Nigerian Universities in THE World University Rankings, Federal Universities Remain on Top

Covenant University and Landmark University, both initiated by Bishop Oyedepo’s Winner’s Chapel, made Nigeria's top 10. Babcock University is the third university to make top 24 in Nigeria

Times Higher Education Rankings Nigeria

The latest Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings for 2026 offers a critical, unvarnished look into the state of Nigeria’s university education sector.

Here are five key signals emerging from Nigeria’s performance in the 2026 THE University Rankings:

  1. Federal universities remain on top

Federal universities still overwhelmingly dominate the top ranks. Nigeria’s top 10 is composed of eight federal universities and just two private institutions, with zero state universities making the cut. This pattern continues into the top 24, where federal institutions hold 17 spots.

Despite the proliferation of state and private universities, the legacy federal institutions remain the primary centres of academic and research strength, reflecting a historical concentration of resources and prestige.

  1. Private universities are breaking into the top but..

Covenant University and Landmark University, both initiated by Bishop Oyedepo’s Winner’s Chapel, made Nigeria’s top 10. Babcock University is the third university to make top 24 in Nigeria.

This shows that private investment and a focused, private-sector approach to governance and funding can yield competitive results, even in a system where public institutions are typically more established. However, there are 159 private universities and just three of them made Nigeria’s top 24. This is underwhelming. Nonetheless, congratulations to the three musketeers representing their sub-sector brilliantly.

  1. Global visibility is still too low

Only two Nigerian universities, the University of Ibadan (UI) and the University of Lagos, managed to break into the world’s top 1,000. In contrast, eight South African universities made the world’s top 1,000. In fact, seven South African universities were ranked higher than Nigeria’s highest ranked university.

The performance gap between Nigeria’s best and global standards is vast, despite having Africa’s largest university systems. More clearly must be done to improve research quality, infrastructure, and international collaboration (the key metrics for global rankings). Nigeria needs to ask itself serious questions about the future of its tertiary education.

  1. Poor investment by wealthier states

The rankings expose a disconnect between the financial strength of some states and the performance of their state universities. Wealthier states like Rivers, Akwa Ibom, and Delta are not seeing their huge revenue from federal allocations and Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) translate into higher rankings for their tertiary institutions. Delta State University is, for example, ranked at the same level as the state university of the less-financially endowed Ekiti State.

All in all, state universities performed worse than private universities with no state university breaking into Nigeria’s top 10. Four of them (out of ~63 state universities), however, made it into the Top 24 universities. Oyo State’s Ladoke Akintola University and Lagos State university joined Delta State University and Ekit State University on the list.

  1. Is it time to pick winners and invest in them?

Some federal universities are demonstrating great performance that is not found in other federal universities. For example, the University of Ibadan and the University of Lagos have consistently ranked at the top over the years, and yet they are still provided with similar levels of funding as other federal universities that are floundering. Perhaps it is time to embark on a disproportionate level of funding on the universities that have in recent time demonstrated great results.

Imagine if instead of the current scattergun funding approach, the federal government decides to create an “excellence funding programme,” that sees the government provide $500 million each to the best 8 universities in the country, with a simple charge to use the funding to improve themselves to become a global Top 200 university within 10 years. The universities that succeed are rewarded with another $500 million each in an endowment fund that can push them even further.

There would be other reforms necessary in those universities to ensure the money is spent the right way, but this investment with a clear mandate and performance incentives can offer us a way to fast-track a handful of institutions into world-class centres. This can potentially benefit the entire education ecystem in the long run through shared research, faculty, and standards. The current model of “equal funding” fosters general mediocrity rather than concentrated excellence.

 

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