Organisation There are fifteen universities in Scotland and three other institutions of higher education which have the authority to award
academic degrees. The
University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) gained full university status in 2011, having been created through the federation of 13 colleges and research institutions across the Highlands and Islands, a process that began in 2001. All Scottish universities have the power to award degrees at all levels: undergraduate, taught postgraduate, and doctoral. Education in Scotland is controlled by the
Scottish Government under the terms of the
Scotland Act 1998. The minister responsible for higher education is the
Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills, currently
Jenny Gilruth of the
Scottish National Party. University status in Scotland and throughout the United Kingdom today is conferred by the
Privy Council which takes advice from the
Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education.
Funding and finances All Scottish universities are
public universities and part funded by the
Scottish Government (through its
Scottish Funding Council) and financial support is provided for Scottish-domiciled students by the
Student Awards Agency for Scotland. Students ordinarily resident in Scotland do not pay
tuition fees for their first undergraduate degree, but tuition fees are charged for those from the rest of the United Kingdom. All students are required to pay tuition fees for postgraduate education (e.g. MSc, PhD), except in certain priority areas funded by the Scottish Government, or if another source of funding can be found (e.g.
research council studentship for a PhD). A representative body called
Universities Scotland works to promote Scotland's universities, as well as six other higher education institutions. The total consolidated annual income for the fifteen Scottish universities for 2020–2021 was £4.38 billion of which £847 million was from research grants and contracts, with an operating surplus of £290.4 million (6.63%). £1.36 billion was received from the Scottish Funding Council via grants and £298.5 million was received from tuition fees of Home-domiciled students, defined as Scotland-domiciled students and European Union-domiciled students who began their studies prior to 2021–2022. The table below is a record of each Scottish university's financial data for the 2020–2021 financial year as recorded by the
Higher Education Statistics Agency:
Students In the 2022–23 academic year, 292,240 students studied at universities or institutes of higher education in Scotland, 228,005 of whom were full-time, 59.0% were female and 40.4% male. 59.5% of students were domiciled in Scotland, 11.5% from the rest of the United Kingdom, and the remaining 28.7% being
international students (4.5% from the European Union). Of all these, approximately 198,745 were studying at undergraduate level, 79,395 for a taught postgraduate degree (primarily a master's degree) and 14,105 for a postgraduate research degree (primarily PhD). The three largest universities by enrolment were the Universities of Glasgow (39,755 students), Edinburgh (39,110 students) and Strathclyde (24,860 students). it had increased to include Dundee, Glasgow Caledonian, Heriot-Watt, Paisley, and Strathclyde.
Rankings In the 2026 national league table rankings, six of the top thirty in both of
The Guardian University Guide and in
The Times/Sunday Times Good University Guide were Scottish universities. In the 2026 global rankings, three Scottish universities featured in the world's top 200 universities in both of the
QS and the
Times Higher Education World University Rankings. In terms of rankings there are four distinctive clusters of higher and lower status universities in the UK:
Oxbridge comprising cluster one; a second cluster containing the remaining 22
Russell Group universities together with 17 other old universities, including Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Heriot-Watt, St Andrews, Stirling and Strathclyde; a third cluster containing 13 old universities and 54 new universities including the remaining Scottish universities; and a fourth cluster contains 19 new universities but no Scottish universities.
Research Excellence Framework The below lists the outcome of the latest
Research Excellence Framework undertaken in 2021 (the next REF is scheduled for 2028) by the four UK higher education funding bodies. The quality of research was rated 4* (world leading), 3* (internationally excellent), 2* (recognised internationally), 1* (recognised nationally) and unclassified. GPA measures the quality of research and Research Power is calculated by the GPA score of a university multiplied by the full-time equivalent number of researchers submitted. The rankings are out of 129 institutions as measured by output: ==See also==