Charles Darwin University (CDU) has climbed to 584 in the prestigious 2026 QS World University Rankings - a marked improvement from its position in the 621-630 band last year - defying the national trend.
While more than 70 per cent of Australian universities experienced a decline in the latest QS results, CDU improved its position, highlighting its growing global reputation and continued focus on international partnerships and research excellence.
The rankings, released on Thursday, draw from millions of academic papers and insights from across 1,501 universities in 106 countries.
Of note was the University's result in the newly introduced International Student Diversity indicator - with CDU ranked 154th globally and 15th nationally.
The impressive debut highlights CDU's rising appeal among international students seeking a high-quality, inclusive education experience in one of Australia's most unique regions.
CDU's Vice-Chancellor and President, Professor Scott Bowman, said the results showed the world is taking notice of CDU.
"In a year when most Australian universities have slipped in the global rankings, CDU is proud to be heading in the other direction," Professor Bowman said.
"We're bucking the trend, and that's a result of our commitment to offering a globally connected, high-impact education and research environment."
CDU recorded a significant 92-place global leap in the International Students metric, with a national improvement from 23rd to 18th place.
The University also advanced 44 places globally in the International Faculty indicator, moving up to 34th nationally.
Research performance also saw gains, with CDU improving from 28th to 23rd in Australia for Citations per Faculty - reflecting the increasing reach and relevance of its academic work.
Despite a 58-place drop globally in the Sustainability metric, CDU remains steady nationally at 25th out of 36 universities and continues to prioritise sustainability across its campuses and partnerships.
Professor Bowman said the results reflect CDU's upward trajectory in the global higher education landscape.
"We're a university on the rise," he said.
"From Darwin to the world, we're showing that regional and inclusive institutions can lead on the global stage."
The QS World University Rankings evaluate institutions across a range of metrics including academic reputation, employer reputation, faculty to student ratio, and internationalisation and research impact.