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How Important Are Rankings For Choosing An MBA Program?

Learn from experts how to use rankings to evaluate an MBA, plus what other factors you should consider when choosing your best-fit program

Tue Sep 30 2025

BusinessBecause
With the MBA admissions cycle underway for the Class of 2028, many aspiring business school students will find themselves poring over the annually published program rankings deciding where to apply. 

According to GMAC’s latest survey of applicants, rankings are one of the top-three considerations for prospective students when selecting a business school. But with six or eight well-known business school rankings now available—such as those offered by the Financial Times (FT), QS, US News, Bloomberg Businessweek, LinkedIn, Princeton Review—where is a good place to start your research?


Which business school rankings matter most? 

As co-founder of Fortuna Admissions, and the ‘S’ of QS, Matt Symonds is an expert in business school admissions and MBA rankings. He says “the rankings that matter measure and assess the things that MBA candidates care about. Those naturally include salary and career progression, the program quality, alumni networks, value for money, and insights about the class profile.”

Matt feels the FT MBA ranking has many of those components, and it's justifiably well regarded. But, he adds: “its MBA ranking also includes institutional data about the number of faculty with doctorate research output… [which is] arguably less relevant to the MBA experience.”

Founder of MBA 360 Admissions Consulting Barbara Coward agrees that rankings can be generally helpful for MBA applicants in deciding where to target. Though, she says “it’s essential to understand the details of each ranking methodology. If a ranking’s input criteria and weightings don’t align well with what’s important to you, that ranking won’t be very useful.”

If job placement, starting salaries, and career outcomes are highly important to you, Barbara advises paying close attention to the US News and QS MBA rankings. 

“For each of those, career outcome criteria drive 75% of the ranking score. US News rankings heavily reward quick placement and post-MBA starting salaries, while QS rankings take a longer-term view based on employer reputation and ROI,” says Barbara.


READ: Is An MBA Worth It? Calculating Your MBA ROI

85051c71c6d97593a2f3afa25eb92708fe3782cd.png ©Gren Hren for Harvard Business School


However, rankings are not just about jobs and salaries. If cohort diversity, faculty diversity, faculty research, and carbon footprint are highly important to you then Barbara’s advice is to dig into the FT Global MBA ranking. “These criteria drive nearly half (47%) of the FT ranking score,” she says. 

Andrew Crisp is another expert in this field. Co-founder of CarringtonCrisp, a data and insights company specializing in universities and business schools, each year his organization partners with EFMD, an accreditation and networking body, to produce the Tomorrow’s MBA report, which evaluates how future students are approaching their MBA applications.

Andrew feels the rankings that applicants are likely to rely upon can vary. While he agrees with Matt that the FT rankings are generally favored by the majority of MBA students, he says that location also plays a part in which rankings can support your research. 

“In the US it’s Forbes [a ranking of Online MBA programs] and Bloomberg that are more prominent,” says Andrew. “QS is perhaps stronger in Asia and then you have to think about local [in-country or regional] rankings."

For Indian students, the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF), is widely considered the most authoritative list. It ranks schools on teaching and learning, research, graduate outcomes, diversity and perception or reputation. The Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) perform strongly, with IIM-Ahmedabad topping the ranking for the past six years.

Elsewhere, the Australian Financial Review’s Boss Magazine has just published its ranking of Australian business schools. So, if you’re an international student considering Australia, you might consider that, says Andrew.

“We’ve also found that the Shanghai Jiao Tong Academic Ranking of World Universities has risen in importance over recent years and a number of European schools such as Rotterdam School of Management have done well in those recently—and of course, they tend to be used quite often by Chinese students,” he adds.

“In short,” says Andrew, “It would be wrong to say it’s one ranking [that matters]. It depends on the type of course you’re looking for, where you are in the world, and where you want to study.”


Which business schools rank highly?

Most years, the elite group of US business schools known as the 'M7' cluster toward the top of global MBA rankings. Wharton and Columbia top the 2025 FT Global MBA ranking; Wharton, Harvard, MIT Sloan and Stanford rank first to fourth in the 2026 QS Global MBA Rankings; while for Bloomberg it’s Stanford, Wharton, UC Berkeley Haas (a non-M7 school), Harvard, and Kellogg that take the top places in its US regional ranking in 2025.

Of course, being an M7 school means prestige but this also increases the schools’ selectivity and cost. On average, an MBA from an M7 school will set you back around $260,000 according to our latest Cost of MBA Report

Though, these top schools also thrive on applicant and employer brand perception, says Matt. Graduating from one of them is likely to open up opportunities at top companies.

But this is where studying the rankings can pay off.

In 2025, European business schools such as IESE, INSEAD, SDA Bocconi, and London Business School have performed particularly well in the FT MBA ranking, all positioned between third and seventh in the list. The average total cost of an MBA at one of these schools is estimated at just over $180,000, almost $80,000 lower than the cost at an M7 school. Plus, taking 12-18 months to complete one of these programs means a faster opportunity to recoup the MBA investment.

Read through these schools’ employment reports—available on their websites—and you can see the range of employers and sectors they recruit into. IESE, for example, saw 47% of its most recent cohort recruited into highly desirable consulting companies such as McKinsey, Bain, and BCG.

Additionally, go beyond the top 10 schools in any ranking and you’ll have an array of great options with niche industry links. UT Austin, ranked 16th by US News, has strong links with the finance industry and ranks highly for accounting and entrepreneurship.

UCLA Anderson, ranked 19th in the FT Global MBA and 18th by US News, offers niche MBA specializations in health care, sustainability, entertainment, and real estate, along with more standard MBA areas.


What else is important when choosing an MBA, beyond rankings?

1. Find a good-fit program 

For Matt, rankings are just one factor in an applicant’s school decision-making process. 

“Fit beats prestige,” he argues. “There’s no one best business school but there are, I think, best business schools for you. So, the best MBA is the one that aligns with your goals and your values and your learning style, location, and other things. So, the three Cs: culture, cohort, and curriculum, are really going to determine your MBA experience.”

2. Choose a cohort that will help you thrive

While students might focus on selectivity, believing that schools that require top GMAT scores or have low acceptance rates are most desirable, such institutions are more likely to attract a highly competitive and individualistic cohort, says Matt. “Is this a place you’re going to thrive?” he asks, suggesting that candidates should try to visit their target school when classes are in progress to get a proper feel for it.

“Rankings don't tell you if the alumni network will go that extra mile for you when the job market is really difficult and you need that support network,” he says. To understand how strong the class connection is, reach out and speak to a current student or recent graduate, he adds.

3. Calculate the ROI of study

“Value for money is a big question on students’ lips,” says Andrew. “An MBA is a big investment, so it pays to ask: ‘is this going to help me get the job that I want and a salary that makes sense for what I'm spending on an MBA?’”

School employment reports should help you to picture the outcomes of your investment—where you could work, how much you could earn, what role you could achieve.   

4. Choose your study abroad experience carefully

You’ll need to consider where you want to study and where you want to work when you graduate, says Andrew. “Or can I even work in that country after I graduated, at least for a couple of years?” 

Even if you secure a student visa, knowing how easy post-study work visas or work permits are to obtain is an important consideration, as the recent proposed changes to the the H1-B visa have shown. It pays to take advice before you commit to ensure that work options allow you to pay back the cost to finance your degree.


Compare Full-Time MBA & Business School Rankings


Methodology of leading global business school rankings

Financial Times Global MBA Rankings: Focuses on salary increase, career progress, diversity of class and faculty, research quality, and international experience, and regularly features top international programs in its lists. Wharton, Columbia, IESE, INSEAD and SDA Bocconi lead the 2025 table.

QS Global MBA Rankings: Rates business schools worldwide based on employability, ROI, entrepreneurship, alumni outcomes, academic reputation and class and faculty diversity. Wharton, Harvard, MIT Sloan, Stanford and HEC Paris top the 2026 global list.

US News & World Report: Concentrates on US MBA programs, with a methodology that emphasizes peer and recruiter assessments, career placements and admissions selectivity. Wharton, Kellogg and Stanford sit on top of the 2025 ranking.

Bloomberg Businessweek: Surveys students, alumni, and employers to assess learning, networking, compensation, entrepreneurship, and diversity (US), offering segmented rankings for US, Europe, Asia, and Canada. Stanford tops the 2025-2026 US ranking, with Wharton and UC Berkeley Haas taking up the next positions.


TLDR article summary

⇨ Rankings can play a useful role in helping applicants to draw up an MBA program long-list, but are only one factor in choosing target schools.

⇨ While many MBA rankings are available—including QS, Financial Times, US News & Report, and Bloomberg Businessweek—knowing the metrics they employ can help you decide which rankings to use to evaluate a program.

⇨ There are pros and cons to using MBA rankings when choosing a program. Other considerations that might play into your application decision include location, culture and the MBA specializations it offers. Fortuna Admissions