MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: The Indian Institutes of Technology continue to anchor the country’s global reputation in engineering, placing multiple disciplines firmly within the world’s top 50 QS rankings by subjects. Close behind, management education is carving out its own space, with institutions such as IIM Ahmedabad pushing into elite global ranks and signalling India’s growing influence in business and strategy education. However, arts and humanities present a more complex picture, an area where progress has been slower, and in some cases, reversed.The latest QS World University Rankings by Subject 2026 released Wednesday placed IIT Bombay‘s Computer Science (44), Electrical Engineering (44) and Civil Engineering (42) among the world’s leading technical institutions. IIT Delhi records an equally strong showing, with Electrical Engineering at 36, Mechanical Engineering at 44 and Chemical Engineering entering the top 50 for the first time at 48. IIT Madras, meanwhile, posts four top-50 finishes, led by Petroleum Engineering (29), along with strong returns to the top tier in Civil and Mechanical disciplines.Across the country, nearly 100 institutions now feature in the rankings, marking a 120% increase in five years. More significant is the quality shift: 44% of India’s entries improved their positions this year, the highest proportion among major higher education systems globally.Jessica Turner, CEO, QS Quacquarelli Symonds, said: “India’s rise this year is not just about scale: it’s about momentum in quality and global competitiveness. The breadth of improvement across engineering, technology and business signals a system that is accelerating with intent.”The gains are most visible in engineering. Chemical Engineering alone now has five Indian institutions in the global top 100, up from two. Electrical and Mechanical engineering each have six. Civil engineering has five. In Mineral and Mining Engineering, four institutions sit in the top 50.Computer science, once a thinner area of representation, has expanded rapidly. Ten Indian institutions now feature in the top 200, with IIT Bombay and IIT Delhi leading at 44 and 45 respectively-their highest-ever ranks.Moreover, IIT Kharagpur has entered Petroleum Engineering at 28 on debut and climbed sharply in Mineral and Mining Engineering. Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani has moved into the global top 50 in Pharmacy and Pharmacology. Vellore Institute of Technology has broken into the top 100 in Electrical Engineering for the first time.Beyond engineering. Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad has climbed to 21 in Business and Management Studies and made a debut at the same rank in Marketing, the first time an Indian institution has been ranked in that discipline. In medicine, All India Institute of Medical Sciences has reached its highest-ever global position at 105.