List of colleges and universities in Massachusetts


There are 104 colleges and universities in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts that are listed under the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. Of Massachusetts post-secondary institutions, 94 are officially recognized by the New England Commission of Higher Education, while most are accredited by multiple higher education accreditation agencies.
These institutions include fourteen research universities, twenty-one master's universities, and thirty-four special-focus institutions. Eighty-five of Massachusetts' post-secondary institutions are private, of which five are for-profit. Thirty of the state's post-secondary institutions are public, a number which excludes the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which was founded by the Morrill Land-Grant Acts, but later became a private institution.
Harvard University is the state's oldest post-secondary institution, having been founded in 1636. Boston University is the state's largest institution of higher learning in terms of enrollment, having 36,624 students in the fall of 2023 while Conway School of Landscape Design is the state's smallest college with an enrollment of 18. The University of Massachusetts Amherst is the state's largest public university, with an enrollment of 28,518 students. Massachusetts is also home to a number of internationally recognized universities, including Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which are ranked among the top ten universities in the world.
The University of Massachusetts Amherst is the state's sole public land-grant university, and is the flagship institution of the University of Massachusetts system. There are also eleven Catholic post-secondary institutions, including Boston College, the College of the Holy Cross, Merrimack College and Stonehill College. There are also two Judaic post-secondary institutions in Massachusetts, Brandeis University and Hebrew College. The state has four medical schools: Boston University School of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, the University of Massachusetts Medical School, and Tufts University School of Medicine. There are eight law schools which are accredited by the American Bar Association and one, Massachusetts School of Law, which is not ABA accredited but instead accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education.

Current institutions

AbbreviationAccrediting agency
AAMFTAmerican Association for Marriage and Family Therapy
AANAAmerican Association of Nurse Anesthesiology
ACPEAccreditation Council for Pharmacy Education
ACAHMAccreditation Commission for Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine
ABAAmerican Bar Association
ABHEAssociation for Biblical Higher Education
ACENAccreditation Commission for Education in Nursing
ACENDAccreditation Council for Education in Nutrition and Dietetics
ACPEAssociation for Clinical Pastoral Education
ADAAmerican Dental Association
AOTAAmerican Occupational Therapy Association
AOAAmerican Optometric Association
APTAAmerican Physical Therapy Association
APAAmerican Psychological Association
ASHAAmerican Speech–Language–Hearing Association
ATSAssociation of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada
AVMAAmerican Veterinary Medical Association
CAHMECommission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Management Education
CCNECommission on Collegiate Nursing Education
CEACommission on English Language Program Accreditation
CEPHCouncil on Education for Public Health
COMTACommission on Massage Therapy Accreditation
JRCERTJoint Review Committee on Education in Radiologic Technology
LCMELiaison Committee on Medical Education
NASADNational Association of Schools of Art and Design
NASMNational Association of Schools of Music
NECHENew England Commission of Higher Education
NLNACNational League for Nursing Accrediting Commission

Defunct institutions

At least eighty-two colleges and universities have closed in Massachusetts, beginning with Worcester Medical Institute in 1859. Defunct institutes include multiple private institutions, and the public Hyannis State Teachers College. Many schools were also merged into modern public universities, which form the origins of the Boston, Dartmouth, and Lowell campuses of the University of Massachusetts system. Many of these were private institutions, which either merged with private institutions and ceased to grant degrees, or institutions like the Swedenborg School of Religion, which merged with the Pacific School of Religion upon its relocation to California. The Bible Normal School was founded in Massachusetts but moved to Connecticut before it was merged into the Hartford Seminary. However, this excludes institutions which operated as part of for-profit corporations incorporated in other states, such as Empire Beauty Schools and the University of Phoenix, as they were not operated as separate college campuses and operated more as corporate entities.
School
Andover Theological Seminary
Andover Junior College
Andover Institute of Business
Andover Newton Theological Seminary
Aquinas College
ArsDigita University
Art Institute of Boston
Atlantic Union College
Bard College at Simon's Rock
Bay State College
Becker College
Berkshire Christian College
Berkshire Medical College
Boston Business School
Boston Female Medical School
Boston State College
Bouvé College
Bradford College
Bradford Durfee College of Technology
Bryant & Stratton Business Institute
Bryant McIntosh College
Burdett College
Bussey Institution
Calvin Coolidge College
Cambridge Junior College
Campbell School
Cardinal Cushing College
Cardinal O'Connell Seminary
Cape Cod Hospital School of Nursing
Central New England College
Chamberlayne Junior College
Chandler School for Women
College of Physicians and Surgeons
College of Saint Joseph
Comers Commercial College
Coyne School of Technical Electricity
Crane Theological School
Divine Providence Institute
Eastern Nazarene College
Episcopal Divinity School
Garland Junior College
Grahm Junior College
Hallmark Institute of Photography
Hampden College of Pharmacy
Holliston Junior College
Hyannis State Teachers College
Ipswich Female Seminary
Kinyon-Campbell Business School
Kinyon School
LaFosse Teacher Training College
Lay College
Leicester Junior College
Lowell State College
Lowell Technological Institute
Marian Court College
Marist College and Seminary
Massachusetts College of Osteopathy
Middlesex University
Monroe College of Oratory
Mount Alvernia College
Mount Ida College
New Bedford Institute of Technology
New England Female Medical College
New England Institute of Applied Funeral Arts and Sciences
New England Institute of Art
New England School of Photography
Newbury College
Newton College of the Sacred Heart
Newton Junior College
Newton Theological Institution
Northampton Junior College
Oblate College & Seminary
Oread Institute
Our Lady of Sorrows
Perry Normal School
Pine Manor College
Queen of Apostles Seminary
Radcliffe College
Regina Coeli College
Revere Lay College
Sacred Heart College for Teachers
Saint Gabriel's Institute
Saint Hyacinth College & Seminary
Saint Joseph Teacher Training Institute
Saint Paul's House of Studies
Saint Stephen's College
School for Christian Workers
School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Southern New England School of Law
Staley School of the Spoken Word
Stanley College
Stevens College
Swain School of Design
Swedenborg School of Religion
Vesper George School of Art
Wang Institute of Graduate Studies
Wheelock College
Winter Hill Business College
Worcester Junior College
Worcester Medical Institute
Worcester Technical Institute

Forbes National Rankings

The Forbes National Colleges Ranking is a ranking system for the best four-year colleges in the United States. These colleges are ranked for their alumni salary, debt, return on investment, graduation rate, membership in Forbes honors lists such as Forbes 30 Under 30, student retention, and academic achievement. As of 2021, Forbes recognizes the University of Massachusetts Amherst as the flagship public university and Massachusetts Institute of Technology as the flagship private university in Massachusetts.