Japan university stands as only Asia institution in global top 25

The Japanese university ranked 13th globally, making it Asia’s highest-ranked institution. The Center for World University Rankings (CWUR) assessed more than 21,200 higher education institutions worldwide before selecting the final Global 2000.

Kyoto University was Asia’s second-highest-ranked university, placing 26th.

Yasuda auditorium is seen behind ginkgo trees at the University of Tokyo in Tokyo, Japan July 20, 2016. Photo by Reuters

Beyond the Japanese institutions, Asia’s next-highest-ranked universities include South Korea’s Seoul National University at 30th. Three Chinese institutes followed closely: Tsinghua University at 36th, Peking University at 40th, and the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences at 41st.

The global top five remained unchanged from the previous year, with leading institutions from the United States and the United Kingdom continuing their dominance. Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Stanford University, the University of Cambridge, and the University of Oxford took the highest honors.

The U.S. maintained its strong grip on the upper echelon of the list. American universities claimed eight of the top 10 spots and 20 of the top 30.

CWUR rank 2026InstitutionLocationScoreTuition fees (USD)

1

Harvard University

US

100

59,300

2

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

US

96.8

64,300

3

Stanford University

US

95.2

67,700

4

University of Cambridge

UK

94.1

59,700

5

University of Oxford

UK

93.3

85,800

6

Princeton University

US

92.7

68,100

7

University of Pennsylvania

US

92.1

65,700

8

Columbia University

US

91.6

70,200

9

Yale University

US

91.2

69,900

10

University of Chicago

US

90.8

73,300

11

California Institute of Technology

US

90.5

65,600

12

University of California, Berkeley

US

90.2

54,900

13

University of Tokyo

Japan

89.9

2,170

14

Cornell University

US

89.6

71,300

15

Northwestern University

US

89.3

70,600

16

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

US

89.1

66,200

17

University of California, Los Angeles

US

88.9

54,900

18

Johns Hopkins University

US

88.7

67,200

19

University College Londononal University

UK

88.5

43,100-77,200

20

PSL University

France

88.3

3,365

21

Duke University

US

88.1

73,200

22

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

US

87.9

47,800

23

University of Toronto

Canada

87.8

51,700

24

New York University

US

87.6

65,600

25

University of Washington

US

87.4

44,600

26

Kyoto University

Japan

87.3

3,350

27

Imperial College London

United Kingdom

87.2

58,500

28

McGill University

Canada

87.0

25,700-91,600

29

University of Wisconsin–Madison

US

86.9

44,200

30

Seoul National University

South Korea

86.8

3,970

Although China had no universities in the top 30 this year, it boasted 360 ranked institutions overall, the highest number of any country in the world. Approximately 98% of Chinese universities improved their positions from previous years. The U.S. followed with the second-largest number of ranked institutions at 313.

Unlike some other global rankings, the CWUR does not rely on surveys or data submitted by the universities themselves. Instead, the rankings are based on four key factors: education quality, alumni employability, faculty distinction, and research performance.

Research performance carries the heaviest weight, accounting for 40% of the total score. This metric assesses the total number of research articles as well as those published in highly influential or frequently cited journals.

The quality of education and alumni employment each contribute 25% to the final score. These factors are measured by the academic and professional success of a university’s alumni relative to the institution’s size.

The final 10% is determined by faculty quality, specifically tracking the number of faculty members who have received top global academic distinctions.

Comments are closed.