The University of Hong Kong (HKU) has emerged as the top-ranked university in Asia in the QS World University Rankings: Asia 2026, overtaking Peking University, which now holds the #2 position. The National University of Singapore (NUS) and Nanyang Technological University (NTU) share the joint #3 spot.
The rest of the top 10 list reflects a strong regional concentration in East Asia. Fudan University ranks fifth, followed by the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (6), The Chinese University of Hong Kong (7), and City University of Hong Kong, which shares the same rank. Tsinghua University (9) and The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (10) complete the top 10.
The 2026 edition of the QS Asia Rankings marks the largest regional assessment to date, evaluating over 1,500 universities across 25 higher-education systems. The 2026 edition highlights the growing competition among Asian universities as governments continue to invest in research, international partnerships, and student mobility. With China and Singapore maintaining dominance and India rapidly expanding participation, the continent’s academic ecosystem is more dynamic — and more competitive — than ever before.
Mainland China leads with around 395 ranked institutions, while India follows with 294, marking a substantial increase in representation compared to previous years. Malaysia, meanwhile, has been identified as one of the “most improved” higher-education systems in this edition.
India continues to strengthen its regional presence, with seven institutions among Asia’s top 100, 20 in the top 200, and 66 in the top 500.
Leading Indian institutions include:
- Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IIT Delhi) – ranked around 59
- Indian Institute of Science Bengaluru (IISc) – around 64
- Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT Madras) – around 70
While India’s performance reflects steady progress, the country still trails behind leading East and Southeast Asian universities in areas such as global research impact, international faculty representation, and institutional reputation.
This year, QS introduced a refined normalisation methodology, altering how raw indicator values are scaled and adjusted. As a result, university scores are not directly comparable year-to-year, even if performance levels remain consistent.
The Asia-specific methodology for 2026 includes the following indicator weightings:
- Academic Reputation – 30%
- Employer Reputation – 20%
- Citations per Paper – 10%
- Faculty-Student Ratio – 10%
- Staff with a PhD – 5%
- Papers per Faculty – 5%
- International Student Ratio – 2.5%
- Inbound Exchange Students – 2.5%
- Outbound Exchange Students – 2.5%
(Note: Total exceeds 100% due to rounding and grouping.)
Unique to the Asia rankings are indicators such as Staff with a PhD, Inbound Exchange Students, and Outbound Exchange Students, underscoring QS’s increasing emphasis on global mobility and internationalisation.
QS has cautioned institutions and analysts that, given the updated methodology and expanded dataset, year-to-year rank comparisons should be approached with caution, as similar scores may reflect different competitive conditions or distributions.



