World University Rankings news
  
  
   
  
      
  
  
    
        
  
  
      
            
  
      The Times Higher Education World University Rankings measure research-intensive universities across all their core missions. Here, we explain how we arrive at the results for the global rankings
       
  
      India will be the second most-represented country in world for first time
       
  
      91茄子 is refocusing on core and deeply trusted rankings while retaining a diversity of measures and metrics, says Phil Baty
       
  
      Robust pipelines, smart validation and continuous observability have enabled us to improve data integrity even as our global rankings have grown, says Loubaba El Wazir
       
  
      Rankings did not drive the Singaporean institution’s strategy, but gave the then underdog the data and visibility to enter a virtuous circle of success, explain Bertil Andersson and Tony Mayer
       
  
      China’s neighbours benefit in list of the world’s most international universities, as giant expands its network
       
  
      Number of female university leaders reaches record high, with Switzerland seeing biggest growth
       
  
      The use of generative AI and a new engine drawing on data from government agencies are among the ways in which we’re doubling down on quality, says David Watkins
       
  
      Despite Asia’s success elsewhere, its leading universities are still struggling to compete globally in arts and humanities. Patrick Jack asks whether that needs to change for them to be considered world-class
       
  
      How we rank universities across 11 separate subject areas 
       
  
      Universities are invited to participate, as the portal for our global research-focused rankings opens
       
  
      Concerns around scholars using excessive self-citations are valid, but banning them entirely is not the right approach, says David Watkins 
       
  
      Flagship higher education event on 7-9 October 2025 to focus on ‘Universities as agents of change’
       
  
      No elite US university finishes in the top 50 for the international outlook pillar, a category that is dominated by the United Arab Emirates at the top and the UK lower down
       
  
      The distribution of countries’ ranking positions reveals new insights
       
  
      The US has a new leader, while Brazil and the UAE join the top 200
       
  
      Oxford breaks record at number one spot, defying trend of declining UK reputation 
       
  
      The number of ranked Chinese institutions is back up, while Turkey has also experienced fast growth
       
  
      We’re launching two brand-new rankings this autumn, while fine-tuning our established analyses, writes Duncan Ross
       
  
      Irene Tracey says policymakers and universities need to work together to tackle funding crisis
       
  
      In a turbulent period for HE and beyond, university leaders are determined to make their work count
       
  
      Institutions are setting the scene for a thriving international system post-war
       
  
      Half of sector goes backwards in this year’s table, as international student caps threaten more damage
       
  
      ‘SWAT team’ of finance experts and science writers helps university secure more federal research funds than any other US institution, says its vice-provost for research
       
  
      Monash vice-chancellor discusses universities' progress on preventing gender-based abuse and the 'flattening effect' on internationalisation 
       
  
      With many of the world’s top universities sporting new heads, and tenures shrinking, experts call for initiatives to develop future leaders
       
  
      Dartmouth College president discusses seeking criticism, prioritising mental health and getting more women into engineering
       
  
      Leadership troubles at two Parisian mega-universities reflect ongoing debates around governance and academic culture, says Jean-Yves Mérindol
       
  
      Indian Institute of Science director discusses opening a new medical school and receiving the country’s largest philanthropic university gift
       
  
      Research suggests some widespread initiatives don’t work, and some even lead to a decrease in academic diversity. So why do they continue to be rolled out? And what should institutions try instead? Rosa Ellis reports
       
  
      Sheffield vice-chancellor discusses including innovation in promotions criteria and carving a distinct identity for the university
       
  
      If AI is to transform education, assessment must be rebooted and developers must make leaps in understanding the learning process, experts say. Rosa Ellis reports
       
  
      The Florida Tech president on creating a 'living, breathing' strategic plan, the explosion of the space industry and why diversity matters
       
  
      Academics and students are getting older, on average. Do universities need to adapt to manage a community with a widening age span?
       
  
      We compile our World University Rankings from information supplied by institutions across the globe, which is scrutinised and considered against the criteria here
       
  
      Outgoing Erasmus University Rotterdam president discusses the underappreciated value of the social sciences, managing student protests and the differences between Dutch and German higher education
       
  
      Milestone marks biggest rise in number of ranked universities in five years
       
  
      African participation surpasses North America for the first time
       
  
      Increase in female leaders driven by Europe as US stagnates
       
  
      Universities that are ranked by Times Higher Education tend to have healthy levels of prestige, write David Watkins and Mark Caddow
       
  
      The president of Aalto University talks about leading a nationwide flexible learning effort, and why he’s been standing up for an ‘international Finland’
       
  
      Elsewhere, Australia and UK improve, but tightening immigration policies could threaten progress
       
  
      Universities are invited to participate, as the portal for our global research-focused ranking opens
       
  
      There is no single or ‘correct’ way to rank universities – and that’s a very good thing, writes Phil Baty
       
  
      A look at the most-read 91茄子 university rankings articles from the past 12 months
       
  
      Online Learning Rankings will benchmark universities on resources, outcomes, student engagement and learning environment 
       
  
      While Covid has perforated the rankings bubble of the front runners, better commercial engagement and refined research measures have boosted much of the middle tier
       
  
      Asia saw the largest rise of all continents in research quality, teaching score, and overall performance in the latest World University Rankings
       
  
      North America has also revived while Oceania’s international outlook has dipped. Patrick Jack picks out key rankings trends
       
  
      European nations have the highest research income levels, but Hong Kong and Australia surpass them in research productivity
       
  
      UK and US universities struggle to keep pace with top Asian performers as research funding shares decline
       
  
      Hong Kong and the Netherlands lead new 91茄子 metrics measuring research strength, excellence and influence 
       
  
      Southeast Asian country has made big gains on student-staff ratio since 2020, while Hungary has improved on share of postgraduate researchers
       
  
      UK universities are overwhelmingly represented at the top of the international outlook pillar
       
  
      The World University Rankings have grown and developed to reflect the changing global higher education sector, writes Ellie Bothwell 
       
  
      We’re gathering data on interdisciplinary science and online learning, and making improvements to some of our existing rankings, to capture insights on more of the work that universities do, says 罢贬贰’s chief data officer 
       
  
      WUR expands industry pillar to include patents in country scores, with greatest gains by Ireland, Hong Kong and the US
       
  
      UC Davis’ chancellor, Gary May, has plenty of background in attracting minority students, but finds California’s decades-old ban on race-based admissions a formidable foe
       
  
      Canterbury’s vice-chancellor contrasts her adopted island homeland with her native South Africa and reflects on the opportunities spawned by even the worst horrors
       
  
      Daniel Diermeier reflects on traversing the increasingly polarised US political landscape and on disagreeing with staff and students pressing for the university to take sides