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Rankings of universities in the United Kingdom

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rankings of higher education providers in the United Kingdom

Three nationalrankings of universities in the United Kingdom are published annually by theComplete University Guide andThe Guardian, as well as a collaborative list byThe Times andThe Sunday Times. Rankings have also been produced in the past byThe Daily Telegraph and theFinancial Times.

British universities rank highly inglobal university rankings with eight featuring in the top 100 of all three major global rankings as of 2024:QS,Times Higher Education, andARWU. The national rankings differ from global rankings with a focus on the quality ofundergraduate education, as opposed toresearch prominence and facultycitations.

The primary aim of domestic rankings is to inform prospective undergraduate applicants about universities based on a range of criteria, including: entry standards, student satisfaction, staff–student ratio, expenditure per student, research quality,degree classifications, completion rates, and graduate outcomes. All of the league tables also rank universities in individual subjects.

As of 2025, the top-five ranked universities in the United Kingdom areOxford,Cambridge,London School of Economics (LSE),St Andrews, andDurham, withImperial College London,Bath andWarwick also appearing in the top ten of all three rankings.

Summary of national rankings

[edit]
Bodlein Library, University of Oxford
King's College Chapel, University of Cambridge
Sir Arthur Lewis Building, London School of Economics
St Salvator's Hall, University of St Andrews
University College at Durham Castle, Durham University
Oxford,Cambridge,LSE,St Andrews, andDurham ranked as the top-five British universities in 2025.

From 2008 to 2022, the three main national rankings—Complete,Guardian, andTimes—were averaged each year to form an overall league table by theTimes Higher Education Table of Tables; in its final edition, the top-five universities wereOxford,Cambridge,LSE,St Andrews, andImperial.[1]

Rankings published in 2025 for the prospective year 2026 (1–25)

[edit]
PosUniversityAverageCompleteGuardianTimes[a]
1OxfordOxford2.3214Decrease
2=CambridgeCambridge2.7134
2=St AndrewsSt Andrews2.7422
2=LSELSE2.7341
5DurhamDurham4.35Increase5Increase3Increase
6ImperialImperial66Decrease6Decrease6Increase
7BathBath7.788Decrease7Increase
8WarwickWarwick89Increase7Increase8Increase
9LoughboroughLoughborough107Decrease11Decrease
10UCLUCL10.713Decrease10Decrease9Decrease
11LancasterLancaster131014Decrease
12BristolBristol13.315Increase15Increase10Increase
13ExeterExeter1411Increase17Increase
14SheffieldSheffield1516Increase16Increase
15SouthamptonSouthampton1817Increase20Increase
16EdinburghEdinburgh18.718Decrease13Increase
17BirminghamBirmingham19.314Decrease28Decrease
18King'sKing's19.719Increase21Increase
19LiverpoolLiverpool20.723Decrease21Increase
20StrathclydeStrathclyde22.738Decrease19Decrease
21YorkYork23.312Increase38Decrease
22AberdeenAberdeen23.730Increase18Decrease
23SurreySurrey24.319Decrease23Decrease
24LeedsLeeds2521Increase28Increase
25GlasgowGlasgow25.731Decrease24Decrease
Sources:[2][3][4]

Rankings published in 2024 for the prospective year 2025 (26–130)

[edit]
PosUniversityAverageCompleteGuardianTimes[a]
26Arts LondonArts London27.32913
27LeedsLeeds29.72337
28=ReadingReading31.33535
28=Queen's BelfastQueen's Belfast31.32543
30AstonAston31.739=21
31LeicesterLeicester32.33634
32=East AngliaEast Anglia33.02145
32=EssexEssex33.030=23
34SwanseaSwansea34.33729
35CardiffCardiff35.02746=
36UlsterUlster37.042=24
37NorthumbriaNorthumbria38.33438=
38NewcastleNewcastle39.72663
39NottinghamNottingham40.730=62
40Royal HollowayRoyal Holloway[b]41.33852=
41City St George'sCity St George's[b]42.039=[c]38=
42Harper AdamsHarper Adams43.033
43Oxford Brookes44.74638=
44Nottingham TrentNottingham Trent45.34549
45DundeeDundee46.35152=
46=West London48.358=30
46=PortsmouthPortsmouth48.34941
48KentKent50.75260=
49SussexSussex51.04768=
50LincolnLincoln51.34850
51AberystwythAberystwyth52.042=66=
52=Heriot-WattHeriot-Watt53.042=66=
52=Manchester MetManchester Met53.056=57
54=Queen MaryQueen Mary[b]54.35074
54=CoventryCoventry54.36742
56Glasgow CaledonianGlasgow Caledonian55.075=46=
57ChichesterChichester55.779=26
58Edge HillEdge Hill60.75444
59KeeleKeele63.36172
60ChesterChester63.756=46=
61St Mary'sSt Mary's66.37275=
62Liverpool John MooresLiverpool John Moores67.08154=
63BangorBangor68.36873
64West of EnglandWest of England69.075=64
65HullHull69.373=75=
66=StirlingStirling70.05394
66=Cardiff MetCardiff Met70.06282
68HuddersfieldHuddersfield70.365=68=
69SunderlandSunderland71.075=33
70PlymouthPlymouth73.065=84
71Sheffield HallamSheffield Hallam74.06375=
72=DerbyDerby75.395=54=
72=SOASSOAS[b]75.37190
74Brighton75.77086=
75SalfordSalford76.073=83
76FalmouthFalmouth76.36492
77South WalesSouth Wales80.095=51
78Edinburgh NapierEdinburgh Napier80.38696=
79=BournemouthBournemouth80.755105=
79=HertfordshireHertfordshire80.78475=
81Norwich Arts81.582
82KingstonKingston81.788=60=
83Robert GordonRobert Gordon82.39195
84GoldsmithsGoldsmiths[b]83.060109
85AbertayAbertay84.09979
86StaffordshireStaffordshire85.397=58
87Greater ManchesterGreater Manchester86.310832
88Creative ArtsCreative Arts87.08589
89Liverpool HopeLiverpool Hope87.78386=
90Leeds BeckettLeeds Beckett88.375=102=
91Arts Bournemouth90.393=100=
92TeessideTeesside90.710068=
93London South BankLondon South Bank91.011459
94GloucestershireGloucestershire92.788=100=
95Suffolk93.758=99
96=Birmingham NewmanBirmingham Newman95.012471
96=Plymouth MarjonPlymouth Marjon95.0115
98SolentSolent95.310286=
99Central LancashireCentral Lancashire95.787104
100Bath Spa96.0104108
101York St JohnYork St John96.710196=
102=Buckinghamshire NewBuckinghamshire New97.7106=65
102=Queen MargaretQueen Margaret97.797=91
104BradfordBradford99.3106=81
105WorcesterWorcester99.788=112
106Birmingham CityBirmingham City100.392102=
107Leeds Arts101.5111=
108BrunelBrunel[b]102.079=120
109=East LondonEast London102.312556
109=WTSD102.311780
111Lincoln BishopLincoln Bishop104.0122
112WolverhamptonWolverhampton106.3111=85
113=Roehampton107.093=110
113=WinchesterWinchester107.0103115
115Canterbury Christ ChurchCanterbury Christ Church108.3109107
116GreenwichGreenwich109.7110117
117Leeds TrinityLeeds Trinity111.0116105=
118De MontfortDe Montfort112.0105118
119MiddlesexMiddlesex114.3113113=
120London MetLondon Met115.712793
121HartpuryHartpury116.0
122Anglia RuskinAnglia Ruskin116.312198
123WrexhamWrexham118.7130111
124WestminsterWestminster119.0118119
125NorthamptonNorthampton119.3120113=
126BuckinghamBuckingham120.0126
127CumbriaCumbria122.3123116
128West of ScotlandWest of Scotland123.3128121
129RAURAU125.0119
130Bedfordshire126.7129122
Source:[5][6][7]

League tables and methodologies

[edit]

There are three main domestic league tables in the United Kingdom: theComplete University Guide (CUG),The Guardian, andThe Times/The Sunday Times.

Complete University Guide

[edit]
Top 40 universities based on theCUG's aggregated results over the past 10 years

TheComplete University Guide is compiled by Mayfield University Consultants and was published for the first time in 2007.[8]

The ranking uses ten criteria, with a statistical technique called theZ-score applied to the results of each.[9] The effect of this is to ensure that the weighting given to each criterion is not distorted by the choice of scale used to score that criterion. The ten Z-scores are then weighted (as given below) and summed to give a total score for each university. These total scores are then transformed to a scale where the top score is set at 1,000, with the remainder being a proportion of the top score. The ten criteria are:[10]

  • "Academic services spend" (0.5) – expenditure per student on all academic services – data source:Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA);
  • "Degree completion" (1.0) – a measure of the completion rate of students (data source: HESA);
  • "Entry standards" (1.0) – averageUCAS Tariff score of new students under the age of 21 (data source: HESA);
  • "Facilities spend" (0.5) – expenditure per student on staff and student facilities(data source: HESA);
  • "Good honours" (1.0) – the proportion of first and upper-second-class honours,phased out (data source: HESA);
  • "Graduate prospects" (1.0) – a measure of the employability of graduates (data source: HESA);
  • "Research quality" (1.0) – a measure of the average quality of research – data source:Research Excellence Framework (REF);
  • "Research intensity" (0.5) – a measure of the fraction of staff who are research-active (data source: HESA / REF);
  • "Student satisfaction" (1.5) – a measure of the view of students on the teaching quality (data source:National Student Survey);
  • "Student–staff ratio" (1.0) – a measure of the average staffing level (data source: HESA).

The Guardian

[edit]
Top 40 universities based onThe Guardian's aggregated results over the past 10 years

The Guardian's ranking uses nine different criteria, each weighted between 5 and 15 per cent. Unlike other annual rankings of British universities, the criteria do not include a measure of research output.[11] A "value-added" factor is included which compares students' degree results with their entry qualifications, described by the newspaper as being "[b]ased upon asophisticated indexing methodology that tracks students from enrolment to graduation, qualifications upon entry are compared with the award that a student receives at the end of their studies".[12] Tables are drawn up for subjects, with the overall ranking being based on an average across the subjects rather than on institutional level statistics. The nine criteria are:[13]

  • "Entry scores" (15%);
  • "Assessment and feedback" (10%) – as rated by graduates of the course (data source: National Student Survey);
  • "Career prospects" (15%) (data source:Destination of Leavers from Higher Education);
  • "Overall satisfaction" (5%) – final-year students' opinions about the overall quality of their course (data source: National Student Survey);
  • "Expenditure per student" (5%);
  • "Student-staff ratio" (15%);
  • "Teaching" (10%) – as rated by graduates of the course (data source: the National Student Survey);
  • "Value added" (15%);
  • "Continuation" (10%).

The Times/The Sunday Times

[edit]

The Times/The Sunday Times university league table, known as the Good University Guide,[14] is published in both electronic and print format. Since 1999, the guide also recognises one university annually asUniversity of the Year. It ranks institutions using the following eight criteria:[15]

  • "Student satisfaction (+50 to −55 points)" – the results of national student surveys are scored taking a theoretical minimum and maximum score of 50% and 90% respectively (data source: the National Student Survey);
  • "Teaching excellence (250)" – defined as: subjects scoring at least 22/24 points, those ranked excellent, or those undertaken more recently in which there is confidence in academic standards and in which teaching and learning, student progression and learning resources have all been ranked commendable (data source:Quality Assurance Agency;Scottish Higher Education Funding Council;Higher Education Funding Council for Wales);
  • "Heads'/peer assessments (100)" – school heads are asked to identify the highest-quality undergraduate provision (data source:The Sunday Times heads' survey and peer assessment);
  • "Research quality (200)" – based upon the most recent Research Assessment Exercise (data source:Higher Education Funding Council for England (Hefce));
  • "A-level/Higher points (250)" – nationally audited data for the subsequent academic year are used for league table calculations (data source: HESA);
  • "Unemployment (100)" – the number of students assume to be unemployed six months after graduation is calculated as a percentage of the total number of known desbefore completing their courses is compared with the number expected to do so (the benchmark figure shown in brackets) (data source: Hefce, Performance Indicators in Higher Education).

Other criteria considered are:

  • "Completion" – the percentage of students who manage to complete their degree;
  • "Entry standards" – the average UCAS tariff score (data source: HESA);
  • "Facilities spending" – the average expenditure per student on sports, careers services, health and counselling;
  • "Good honours" – the percentage of students graduating with a first or 2.1;
  • "Graduate prospects" – the percentage of UK graduates in graduate employment or further study (data source: HESA's survey ofDestination of Leavers from Higher Education (DLHE));
  • "Library and computing spending" – the average expenditure on library and computer services per student (data source: HESA);
  • "Research" (data source: 2021 Research Excellence Framework);
  • "Student satisfaction" (data source: National Student Survey); and
  • "Student-staff ratio" (data source: HESA).

Disparity with global rankings

[edit]

It has been commented byThe Sunday Times that a number of universities which regularly feature in the top ten of British university league tables, such asSt Andrews,Durham andLSE (in the case of LSE 3rd to 4th nationally whilst only 101–150th in theARWU Rankings / 56th in theQS Rankings / 37th in theTHE Rankings), "inhabit surprisingly low ranks in the worldwide tables", whilst other universities such asManchester,Edinburgh andKCL "that failed to do well in the domestic rankings have shone much brighter on the international stage".[16] The considerable disparity in rankings has been attributed to the different methodology and purpose ofglobal university rankings such as theAcademic Ranking of World Universities,QS World University Rankings, andTimes Higher Education World University Rankings. International university rankings primarily use criteria such as academic and employer surveys, the number of citations per faculty, the proportion of international staff and students and faculty and alumni prize winners.[17][18][19] When size is taken into account, LSE ranks second in the world out of all small to medium-sized specialist institutions (afterENS Paris) and St Andrews ranks second in the world out of all small to medium-sized fully comprehensive universities (afterBrown University) using metrics from theQS Intelligence Unit in 2015.[20] The national rankings, on the other hand, give most weighting to the undergraduate student experience, taking account of teaching quality and learning resources, together with the quality of a university's intake, employment prospects, research quality and drop-out rates.[12][21]

The disparity between national and international league tables has caused some institutions to offer public explanations for the difference.LSE for example states on its website that 'we remain concerned that all of the global rankings – by some way the most important for us, given our highly international orientation – suffer from inbuilt biases in favour of large multi-faculty universities with full STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) offerings, and against small, specialist, mainly non-STEM universities such as LSE.'[22]

Research by the UK's Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) in 2016 found that global rankings fundamentally measure research performance, with research-related measures accounting for over 85 percent of the weighting for both theTimes Higher Education andQS rankings and 100 percent of the weighting for theARWU ranking. HEPI also found thatARWU made no correction for the size of an institution. There were also concerns about the data quality and the reliability of reputation surveys. National rankings, while said to be "of varying validity", have more robust data and are "more highly regarded than international rankings".[23]

British universities in global rankings

[edit]
See also:College and university rankings

The following universities rank in the top 100 in at least two global rankings:

UniversityARWU
2025
(Global)[24]
QS
2026
(Global)[25]
THE
2026
(Global)[26]
#a
University of Cambridge463=
3b
University of Oxford641
3b
University College London14922
3b
Imperial College London2628
3b
University of Edinburgh373429
3c
University of Manchester463556
3
King's College London613138
3
University of Bristol985180=
3
University of Glasgow101–1507984
2
London School of Economics151–2005652
2
University of Birmingham151–2007698=
2

Notes:
a Number of times the university is ranked within the top 100 of one of the three global rankings.
b The university is ranked within the top 25 of all three global rankings.
c The university is ranked within the top 50 of all three global rankings.

Reception

[edit]

Accuracy and neutrality

[edit]

There has been criticism of attempts to combine different rankings on for example research quality, quality of teaching, drop out rates and student satisfaction. Sir Alan Wilson, former Vice-Chancellor of theUniversity of Leeds, argues that the final average has little significance and is like trying to "combine apples and oranges".[27] He also criticised the varying weights given to different factors, the need for universities to "chase" the rankings, the often fluctuating nature of a university's ranking, and thecatch-22 that the government's desire to increase access can have negative effects on league table rankings.[27] Further worries have been expressed regarding marketing strategies and propaganda used to chase tables, thus undermining universities' values.[28]

The Guardian suggests that league tables may affect the nature of undergraduate admissions in an attempt to improve a university's league table position.[29]

Roger Brown, the former Vice-Chancellor ofSouthampton Solent University, highlights perceived limitations in comparative data between Universities.[30]

Writing inThe Guardian, Professor Geoffrey Alderman makes the point that including the percentage of 'good honours' can encouragegrade inflation so that league table position can be maintained.[31]

The rankings are also criticised for not giving a full picture of higher education in the United Kingdom. There are institutions which focus on research and enjoy a prestigious reputation but are not shown in the table for various reasons. For example, theInstitute of Education, University of London (now part of UCL), was not usually listed in the undergraduate rankings despite the fact that it offered an undergraduate BEd and was generally recognised as one of the best institutions offering teacher training and Education studies (for example, being given joint first place, alongsideOxford University, in the 2008 Research Assessment 'Education' subject rankings, according to both Times Higher Education and The Guardian).[32][33]

The INORMS Research Evaluation Group have developed an initiative called More Than Our Rank[34] which allows universities to describe in a narrative format their activities, achievements and ambitions not captured by any university ranking.

Full-time bias

[edit]

League tables, which usually focus on thefull-time undergraduate student experience, commonly omit reference toBirkbeck, University of London, and theOpen University, both of which specialise in teaching part-time students. These universities, however, often make a strong showing in specialist league tables looking at research, teaching quality, and student satisfaction. In the 2008Research Assessment Exercise, according to theTimes Higher Education,Birkbeck was placed equal 33rd, and theOpen University 43rd, out of 132 institutions.[35] The 2009 student satisfaction survey placed theOpen University 3rd andBirkbeck 13th out of 153 universities and higher education institutions (1st and 6th, respectively, among multi-faculty universities).[36] In 2018, Birkbeck announced that it would withdraw from UK university rankings because their methodologies unfairly penalise it, since "despite having highly-rated teaching and research, other factors caused by its unique teaching model and unrelated to its performance push it significantly down the ratings".[37]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abEntries 11–130 have been omitted due tocopyright.
  2. ^abcdefMember institution of theUniversity of London.
  3. ^City, University of London was ranked tied-39th;St George's, University of London was ranked 69th.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"THE 'Table of Tables' 2022: London universities rise".Times Higher Education. 29 November 2021. Retrieved16 May 2025.
  2. ^"University League Tables 2026".The Complete University Guide. Retrieved21 September 2025.
  3. ^"The Guardian University Guide 2026 – the rankings".The Guardian. 13 September 2025.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved21 September 2025.
  4. ^"UK university rankings 2026: League table".The Times. Retrieved21 September 2025.
  5. ^"University League Tables 2025". Complete University Guide. 14 May 2024. Retrieved16 May 2025.
  6. ^"The best UK universities 2025 – rankings".The Guardian. 7 September 2024. Retrieved16 May 2025.
  7. ^"UK University Rankings 2025: League table".The Times. 20 September 2024. Retrieved16 May 2025.
  8. ^"League Table Methodology".The Complete University Guide.Archived from the original on 7 February 2011. Retrieved19 February 2018.
  9. ^"League Table Key".The Complete University Guide. Archived fromthe original on 18 August 2010. Retrieved19 February 2018.
  10. ^"University League Tables Methodology".The Complete University Guide. Retrieved21 March 2020.
  11. ^MacLeod, Donald (1 May 2007)."What the tables mean".The Guardian. London.Archived from the original on 21 August 2008. Retrieved7 May 2010.
  12. ^ab"The Guardian University League Table 2011 – Methodology"(PDF).The Guardian. London. 8 June 2010.Archived(PDF) from the original on 5 July 2010. Retrieved15 September 2010.
  13. ^Hiely-Rayner, Matt (7 June 2019)."Methodology behind The Guardian University Guide 2020".The Guardian.
  14. ^"The Times & The Sunday Times". Retrieved19 February 2018.
  15. ^"How the guide was compiled".The Times. London. 11 September 2011. Archived fromthe original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved11 September 2011.
  16. ^Thomas, Zoe (11 October 2009)."UK universities top the league table in Europe".The Sunday Times. London. Archived fromthe original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved28 September 2010.
  17. ^"About ARWU". Shanghai Ranking Consultancy. Archived fromthe original on 30 January 2013. Retrieved15 September 2010.
  18. ^"QS World University Rankings 2010". QS Quacquarelli Symonds Limited. Archived fromthe original on 16 September 2010. Retrieved15 September 2010.
  19. ^"Global rankings system methodology reflects universities' core missions".Times Higher Education. 7 September 2010.Archived from the original on 11 September 2010. Retrieved15 September 2010.
  20. ^"QS World University Rankings: World Map Results (Filter by Institution Profile)". Quacquarelli Symonds Intelligence Unit.Archived from the original on 6 January 2016. Retrieved30 December 2015.
  21. ^"The University League Table methodology 2011". The Complete University Guide.Archived from the original on 24 August 2010. Retrieved28 September 2010.
  22. ^Science, London School of Economics and Political."About LSE".Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved19 February 2018.
  23. ^Bekhradnia, Bahram (15 December 2016)."International university rankings: For good or ill?"(PDF). Higher Education Policy Institute.Archived(PDF) from the original on 15 February 2017. Retrieved26 May 2017.
  24. ^"Academic Ranking of World Universities 2025". Shanghai Ranking Consultancy. Retrieved24 September 2025.
  25. ^"QS World University Rankings 2026". Quacquarelli Symonds Ltd. Retrieved25 September 2025.
  26. ^"THE World University Rankings 2026". Times Higher Education. 9 October 2025. Retrieved9 October 2025.
  27. ^ab"Reporter 485 - 28 October 2002 - University league tables".reporter.leeds.ac.uk.Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved19 February 2018.
  28. ^McNamara, Adam."BULL: A new form of propaganda in the digital age". Archived from the original on 17 December 2015. Retrieved6 August 2015.
  29. ^MacLeod, Donald (19 April 2007)."Funding council to investigate university league tables".The Guardian. London.Archived from the original on 21 July 2008. Retrieved7 May 2010.
  30. ^Brown, Roger (10 April 2007)."Tables can turn".The Guardian. London.Archived from the original on 21 July 2008. Retrieved7 May 2010.
  31. ^Alderman, Geoffrey (24 April 2007)."League tables rule – and standards inevitably fall".The Guardian. London.Archived from the original on 21 July 2008. Retrieved7 May 2010.
  32. ^"Times Higher Education RAE tables"(PDF).Archived(PDF) from the original on 20 August 2012. Retrieved19 February 2018.
  33. ^"RAE 2008: education results".The Guardian. 18 December 2008.Archived from the original on 10 May 2017. Retrieved19 February 2018.
  34. ^"More Than Our Rank | INORMS". 12 July 2022.
  35. ^"Times Higher Education RAE 2008 tables"(PDF).Archived(PDF) from the original on 20 August 2012. Retrieved19 February 2018.
  36. ^"Student survey results 2009". BBC News. 6 August 2009.Archived from the original on 13 March 2012. Retrieved19 February 2018.
  37. ^"Birkbeck to leave UK university league tables". Bbk.ac.uk. 9 October 2018. Retrieved23 June 2019.

External links

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