broadcasting, competitions and media.

These figures highlight how influence in hospitality now extends across kitchens, media and entrepreneurship.

A New Generation in the Kitchen

The future of hospitality leadership is already emerging.

One example is Keren Pinko, pastry sous chef at Claro in St James’s.

Claro, founded by chef patron Ran Shmueli and led in London by head chef Shadi Issawy, bridges Eastern Mediterranean heritage with London seasonality. Within this kitchen, Keren’s pastry work balances technical precision with personal storytelling - from dark chocolate mousse layered with tahini crumble and sesame tuile to a refined mille-feuille with vanilla cream and toffee sauce.

Still early in her career, she represents a generation of chefs who have grown up believing they belong in professional kitchens.

Keren often cites Julia Child as an inspiration - a woman who brought personality and authority into a culinary world where female leadership was once rare.

International Women’s Day in Action

Across the UK, operators are marking International Women’s Day with events that celebrate female talent while supporting community initiatives.

Cavita Collaborative Lunch – Marylebone

On Sunday, March 8, Cavita in Marylebone will host a one-off collaborative lunch bringing together five leading female chefs whose heritage spans Mexico, the Middle East, Africa, the Caribbean and South Asia.

Adriana Cavita, Maria Bradford, Ayesha Kalaji, Keshia Sakarah and Sabrina Gidda will create a five-course menu inspired by migration, memory and cultural identity.

Highlights include snapper ceviche with culantro and sour orange by Keshia, spiced chickpea and potato chaat by Sabrina, Sierra Leonean-inspired fish pepe soup from Maria, venison albóndigas from Adriana and a labneh mousse dessert by Ayesha.

Alongside the meal, guests will take part in a live Q&A hosted by entrepreneur and author Justine Murphy discussing representation and careers in hospitality.

Tickets are £120 per person, with profits donated to women and children’s charity Refuge.

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Angela Hartnett x The Canteen

Angela Hartnett joins Jess Filbey and The Canteen team for a one-night collaborative dinner celebrating seasonal produce.

Dishes include pea, mint and ricotta tortelloni, lamb leg with wild garlic salsa verde and a rhubarb frangipane tart with honeycomb and ginger ice cream.

Stakehaus Fundraiser – Margate

Female-founded steak concept Stakehaus will host a charity dinner supporting Not A Phase and Everyday Racism, bringing the Margate community together for a three-course meal and fundraising evening.

The Mayfair Chippy x 18 Keys

Beyond one-day events, some restaurants are supporting longer-term initiatives. The Mayfair Chippy has partnered with 18 Keys, a charity helping women rebuild their lives after homelessness.

The restaurant team runs regular cooking lessons at the charity’s Wandsworth site, teaching practical skills and preparing meals together, helping participants build confidence and independence through food.

A Platform for Change

International Women’s Day offers the hospitality industry a moment to recognise achievements while looking ahead.

From Michelin-starred kitchens to television studios, from independent restaurants to community kitchens, women are shaping the future of UK hospitality.

The challenge for the industry now is not simply to celebrate those successes but to ensure the next generation of chefs, managers and operators can build careers without the barriers previous generations faced.

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