Browse the full results of the latestߣߣƵ Sustainability Impact Ratings
What can an elephant skeleton, a campus displaced by war and an app for scouting water availability in Indian villages tell us about higher education? Each is the result of a university’s drive for sustainability, and provides an insight into how many institutions view their mission as something much larger than their own academic excellence.
This is whatߣߣƵalso believes, and this conviction runs through the core of our eighth annual Sustainability Impact Ratings (formerly Impact Rankings), the only global university ranking that examines howinstitutions are performing in relation to the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
As Julian Skyrme, executive director of social responsibility and civic engagement at the University of Manchester, puts it, theimpact ratings encourage institutions to consider “what universities are good for, not just what universities are good at”.
For Manchester, which leads the 2026 impact ratings, placing an elephant skeleton in a busy train stationto spark a conversation about extinction was just one of many ways the university strives to reach the communitybeyond the university and contribute to cultural life.
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And in Western Sydney, ߣߣƵ,a drive for community-based initiatives saw local water knowledge in India combined with a smartphone app to optimise crop planting in the area.
Whereas in Ukraine, now into its fifth year of conflict since the Russian invasion in 2022,sustainability takes on a broader meaning of survival. As Mykola Trofymenko explains, the ratings’ four pillars of research, resource stewardship, community engagement and teaching “have merged into a single test of institutional endurance”. He describes how the physical destruction ofcampus buildings and forced relocations have strengthened Ukraine’s commitment to the SDGs of quality education (4) andpeace, justice and strong institutions (16)– both tables in which Ukraine performs well.
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This year’s ratings include data covering 1,646 universities from 116 countries/territories. They are rated across 17 individual SDG tables and one overall ranking.
Althoughwealthy nations continue to dominate the ratings, this yearour data reveals how lower-income nations are beginning to narrow the gapthanks to a dedicated focus on SDG alignment.
There are now four lower-middle-income institutionsin the global top 50, double the number from last year. And upper-middle-income countries such as Malaysia continue to build on their success from previous years.
This steadfast global commitment is heartening at a time when the higher education sector finds itself under pressure financially, and often politically too.
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One ofTHE’s key metrics for evaluating SDG performance is evidence: what proof of initiatives and outcomes universities can provide. In this way we aim to take the SDGs from an abstract concept of “saving the planet” to concrete projects where we might see greater numbers of low-income studentsentering higher education or environmental schemes that demonstrably improve the lives of those in the region. Because having a positive impact in a tangible way should always be part of higher education’s mission.
naomi.firsht@timeshighereducation.com
Top 10 countries/territories represented in the overallSustainability Impact Ratings 2026
|
Country/territory |
Number of universities ranked |
Topranked university |
Rank of top institution |
|
Philippines |
160 |
201-300 |
|
|
India |
110 |
23 |
|
|
Turkey |
74 |
=59 |
|
|
Thailand |
69 |
19 |
|
|
Indonesia |
67 |
15 |
|
|
United Kingdom |
59 |
1 |
|
|
Ukraine |
55 |
Interregional Academy of Personnel Management (IAPM) ߣߣƵ |
201-300 |
|
201-300 |
|||
|
Pakistan |
52 |
71 |
|
|
Uzbekistan |
50 |
AlisherNavo’iTashkentState University of Uzbek Language and Literature ߣߣƵ |
101-200 |
|
101-200
|
|||
|
Algeria |
46 |
201-300 |
= joint
See the full results of this year’s Sustainability Impact Ratings
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