UST offers over 63 undergraduate programs in over 100 undergraduate specializations, three professional programs, over 50 master programs, and over 20 doctorate programs enrolling 44,812 students in the first term of the academic year 2025–2026. The Faculty of Art and Letters received the most freshmen with 4,315 students and the Faculty of Engineering followed with 4,015. The UST Hospital, which serves as the training hospital of the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery, offers 21 residency training programs. The university produced 6,963 graduates in 2025.
Admissions The university administers the University of Santo Tomas Entrance Test (USTET) as one of the admission requirements for high school and college in UST Manila, college in UST General Santos, and senior high school in UST Angelicum College. The results are released on April 28, also the foundation day of the university. In 2020 and 2021, the USTET was replaced by the UST Admission Rating (USTAR) because of the COVID-19 situation in the country. The USTAR was a composite score that evaluated parameters obtained primarily from the academic records of the applicant. In 2020, the university received 48,411 applications for the USTAR, admitting 7,772 college freshmen for the school year 2021–2022. The Faculty of Engineering had the most freshmen for three consecutive years, with 1,071 students. The USTET resumed in 2022 for the 2023–2024 school year. The USTET is also conducted in 35 provincial testing centers and 8 international testing sites, namely Hong Kong, Doha, Dubai, Manama, Muscat, Al-Khobar, Jeddah, and Riyadh. The
Faculty of Medicine and Surgery separately conducts a psychological examination for the first-year Doctor of Medicine program as part of the admission process. However, the scholastic standing and
NMAT score are given the biggest weight in accepting applicants. Applicants must have a
GWA score of at least 2.00/B+/86% and an NMAT score of at least 85th percentile. About 480 candidates are accepted out of 1,700 to 1,900 applicants annually. No entrance examination was held in 2021. For the B.S. in Basic Human Studies (LEAPMed) program, the faculty shortlists the top 200 USTET college applicants using the UST Predictive Scoring. It comprises the USTET score or USTAR rating, the LEAPMed examination score, and the IQ score. After an interview and a psychological examination, only the top 90 applicants are accepted. The
Faculty of Civil Law also conducts a separate entrance examination for the degree of Juris Doctor.
Faculty and curriculum As of 2019, UST has 2,164 teaching faculty members, the most among private institutions and second in the country. The faculty comprises 1,160 master's degree holders (largest among private institutions) and 333 doctoral degree holders. The academic year is divided into two terms. The academic performance is graded through the use of the 5-point numerical grading system: 1.00 as excellent, 3.00 as passed, and 5.00 as failed. All bachelor's degrees in the university include theology courses in their curricula. The
Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) program offered by the
Faculty of Medicine and Surgery is a four-year post-graduate degree that consists of three years of academic instruction in the medical school and one year of clinical clerkship in the
UST Hospital. The faculty implements a blended integrated approach, adopting
problem-based learning (PBL) as a teaching model in appropriate teaching-learning scenarios, and recently,
outcome-based education (OBE), a curriculum that emphasizes the achievement of expected learning outcomes. The
Faculty of Civil Law offers a four-year course, which leads to
Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree. The curriculum mirrors the current model curriculum of the
Legal Education Board.
Master of Laws (LL.M.) and
Doctor of Civil Law (D.C.L.) are offered at the Graduate School of Law. In 2002, the university embarked on
e-learning by offering web-enhanced courses through
Blackboard called e-LEAP (e-Learning Access Program). In 2023, the
UST System shifted to
Canvas as its
learning management system.
Research UST is a comprehensive research university. It is a member of the Philippine Higher Education Research Network (PHERNET) and Higher Education Regional Research Centers (HERRC). The university spent ₱91 million and ₱116 million in research in 2017 and 2018 respectively. The university has several research centers, namely the Research Center for Natural and Applied Sciences (RCNAS), Research Center for Culture, Arts, and the Humanities (RCCAH), Research Center for Social Sciences and Education (RCSSEd), Research Center for Health Sciences (RCHS), Center for Religious Studies and Ethics (CTRSE), Center for Health Research and Movement Science (CHRMS), Center for Conservation of Cultural Property and Environment in the Tropics (CCCPET), and the Center for Creative Writing and Literary Studies (CCWLS). In 2026, the Research Center for Engineering and Technological Sciences (RCETS) was established. The main venue for research in Manila campus is the
Thomas Aquinas Research Complex. UST has recently discovered several plant species, namely
Vanda ustii,
Hedyotis papafranciscoi,
Mycetia dagohoyana,
Pyrostria arayatensis, and
Freycinetia nonatoi. The university established the UST Herbarium in the 1870s, to fulfill a requirement of the Spanish government and enable UST to offer science degrees. Today, the Herbarium holds more than 11,000 identified plant specimens. It is also involved in plant curation, storage, and identification through DNA barcoding that aides in taxonomy and conservation. The UST Zooplankton Ecology, Systematics, and Limnology Laboratory is home to the first and only organized assemblage of
zooplankton samples and specimens (UST Zooplankton Reference Collection) collected within the Philippines. As of 2019, the UST Collection of Microbial Strains, holds 224 collections of indigenous, clinical, and biotechnological microbial strains. The institute is a member of ASEAN Network on Microbial Utilization (AnMicro),
World Federation for Culture Collections and the Asian Consortium for the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Microbial Resources. '', an orchid species, is named after the university. UST Eco Tigers I, a team composed of mechanical and electrical engineering students and faculty members from the Faculty of Engineering, ranked first in the prototype diesel category of the
Shell Eco-Marathon Asia (SEMA) 2019 held in May 2019 in
Selangor, Malaysia. The team also ranked 8th in Asia from 26 participating teams under the prototype category with energy source
internal combustion engine (ICE). College of Science professors
Nicanor Austriaco and Bernhard Egwolf are members of the
OCTA Research team that is associated with forecasts and analyses of the country's COVID-19 situation. They also developed an epidemiological model, UST CoV-2 Model, which released COVID-19 cases and death projections in Metro Manila. In the early part of the pandemic, the study recommended the need to increase the daily testing capacity that would potentially control the outbreak. In 2023, Austriaco's 2021 project to develop a yeast-based oral vaccine against COVID-19 was funded by the DOST. A study group from the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery proposed a strategy to the government entitled "War Plan Mayon", to combat the pandemic through herd immunity. Faculty of Engineering professor Anthony James Bautista invented the LISA robot (Logistic Indoor Service), a telepresence and service assistant robot that delivers medicine and allows medical workers to manage isolated patients in the UST Hospital. UST, primarily through the College of Science, is setting up a research and training facility building for the UST Laboratories for Vaccine Science, Molecular Biology, and Biotechnology, or the UST VaxLab. The center has been developing inexpensive oral yeast vaccines against COVID-19 and African Swine Fever (ASF) since 2021. The university and the Philippine
Department of Science and Technology (DOST) launched the DOST–TOMASInno Center, a
technology business incubator (TBI), in 2019. The center was made possible through a research grant from the DOST. The Center for Conservation of Cultural Property and Environment in the Tropics (CCCPET) provides research, training, and
cultural mapping of various national cultural heritages. It assisted in the development of
San Pablo City Heritage District conservation guidelines, the rehabilitation of
Immaculate Conception Parish Church in
Guiuan,
Eastern Samar, and churches in
Bohol and
Leyte, the cultural mapping of cities and municipalities in
Baguio,
Pampanga,
Iloilo City,
Samar, and
Leyte. The center was a recipient of
US Embassy grants for the capacity building of cultural heritage workers in 2017 to 2019. Several
publications made by the university include
Acta Manilana, the
Antoninus Journal,
The Asian Journal of English Language Studies,
Boletin Ecclesiastico,
Journal of Medicine,
Tomas,
UST Law Review,
Philippine Journal of Allied Health Sciences, and
Unitas. Established in 1922,
Unitas is the oldest extant university-based academic journal in the country.
Acta Manilana, founded in 1965, is a multidisciplinary journal that features research papers from the Research Center for the Natural and Applied Sciences. The university journals have been available on a web portal since 2018. UST is sixth in the country in the 2024 Alper-Doger Scientific Index, an institutional ranking system based on the performance and productivity of affiliated scientists. One-sixty Thomasian scientists placed in the ranking system.
Sustainability The university consistently ranked in the Times Higher Education's Impact Rankings which delivered the 17-part United Nations'
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). UST's engagement to help local communities predated the UN SDGs. UST ranked first among Philippine universities in 2020 and third in 2021 and 2022. The university placed fourth (1,041-1,060 bracket) in the 2025
QS World University Rankings in terms of sustainability. The UST
Simbahayan Community Development Office, established in 2010 as the centerpiece project of the
quadricentennial celebration, leads programs and projects in community development, research, and instruction, that involves students, alumni, staff, and national partner communities in becoming agents of social transformation. The term
Simbahayan is a combination of the words
simbahan,
bayan, and
tahanan, which means church, nation, and home respectively. In 2018, UST partnered with a
Lumad school to provide accessible education for indigenous people of
Mindanao. In 2021, the Center for Advanced Materials for Clean Energy Technologies based on Indigenous Materials (CAMCET) was established under the partnership of the UST Research Center for Natural and Applied Sciences,
Mapua University,
Adamson University, and the
Department of Science and Technology. The center will research the use of indigenous materials for fuel cell and energy storage applications. In 2022, UST joined the Austrian embassy in Manila and the
Film Development Council of the Philippines in organizing an SDG film festival and cineforum. In 2023, the university entered a six-year cooperation agreement with the government's Climate Change Commission. The linkage will involve joint research and policy development initiatives, academic lectures, seminars, training workshops, and short courses for climate innovation, sustainability, and possibly, cultural heritage preservation. UST's
Energy Management System (EnMS) include the
Go! Renewable Time or GRT-76 project. It refers to the solar power harvest from 7:00 to 18:00. As of 2024, solar panel installation has begun on top of the Albertus Magnus Building.
Libraries and archives As of 2017–2018, the
Miguel de Benavides Library holds over 360,000 books and logged 10,948,882 accesses to electronic resources remotely. In 2018–2019, it received over 1,100,000 visitors. The main library is located in a six-story building along Alberto Drive. It has sixteen sections and seven branch libraries, namely the Architecture Commons, Ecclesiastical, Health Sciences, Education High School, Junior High School, Senior High School, and the
BiblioTechAI.
BiblioTechAI is the satellite library for the College of Information and Computing Sciences in the Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati, O.P. Building. As of 2017, the Health Sciences Library had 20,904 titles and 25,311 volumes. It was assessed to have sound and good-quality collections based on Doody's Core Titles (DCT) among five select medical libraries in the Philippines. The collections of the Antonio Vivencio del Rosario UST Heritage Library include 30,000 volumes published between 1492 and 1900. Among the collections are
La Guerra Judaica (1492) by
Josephus Flavius,
De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (First edition, 1543) of
Nicolaus Copernicus, and the first book ever written and published in the Philippines,
Doctrina Christiana (1593). In partnership with the
Union Bank of the Philippines, the library launched the
Lumina Pandit (spreading the light) rare books exhibit in 2011. The partnership included a three-phase program: the conservation, digitization, and publication of the university's archives and historical collections. In 2017, the conservation efforts continued with
Semper Lumina (always the light). The project launched a 6-volume catalogue of rare books and periodicals and the UST Digital Library. As of the launching, 1.5 million pages have been scanned by the library for restoration and online publication, including the first-edition of
José Rizal's Noli Me Tángere. '', the first book printed in the Philippines The university received the annual prize in the category of education and science in
Casa Asia Awards 2021 in Spain. The library was also recognized for its efforts in preserving its heritage and digitizing its collections. The
Archivo de la Universidad de Santo Tomas (AUST) houses old books, various
incunabula,
papal bulls, university records, and original documents relevant to the university foundation. AUST holds the biggest collection of extant ancient
baybayin scripts in the world. Two 17th-century deeds of sale documents in
baybayin, the oldest of their kind, were declared National Cultural Treasures by the National Archives of the Philippines in 2014. The scholastic records of
José Rizal in
Ateneo Municipal de Manila and UST are also preserved in the archives. The early Spanish-Hokkien manuscripts, such as
Dictionario Hispanico Sinicum (1626–1642) and
Vocabulario de la Lengua Chiõ Chiu (1620) (A Lexicon of the
Chiangchiu-descended dialect of
Hokkien in Early Spanish
Manila), early 17th century Spanish-Chinese dictionaries and vocabularies were discovered by Spanish and Taiwanese scholars in the archives in 2017. The
Dictionario Hispanico Sinicum (1626–1642) is considered to be the world's oldest extant and largest Spanish-Chinese dictionary.
Museums and collections The
UST Museum of Arts and Sciences, founded in 1871 as the
Gabinete de Fisica (Cabinet of Physics), is the oldest museum in the Philippines. It houses the oldest zoological collection in the country, with over 100,000 specimens collected and curated in the 19th century by Dominican priest and professor Castro de Elera. De Elera also published
Catalogo Sistematico de toda La Fauna de Filipinas (Catalog of Philippine Fauna) in 1895. It was the first systematic work in zoology in the country. The museum also holds 4,899 species and subspecies of Philippine
mollusks, the most among all mollusk museums in the world. Part of the museum collection includes artifacts of Philippine ethnology, coins, medals, and memorabilias. Two of the five chairs used by the popes who visited the university are on permanent display. The UST Hall of Visual Arts features restored paintings from various foreign and local artists, as well as works from several
national artists. The collection includes a portrait of
José Rizal by
Victorio Edades,
El Studio Natural of
Félix Resurrección Hidalgo, and four masterpieces of
Fernando Amorsolo. The museum's restoration project was funded by grants from the early editions of the
UST Christmas Concert Gala. The Hall of Philippine Religious Images houses images collected from the various provinces of the country. Part of its collection includes the largest ivory crucifix ever made in the Philippines, which was controversially featured in the October 2012 issue of
National Geographic. Other museums include the UST Medicine Museum, Dr. Julieta Hayag-Manchanda UST Anatomy Gallery, and UST Beato Angelico Art Gallery. The Anatomy Gallery serves as a showcase of all the teaching materials in anatomy. It features thick glass containers that hold dissected specimens for gross anatomy, neuroanatomy, and embryology.
Publishing The
UST Publishing House (USTPH) was established in 1996 when the Santo Tomas University Press (STUP) and the UST Printing Office merged. The STUP was founded in 1593 by the Dominican priest Francisco de San Jose. It is one of the oldest continuing presses in the world today, only next to
Cambridge University Press in the
United Kingdom. The publishing house maintains a bookstore which is located on the ground floor of the UST Main Building. Regular publications include
The Academia, the international bulletin of university, and
The Varsitarian, the student newspaper.
Recognition and accreditation UST is one of only three private universities granted five-year autonomous status by the
Commission on Higher Education (CHED). It is the highest grant given by CHED, which allows universities to implement programs and increase tuition fees with less government regulation. Twenty-six programs in the university are declared as Centers of Excellence (COE) and Centers of Development (COD) by CHED, the most of any private educational institution and second in the country. COE status is granted to 13 programs, and COD status is also given to 13. UST is one of the only three Philippine universities recognized as a Center of Excellence in the Doctor of Medicine program. The architecture program was one of the only two architecture programs in the country recognized as Center of Excellence. UST has been cited by the Philippine Association of Colleges and Universities Commission on Accreditation (PACUCOA) as the university with the highest number of accredited programs in the country since 2011. As of July 2024, PACUCOA has accredited 59 programs of the university. UST also has the most Level IV accredited programs, with 27. UST became an associate member of the ASEAN University Network-Quality Assurance (AUN-QA) group in 2016. In 2020, it was the first associate member to receive an institutional certification. AUN-QA also certified 18 programs from the university. All six engineering programs of the university, namely civil, chemical, electric, electronics, industrial, and mechanical, were accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission of the
Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET) in 2020.
Rankings UST is the first Philippine university to be awarded by the
Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) Stars with four stars and five stars as an institution in 2015 and 2021 respectively. The university achieved five stars for teaching, employability, internationalization, and facilities while scoring four stars for academic development. QS also gave a five-star rating to the Doctor of Medicine program. It has been ranked in the QS Asian University Rankings 2024 (179), QS World University Rankings 2024 (801–850), QS Graduate Employability Rankings 2023 (251–300), and THE Impact Rankings 2023 (601-800). The
UST Graduate School has seven programs included in the
Eduniversal 2023 Business Schools Ranking, the most among Philippine institutions. The master programs recognized are communication, economics, human resource management, management engineering, public administration,
MBA, and MBA major in entrepreneurship. The
UST Graduate School is ranked as a good business school.
International linkages UST has partnerships and linkages with 171 foreign academic institutions in 32 countries. A dual-degree program in Ph.D. Built Environment/Architecture is offered in collaboration with the
University of Reading. The university also offers a ladderised program in Master in Public Health (International) in partnership with the
University of Leeds. The partnership between the university and the
Duke University allows nursing students of both universities to attend global health courses and participate in clinical immersions. Select fourth-year students from the B.S. Medical Technology program can participate in the International Internship Program at the
Mahidol University in
Thailand. ==Student life==