UJ’s strategic focus on innovation and technology has paid off, with the institution now officially leading South Africa in Computer Science, Engineering, Physical Sciences, and Business and Economics. A Clean Sweep in Innovation
The 2026 rankings highlight UJ’s role as a catalyst for industrial and economic growth. Beyond the top spots, the university also secured #2 in South Africa for Education Studies, Law, Social Sciences, and Psychology, demonstrating a balanced excellence across both STEM and the Humanities.
“These results confirm that UJ’s strategy is delivering measurable impact,” said Prof Letlhokwa Mpedi, UJ’s Vice-Chancellor. “Our trajectory speaks directly to our Strategic Plan 2035, placing excellence and impactful research at the center of everything we do.”

Global Gains: Climbing the World Stage
UJ didn’t just win at home; it made significant leaps in the global arena. The university was ranked in all 11 assessed subject areas, with improvements in seven of them.
Key Global Performance Highlights:
- Computer Science: Jumped two bands into the top 251–300 worldwide.
- Education & Law: Ranked in the elite 126–150 band globally.
- Business & Social Sciences: Now placed within the world’s top 200.
- Social Sciences: Moved up into the 151–175 global band.
2026 Subject Ranking Summary
| Subject Area | National Rank (SA) | Global Band |
| Computer Science | #1 | 251–300 |
| Engineering | #1 | Top 400 |
| Physical Sciences | #1 | Top 400 |
| Business & Economics | #1 | Top 200 |
| Law | #2 | 126–150 |
| Education Studies | #2 | 126–150 |
| Social Sciences | #2 | 151–175 |

Why These Rankings Matter
The THE subject rankings are based on 18 rigorous performance indicators, evaluating teaching, research quality, industry engagement, and international outlook. For UJ, this success is attributed to:
- Curriculum Renewal: Digitally enabled teaching preparing graduates for a knowledge-driven economy.
- Research Quality: A surge in high-impact scholarship and global collaboration.
- Industry Linkages: Strong performance in translating academic research into industrial solutions (particularly in AI, Cybersecurity, and Mechanical Engineering).
Prof Sehaam Khan, Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic), noted that the results reflect a “collective effort to deepen academic quality across the entire student lifecycle.”
















