India Records Strongest-Ever QS Rankings Performance as IIT Delhi Matches Historic High
India recorded its strongest performance in the QS World University Rankings 2027 since the National Education Policy came into force, with 52 institutions making the list. IIT Delhi matched the highest-ever rank achieved by an Indian institution, while private, state and central universities registered significant gains, reflecting the expanding strength of India's higher education system.
The 2027 edition of the QS World University Rankings, scheduled for release on Thursday, places India among the world's leading higher education systems with 52 institutions featured in the list, making it the fifth-largest national contingent globally. Eighteen institutions achieved their highest-ever positions, with 13 of them belonging to non-IIT institutions, indicating a wider distribution of academic progress.
Indian Institute of Technology Delhi emerged as the country's highest-ranked institution, climbing five places from 123rd to 118th globally. The achievement equals the highest ranking ever attained by an Indian institution, a distinction first achieved by Indian Institute of Technology Bombay in the 2026 rankings. Indian Institute of Technology Bombay dropped five places to 134th, while Indian Institute of Technology Madras rose to 170th and Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur advanced to 205th. Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, secured the 221st position worldwide.
At the global level, Massachusetts Institute of Technology retained the number one position for the 15th consecutive year. Imperial College London and Stanford University shared the second position.
The most significant feature of India's performance was the scale of improvement across institutions. Twenty-six Indian universities improved their rankings, nine maintained their previous positions and 15 experienced declines. Two institutions entered the rankings for the first time. India's improvement rate of 52 per cent places the country among the strongest-performing higher education systems in the world.
Some of the largest gains came from Vellore Institute of Technology, which surged 94 places to 597th position, and Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, which climbed 93 places to reach 575th. Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad advanced by 76 places, while Jamia Millia Islamia rose by more than 75 places to secure the 686th position. Shoolini University climbed 51 places to 452nd, earning a place among India's top ten universities.
India's strongest performance continued to come from research impact and employer recognition. Eleven Indian institutions now feature among the world's top 100 in citations per faculty, led by Indian Institute of Science at 21st and Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee at 50th. Six institutions ranked among the global top 100 for employer reputation, with Indian Institute of Technology Bombay leading the country at 32nd position. The University of Mumbai registered a remarkable rise of 70 places to secure the 25th rank globally for employment outcomes.
The latest rankings underline a significant shift in India's higher education landscape, where excellence is no longer concentrated solely within the Indian Institutes of Technology. The broader rise of private, state and central universities highlights the growing depth and competitiveness of the country's academic ecosystem on the global stage.

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