When most Americans feel a fast-food craving coming on, one name surfaces before any other. It is not necessarily the one they think makes the best burger, or the one they trust most for quality. It is McDonald’s, and that distinction alone tells a complicated story about how the chain holds its grip on the American dining imagination.
A 2026 survey conducted by the international market research firm YouGov, titled ‘Best Bites 2026: U.S. Restaurant Brand Rankings,’ asked American adults which restaurant brands they would consider when looking to purchase food or drinks. McDonald’s came out on top with 39.6% of respondents naming it as a consideration, ahead of Chick-fil-A at 35.5% and Wendy’s at 33.2%.
The chain led among men and women alike, and ranked first among adults aged 18 through 64. Only respondents aged 65 and older broke from the pattern, naming Wendy’s as their first consideration instead.
Where McDonald’s actually stands on quality
The survey’s more revealing findings come when consumers were asked to evaluate specific menu categories rather than general brand awareness.
For best burger, McDonald’s finished fifth with 8.7% of the vote. Five Guys led that category at 15.5%, followed by Burger King at 15%, In-N-Out Burger at 12.1%, and Wendy’s at 10.2%. For overall quality across all fast-food brands, Chick-fil-A ranked first while McDonald’s did not place in the top 10. On value, Wendy’s came in at No. 1 with 21.6% while McDonald’s landed at No. 8 with 12.5%.
The one category where McDonald’s ran away from the field was french fries. Nearly 40% of respondents named its fries as the best in fast food, a lead so large that Five Guys, which finished second, earned just 9%.
Other category winners included Subway for best deli sandwich at 22.9%, Taco Bell for best taco or burrito at 30.3%, Chick-fil-A for best chicken at 25.3%, and Pizza Hut for best pizza at 19.1%.
Who is eating fast food and why
The survey also offered a detailed look at the habits and preferences of the roughly 30% of Americans who eat fast food at least once a week. About two-thirds of all American adults purchase food or drinks from fast-food restaurants at least once a month, making the category a central part of how the country eats.
Among weekly fast-food diners, 55% are male and 45% are female. About half fall into the middle-income bracket, defined as earning between 75% and 200% of the median income, and just over half are younger than 45.
What drives those weekly visits is not nostalgia or habit alone. Value and discounts rank as the top motivators, followed closely by the cleanliness of the dining area. The data also revealed some differences between male and female diners. Women place a higher value on the ability to customize their orders, while men are more drawn to around-the-clock service and self-serve drink stations.
What the numbers actually say about McDonald’s
The YouGov findings paint a picture of a brand that has mastered something harder to quantify than taste ratings or quality scores. McDonald’s occupies a specific kind of mental real estate that its competitors have not been able to dislodge, despite outperforming it in nearly every head-to-head category the survey measured.
Ashley Brown, senior director at YouGov, noted that the results suggest consumers evaluate fast-food brands across multiple menu items and attributes rather than any single offering. A chain can rank fifth on burgers and still be the first name that surfaces when someone is deciding where to eat, because the full picture of what a brand represents, its fries, its familiarity, its consistency, carries its own weight in the decision.
McDonald’s has said publicly that its approach centers on using real ingredients including beef patties, white meat chicken, and freshly cracked eggs, and that it continues to adjust its menu to reflect shifting customer preferences.

