- Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Harvard University has retained its position atop the annual U.S. News & World Report rankings of the world’s best universities, with American institutions claiming six of the top 10 slots in the newly released 2026-2027 edition.

U.S. News published the 2026-2027 Best Global Universities rankings, which evaluate more than 2,250 schools on academic research and reputation, drawing on universities from more than 100 countries.

Harvard earned a perfect global score of 100.0. Massachusetts Institute of Technology ranked second with a score of 97.0, followed by Stanford University at 94.4. England’s University of Oxford and University of Cambridge placed fourth and fifth, respectively.



China’s Tsinghua University came in sixth, with the University of California-Berkeley seventh, Yale University eighth, University College London ninth and Columbia University rounding out the top 10. 

The rankings are powered by data from the Web of Science Core Collection and InCites Benchmarking & Analytics, provided by Clarivate. The methodology weighs factors measuring a university’s global and regional research reputation and academic research performance, including bibliometric indicators such as publications, citations and international collaboration. 

“For students seeking universities with strong academic excellence and global recognition, the Best Global Universities rankings offer an essential comparative resource,” said LaMont Jones, managing editor for education at U.S. News. “Our methodology focuses on a school’s research mission and scholarly impact, helping students identify institutions that are truly at the forefront of global knowledge creation.”

China leads all nations with 409 schools in the overall rankings, followed by the United States with 275, India with 123, the United Kingdom with 93 and Japan with 86. 

Of the 51 subject rankings, four will include more schools this year: water resources, chemical engineering, energy and fuels and clinical medicine.

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In the regional breakdowns, Oxford and Cambridge led Europe, with University College London third. In Asia, Tsinghua topped the region ahead of the National University of Singapore and Peking University. Australia’s University of Melbourne led the Australia/New Zealand grouping, ahead of the University of Sydney and the University of New South Wales Sydney.

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