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Asia University Rankings 2026: results announced

China’s ongoing strength means small gains for countries like Japan and South Korea are not enough for them to remain competitive. Meanwhile, Malaysia proves it’s one to watch. Tash Mosheim reports

Published on
April 23, 2026
Last updated
April 23, 2026
Asia University Rankings 2026 logo and artwork.
Source: iStock montage

Browse the full results of the Asia University Rankings 2026


Chinese universities dominate the ߣߣƵAsia University Rankings 2026 once again, maintaining their grip on the top of the table as competition intensifies across the region.

Tsinghua University retains first place, while mainland China continues to account for five of the top 10 institutions and 20 of the top 50, unchanged from last year. The results underline the continued strength of China’s system, which has consolidated its position at the summit even as other parts of Asia improve at a faster rate.

The remainder of the top 10 has seen little movement this year, with Singapore’s top two universities, National University of Singapore and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, holding firm in third and joint fourth place respectively.

Meanwhile, The University of Tokyo inJapan has risen slightly to joint fourth position, up from fifth. And The Chinese University of Hong Kong slipped down one spot into 10th position, swapping places with China’s Shanghai Jiao Tong University, now in ninth.

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Asia University Rankings 2026: top 10

Institution

Country/territory

Rank 2026

Rank 2025

Tsinghua University

China

1

1

Peking University

China

2

2

National University of Singapore

Singapore

3

3

Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Singapore

=4

4

The University of Tokyo

Japan

=4

5

University of Hong Kong

Hong Kong

6

6

Fudan University

China

7

7

Zhejiang University

China

8

8

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

China

9

10

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Hong Kong

10

9


Simon Marginson, professor of higher education at theuniversitiesof Bristol and Oxford, said China’s continued rise across global rankings reflects sustained government investment in research and universities.

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“China continues to rise in all rankings tables at global and regional levels, however they are constructed, and especially – and spectacularly – in the Leiden Ranking of science output and citations, which is the best measure of pure science power, because its government prioritises national investment in science, technology and research universities.”

He added that “research performance, especially, is closely correlated to government funding, and always has been”.

“So next year the gap between China and the other two giants, USA and Europe, will widen significantly.”

The rankings also point to a more competitive regional landscape, particularly in East Asia. Although many universities in Japan and South Korea have fallen in rank, the data suggests that this ismainly a story of relative decline rather than weakening performance.

THEdata scientist Catherine Tushabe said many universities in both countries had recorded small improvements in their overall scores but still experienced drops in their ranking position.

She added that although average institutional scores in Japan and South Korea had increased, their improvements were below the global median score change, meaning their gains did not keep pace with the global trend.

The data also highlights common areas of pressure. Across both countries, declines in research environment, research quality and industry scores were the most consistent negative movements, Tushabe said.

Gerard A. Postiglione, chair professor of education at the University of Hong Kong, said Japan and South Korea weredeclining “for the same reason the US lost ground [in theTHEWorld University Rankings], that being the scaling up of China’s massive system of universities that benefit from returnee talent, increased budgets for both basic research, and the government’s aspiration to become world-leading in higher education”.

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In Japan, the results are mixed. The University of Tokyo reached its highest position since 2015, and the newly merged Institute of Science Tokyo is the highest new entrant at 34th place – made up of two previously ranked institutions, Tokyo Medical and Dental University and Tokyo Institute of Technology. However, this is offset by a broader pattern of stability or decline, with 10 Japanese universities in the top 200 either holding position or falling.

South Korea shows a similar trend. Several institutions, including Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology (DGIST), Kyungpook National University (KNU) and the University of Ulsan, have dropped six places or more, while relatively few have recorded significant gains.

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By contrast, Hong Kong’s universities have strengthened their position. All six institutions ranked last year remain in the top 50, with Hong Kong Baptist University rising from 50th to 40th. In addition, two newly ranked institutions enter the top 100.


Countries/territories represented in the Asia University Rankings 2026

Country/territory

Best university

Rank of best university

Total number of universities ranked

India

Indian Institute of Science

=43

128

Japan

The University of Tokyo

=4

115

Turkey

Koç University

=73

109

China

Tsinghua University

1

97

Iran

Sharif University of Technology

=76

90

Pakistan

Quaid-i-Azam University

=148

48

Taiwan

National Taiwan University (NTU)

=26

47

South Korea

Seoul National University

15

41

Indonesia

University of Indonesia

201-250

35

Saudi Arabia

King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals

32

31

Malaysia

UniversitiTeknologiPetronas

=35

27

Iraq

University of Technology, Iraq

401-500

25

Tishk International University

401-500

25

Thailand

Chulalongkorn University

=134

21

Bangladesh

Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology

301-350

19

University of Dhaka

301-350

19

Jordan

Al-AhliyyaAmman University

132

14

Vietnam

UEH University

=184

11

Hong Kong

University of Hong Kong

6

8

Israel

Tel Aviv University

=52

8

United Arab Emirates

United Arab Emirates University

=55

8

Philippines

Ateneo de Manila University

501-600

6

Sri Lanka

University of Colombo

501-600

6

Kazakhstan

Nazarbayev University

=150

5

Lebanon

Lebanese American University

94

5

Uzbekistan

TashkentInstitute of Irrigation and Agricultural Mechanisation

201-250

4

Macao

University of Macau

28

3

Oman

Sultan Qaboos University

=180

3

Bahrain

Arabian Gulf University

201-250

2

Brunei Darussalam

Universiti Brunei Darussalam

113

2

Kuwait

American University of the Middle East

201-250

2

Palestine

An-Najah National University

351-400

2

Singapore

National University of Singapore

3

2

Mongolia

National University of Mongolia

801+

1

Nepal

Tribhuvan University

801+

1

Qatar

Qatar University

=47

1

Syria

Damascus University

801+

1

Yemen

Taiz University

501-600

1


Malaysia is also emerging as a system to watch. Its top-ranked university has improved its position, while several others have climbed into the top 100. The leading Malaysian institution, Universiti Teknologi Petronas, has jumped forward to joint 35th place, up from joint 43rd.

Postiglione said Malaysia’s progress reflects a more strategic approach to regional positioning.

“Malaysia has become more strategic in learning from its tiny neighbour, Singapore, and using its larger population to become China’s largest ASEAN partner in cross-border university ventures.”

James Chin, professor of Asian studies at the University of Tasmania, said Malaysia’s recent gains reflect long-term efforts to position itself as a regional education hub, with strong performance driven in part by private universities that are particularly focused on improving their standing in global rankings.

“The key strength of the system is that the private universities are doing very well, in the sense that they take the rankings game seriously,” he said. “So this is a long process and what you’re seeing now is Malaysia in a mature place for higher education.”

Tushabe added that Malaysia’s average institutional score increase is “well above the global median”, indicating that Malaysian universities improved more than the global system overall. Although not all institutions have risen in rank, this upward momentum is beginning to translate into greater representation at the top end of the table.

Taken together, the results highlight a shifting competitive landscape in Asian higher education. China’s continued dominance reflects its ability to sustain performance at scale, while Hong Kong’s steady gains and Malaysia’s rising performance point to growing strength elsewhere in the region.

At the same time, the relative slippage of Japan and South Korea underlines the increasing intensity of competition, where even modest improvements may no longer be enough to hold position. As more systems advance at pace, maintaining rank is becoming as challenging as reaching it.

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