Global university visibility ranking puts Harvard first again: Report

A new study tracking public attention across news, web, and social media ranked more than 1,200 universities in all 193 UN-recognised countries.

Staff Writer
Harvard
Image: Harvard University

Article summary

AI Generated

American Caldwell's Global University Visibility Rankings evaluated more than 1,200 institutions across all 193 UN-recognised countries, measuring public attention through news coverage, web traffic, and social media reach. Harvard leads for the fourth consecutive year, with Oxford the top non-US institution at fifth.

Key points

  • Harvard tops the visibility ranking for the fourth consecutive year
  • Oxford leads all non-US universities at fifth place
  • Universities from six continents appear in the top 50

Subscribe to our free newsletter to continue reading.

Newsletters

Harvard University has retained the top spot in American Caldwell’s Global University Visibility Rankings for the fourth consecutive year, ahead of MIT, Stanford University, and Purdue University. The University of Oxford leads among non-US institutions at fifth place.

The 2026-2027 edition of the rankings, which the firm describes as the most comprehensive assessment of university visibility ever conducted, measures public attention rather than academic reputation. It tracks news media mentions, web traffic, social media reach, YouTube viewership, and search behaviour across a 12-month period.

“This edition marks the first time any visibility-based ranking has achieved complete global coverage. The data tells a clear story: public attention is not confined to traditional academic powerhouses in the U.S. and U.K., universities in Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, and Southeast Asia are commanding significant global attention,” N. Alexander Kader, Managing Partner at American Caldwell said in a statement.

The ranking also notes year-over-year gains among institutions in Australia, Mexico, India, and the Philippines, and says universities from six continents appear in the top 50.

The methodology differs from established rankings such as QS or Times Higher Education, which weight research output and peer reputation surveys.

American Caldwell’s approach is built around measurable public engagement, which means a university with high media coverage or social media reach may rank well regardless of its research standing.

Advertisement

The firm says this is the first visibility-based ranking to achieve complete global coverage across all 193 UN-recognised countries.