Winners of the 2025 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest | Go Travel Daily

Winners of the 2025 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest

2025 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest Winners

Gutescu took this photo of “white frost over Pestera village” in Romania.
In 2015, the National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest received more than 17,000 entries from photographers around the world. Grand-prize winner Anuar Patjane Floriuk will get an eight-day

National Geographic Photo Expedition to Costa Rica and the Panama Canal. Here’s how he describes his winning photo: “Diving with a humpback whale and her newborn calf while they cruise around Roca Partida … in the Revillagigedo (Islands), Mexico. This is an outstanding and unique place full of pelagic life, so we need to accelerate the incorporation of the islands into UNESCO as (a) natural heritage site in order to increase the protection of the islands against the prevailing illegal fishing corporations and big-game fishing.”

“(This) gravel-crush working place remains full of dust and sand,” Azim said of this photo from Chittagong, Bangladesh. “Three gravel workmen are looking through the window glass at their working place.”
“Camel Ardah, as it called in Oman, is one of the traditional styles of camel racing … between two camels controlled by expert men,” Al Toqi said. “The faster camel is the loser … so they must be running (at) the same speed level in the same track. The main purpose of Ardah is to show the beauty and strength of the Arabian camels and the riders’ skills. Ardah (is) considered one of the most risky situations, since always the camels’ reactions are unpredictable (and) it may get wild and jump (toward the) audience.”
“The night before returning to Windhoek, we spent several hours at Deadvlei” in Namibia, McCarley said. “The moon was bright enough to illuminate the sand dunes in the distance, but the skies were still dark enough to clearly see the Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds. Deadvlei means ‘dead marsh.’ The camelthorn trees are believed to be about 900 years old but have not decomposed because the environment is so dry.”
“Two boys are trying to catch a duck at the stream of the waterfall (in) Nong Khai Province, Thailand,” Wouters said.
“Kushti is the traditional form of Indian wrestling. Wearing only a well-adjusted loincloth (langot), wrestlers (pelwhans) enter a pit made of clay, often mixed with salt, lemon, and ghee (clarified butter),” Schroeder said. “At the end of a workout, wrestlers rest against the walls of the arena, covering their heads and bodies with earth to soak up any perspiration and avoid catching cold. This relaxation ceremony is completed with massages to soothe tired muscles and demonstrate mutual respect.”
“The night before this photo, we tried all day to get a good photo of the endangered white rhino,” Berube said. “Skulking through the grass carefully, trying to stay 30 feet away to be safe, didn’t provide me the photo I was hoping for. In the morning, however, I woke up to all three rhinos grazing in front of me.” The photo was taken at the Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary in Uganda.
Zardini said this is “a sauna at 2,800 meters high in the heart of (the) Dolomites. Monte Lagazuoi, Cortina, eastern Italian Alps.”
“Traditional haymaking in Poland,” Jurecki said. “Many people continue to use the scythe and pitchfork to sort the hay.”
Spread the love
Back To Top