Women’s Engineering Society Announces Top 50 Women in Engineering 2026

The Women’s Engineering Society (WES) has announced the winners of the Top 50 Women in Engineering (WE50) Awards 2026, honouring exceptional women engineers whose achievements embody this year’s theme, Engineering Intelligence. The winners were celebrated at a breakfast event at the House of Lords and the full list is available on the website https://www.wes.org.uk/we50

Now in its 11th year, the Top 50 Women in Engineering Awards are one of the UK’s most prestigious awards celebrating the contributions of women in engineering and aligned each year to International Women in Engineering Day on the 23 June. Established in 2016, the awards were created to increase the visibility of women engineers, and provide powerful role models for the next generation. Each year, the awards spotlight a different theme, reflecting the evolving landscape of engineering and the diverse ways women are shaping it.

The 2026 winners represent the full spectrum of engineering. Working across aerospace, defence, rail, manufacturing, infrastructure, energy, academia, research, technology and the public sector, they are applying technical expertise, creativity, collaboration and leadership to solve complex challenges and improve lives.

This year’s theme, Engineering Intelligence, recognises the many ways engineers combine knowledge, innovation, data, emerging technologies and human‑centred thinking to create solutions for an increasingly complex world. The winners demonstrate that intelligence in engineering extends far beyond technical capability; it includes adaptability, creativity, communication, ethical decision‑making and a commitment to delivering positive impact.

WES Chief Executive Officer Susan Robson said:

“Our theme of Engineering Intelligence for International Women in Engineering Day 2026 captures the reality of the world we’re working in today. Engineering now is shaped as much by the creativity, insight and humanity of the people who choose to be part of it as it is by technical expertise. Engineering is at its best when people are brave enough to challenge things in their quest for shared success. That spirit of courage and curiosity is what drives progress, and it’s what we’re celebrating this year.”

The winners were selected by an independent judging panel drawn from industry, academia and the wider engineering community. They were recognised for their professional achievements, technical expertise, leadership and commitment to advancing both engineering and inclusion within the sector.

The announcement forms part of the celebrations for International Women in Engineering Day (INWED), held annually on 23 June. Founded by WES in 2014, INWED has grown from a UK‑based awareness campaign into a global movement reaching millions worldwide. The 2026 theme, #TogetherWeEngineer, highlights the power of collaboration in driving innovation and building a more inclusive engineering profession.

Top 50 Women in Engineering 2026 Winners

Farah Ahmed – Secretariat International

Martina Antalova – AstraZeneca

Aaliyah Arnold – National Physical Laboratory

Sadia Bakhtiar – Loughborough University

Monalie Bandulasena – Loughborough University

Carolyn Barbour – Chivas Brothers

Nicole Beaves – Dstl

Alisha Bell – Byworth Boilers Ltd

Kamelia Boodhoo – Newcastle University

Chantal Capelletti – University of Nottingham

Rebecca Cheung – University of Edinburgh

Hoi Ching (Rachel) Chiu – Eutelsat OneWeb

Natalie Collcutt – Watkins Payne Ltd

Cristina Cortes Salas – University of Nottingham

Kathryn Davies – AtkinsRéalis

Lucy Wistow‑Hughes – BAE Systems

Jessica Day – Hillside Engineering Contractors

Deepti Deepti – University of Nottingham

Rachel Donaghey MIET – NATS

Rebecca Grant – Loughborough University

Dalia Heggo – Queen Mary University of London

Lilian Ho – AECOM

Kate Hoole‑Jackson – Malvern Panalytical

Fiona Horgan – Islington Council

Melanie Horton – AWE

Cath Hossain – Leonardo

Adrienne Houston – Eurovacuum Products Ltd

Rowshi Hussain – Cundall

Roha Javed – Arup

Xinyuan Ke – University of Bath

Leonora Lang – Arup

Alina Lixandru – AtkinsRéalis

Maryam Mehrnezhad – Royal Holloway, University of London

Kailey Mills – Stantec

Geeta Morar – Hitachi Rail

Shruti Patil – Frasers Group Plc

Beth Probert – University of Strathclyde

Amanda Reece – AtkinsRéalis UK Limited

Amna Riaz – Northumbria University

Barbara Ruffett – Assystem

Selin Shefik – Arup

Divya Shimoga Prakash – AtkinsRéalis

Maya Shinozaki – Arup

Chloe So – PulpaTronics

Nayantara Srinivasan – University of Oxford

Manuela Paulina Trejo Ramirez – University of Leicester

Iryna Tretiak – University of Bristol

Carol Verheecke Vaessen – Cranfield University

Nash Vracas – Aston Martin

Lydia Watson – 36 Engineer Regiment

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