India's Education Surge: 1,125% Rise in QS Asia Rankings Reveals Growth

Prime Minister Narendra Modi celebrated a massive 1,125% increase in Indian universities featured in the QS Asia University Rankings. The number grew from just 24 institutions in 2016 to 294 this year, placing India second only to China. Indian universities showed particular strength in research output, with five institutions in Asia's top 10 for papers per faculty. While IIT Delhi remains the top-ranked Indian institution at 59th position, the rankings show India's educational prestige expanding beyond the IIT system to include public universities.

Key Points: PM Modi Celebrates Indian Universities QS Asia Rankings Leap

  • Indian universities in QS Asia rankings surged from 24 to 294 in a decade
  • India now trails only China in university representation across Asia
  • Five Indian institutions rank in Asia's top 10 for research papers per faculty
  • IIT Delhi leads Indian institutions at 59th position with strong employer reputation
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PM Modi hails 1,125 pc surge in Indian universities in QS Asia rankings 2026

PM Modi hails 1,125% surge of Indian universities in QS Asia Rankings 2026, with 294 institutions now ranked and strong research performance.

"Our government is committed to ensuring quality education for our youth, with a focus on research and innovation - PM Narendra Modi"

New Delhi, Nov 4

Prime Minister Narendra Modi took to his official X platform on Tuesday to celebrate what he called a record leap in Indian higher education, declaring himself glad to see the number of Indian universities in the QS Asia University Rankings soar by 1,125 per cent over the past decade, from a mere 24 in 2016 to 294 this year.

"Our government is committed to ensuring quality education for our youth, with a focus on research and innovation," PM Modi wrote, adding that New Delhi is building institutional capacities by enabling more educational institutions across the country.

The Prime Minister's enthusiasm was backed by striking data: India now trails only China (395 universities) in representation, having welcomed 137 fresh entrants this edition.

Five Indian institutions occupy Asia's top 10 for papers per faculty, and 28 sit in the top 50, more than double China's tally, underlining a research engine that churns out high-impact publications and staffs laboratories with PhD holders.

Seven Indian names grace the continental top 100, the same tally as last year yet a mark of resilience amid ferocious competition.

The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi held firm as the nation's standard-bearer, climbing to 59th with a score of 78.6, propelled by employer acclaim and citation surges.

The Indian Institute of Science Bangalore followed at 64th (76.5), IIT Madras at 70th (75.1), IIT Bombay at 71st (75.0), IIT Kanpur and IIT Kharagpur sharing 77th (both 73.4), and the University of Delhi at 95th (68.5), proof that prestige now radiates beyond the IIT cluster into broad-based public universities.

At the summit, the University of Hong Kong displaced Peking University to claim first place, while Singapore's National University of Singapore (NUS) and Nanyang Technological University shared third, reaffirming the grip of Hong Kong, mainland China, and the city-state on elite status.

QS chief Executive Jessica Turner credited the National Education Policy's five-year legacy for forging "system-level capacity that is globally relevant and locally empowering", yet cautioned that the coming decade demands deeper global partnerships and digital-age curricula if India is to breach the podium.

Absolute positions dipped for most flagship IITs, IIT Bombay falling 23 places, a slide analysts attribute to rivals' rapid gains in international faculty hires, inbound student diversity, and faculty-student ratios.

Foreign academics and overseas undergraduates remain rare on Indian soil, and infrastructure investment still trails Singapore's NUS, Beijing's Tsinghua, or Seoul's KAIST.

As Vice-Chancellors in New Delhi and Bengaluru dissect the tables, one certainty crystallises: India's universities are sprinting, yet the finish line keeps drifting eastward.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great achievement but we need to be realistic. While the quantity has increased, most IITs actually dropped in rankings. We're still far behind Chinese and Singaporean universities in infrastructure and international faculty. Need to focus on quality, not just numbers.
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Aditya G
Proud moment for Indian education! 🇮🇳 The fact that we're second only to China in representation shows our potential. The research output numbers are particularly impressive - 28 institutions in top 50 for papers per faculty is no small feat. Jai Hind!
S
Sarah B
As an international student considering India for higher studies, this is encouraging. But the article mentions foreign students are still rare - would love to see more diversity on campuses and better infrastructure to attract global talent.
K
Karthik V
The progress is commendable but let's not forget the ground reality. Most Indian universities still struggle with basic facilities. My brother studies in a state university and they don't even have proper labs. Need to bridge this gap between elite institutions and others.
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Meera T
Wonderful to see Delhi University in top 100! This proves that public universities beyond IITs are also making their mark. Hope this ranking improvement brings more funding and opportunities for state universities across India. 💫

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