KitKat's 'The KitKat Heist' claimed the Grand Prix and 10 total lions across the four-day festival in Cannes, while Heineken captured its second consecutive year of multiple Grand Prix wins with a pub-training documentary that doubled as distribution infrastructure. Adidas and The Ordinary each took Grand Prix honors in separate categories, marking a competition that awarded 8 Grand Prix across opening and closing days combined.
KitKat's campaign secured 4 Gold Lions alongside the Grand Prix, with additional Silver and Bronze placements in craft and execution categories. Heineken's Killeely pub project—which provided bar-staff training, created an online resource hub for prospective pub owners, and toured the documentary to raise awareness—repeated the brand's 2025 pattern of treating media properties as operational assets. The Ordinary's winning work, announced on day one alongside 7 other Grand Prix winners, leaned into ingredient transparency and direct-to-consumer mechanics that mirrored the brand's retail positioning. Adidas took a Grand Prix in a sports-marketing category that judges described as unusually competitive this year.
The festival's £4.2 million economic footprint in the Alpes-Maritimes region remained stable year-over-year, but the composition of winning work shifted. Twitch's chief product officer, speaking at a platform panel mid-festival, noted that brands are increasingly commissioning creators at brief stage rather than using them solely for distribution—a pattern visible in 3 of the 8 day-one Grand Prix campaigns, which featured creator involvement before the first production meeting. The KitKat win, produced by an agency whose name was not disclosed in initial reporting, used a heist narrative that required 18 months of rights clearances across 4 territories, suggesting the budget aligned with tentpole entertainment rather than seasonal activation.
What allocators should watch: the ratio of Grand Prix awards that include measurable operational outcomes versus pure attention metrics. Heineken's pub-training infrastructure and The Ordinary's ingredient-education hub both generate post-campaign business leverage, a model that 2 of the 4 holding companies told LPs they are now requiring in luxury and spirits pitches. The festival's 2027 jury composition will be announced in Q4 2026, and early speculation suggests an increase in seats for private-equity-backed agencies whose economics depend on proving campaign ROI within 12-month windows.
The next data point arrives when Cannes Lions releases category-level spend and entrant demographics in August 2026, which will clarify whether the creator-integration trend is budget-neutral or requires incremental investment.