South African, Egyptian Universities Outrank Nigerian Institutions In 2026 Global University Ranking
Nigerian universities have once again fallen behind their African counterparts, as institutions from South Africa and Egypt dominated the 2026 Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) World University Rankings, leaving Nigeria with only three universities on the global list.
According to the rankings, no Nigerian university made the top 1,000 globally. The University of Ibadan (UI) and the University of Lagos (UNILAG) were both placed in the 1,001–1,200 band, while Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, ranked within the 1,201–1,400 range, marking its first appearance on the QS global rankings.
In contrast, South African universities recorded significantly stronger performances. The University of Cape Town (UCT) emerged as Africa’s highest-ranked institution, placing 150th globally, while the University of the Witwatersrand secured the 291st position. Overall, South Africa had 11 universities featured on the list.
Egypt dominated the African landscape with the highest number of universities ranked, boasting 20 institutions in the 2026 QS rankings, further widening the gap between Nigeria and other leading African education hubs.
The QS World University Rankings assess institutions based on academic reputation, employer reputation, research output, faculty-to-student ratio, and international collaboration. Analysts note that persistent challenges such as underfunding, industrial actions, poor research infrastructure, and limited global partnerships continue to affect Nigeria’s higher education competitiveness.
Education stakeholders in Abuja have renewed calls for urgent reforms, increased funding, and stronger policy implementation to reposition Nigerian universities for global relevance and improved performance in future rankings.
