Utrecht University


Utrecht University is a public research university in Utrecht, Netherlands. Established, it is one of the oldest universities in the Netherlands. In 2024, it had an enrollment of 39,008 students, and employed 8,929 faculty members and staff. More than 600 PhD degrees were awarded and 8,314 scientific articles were published. The university's 2024 budget was €2.9 billion, consisting of €1.258 billion for the university and €1.643 billion for the University Medical Center Utrecht.
The university's interdisciplinary research targets life sciences, pathways to sustainability, dynamics of youth, and institutions for open societies. Utrecht University is led by the University Board, consisting of Wilco Hazeleger, Anton Pijpers, Margot van der Starre and Niels Vreeswijk. Close ties are harboured with other institutions internationally through its membership in the Coimbra Group, the League of European Research Universities, the Utrecht Network and the European University Association.

History

Utrecht University was founded on 26 March 1636. It has its roots in the Illustrious School of Utrecht, founded two years earlier in 1634, which was elevated to the status of university in 1636. The influential professor of theology Gisbertus Voetius delivered the inaugural speech, and Bernardus Schotanus became the university's first rector magnificus. Anna Maria van Schurman, who became the university's first female student, was invited to write a Latin poem for the inauguration. Initially, only a few dozen students attended classes at the university. Seven professors worked in four faculties: philosophy, which offered all students an introductory education, and three higher-level faculties.
Utrecht University flourished in the seventeenth century, and contributed significantly to the Dutch Golden Age, despite competition with the older universities, such as Leiden and Groningen. Leiden, in particular, proved a strong competitor and made further improvement necessary; a rivalry that persists to this day. A botanical garden was built on the grounds of the present Sonnenborgh Observatory, and three years later the Smeetoren added an astronomical observatory. The university attracted many students from abroad. They witnessed the intellectual and theological battle fought between proponents of the new philosophy and proponents of the strict Reformed theologian Voetius. They also witnessed the teachings of renowned Dutch jurist, Johannes Voet, a university alumnus and professor of law, whose works remain highly authoritative in modern Roman-Dutch law.
File:RooseveltUtrecht1948.jpg|thumb|left|upright|An honorary doctorate in law was conferred on Eleanor Roosevelt in 1948.
In 1806, the French occupying authorities of the Netherlands downgraded Utrecht University to an école secondaire, but after the establishment of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1813 it regained its former status. Leiden, Leuven, Groningen, Utrecht and Ghent were the five universities of the new state. Two of the universities became part of the new Belgian state after their respective provinces separated from the United Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1830. As a result, Utrecht University remained one of only three Dutch universities. During the French occupation, King Louis Napoleon ordered the construction of a palace in the centre of Utrecht, which eventually became the University Library City Centre.
Utrecht University played a prominent role in the golden age of Dutch science. Around 1850 the "Utrechtian School" of science formed, with Pieter Harting, Gerardus J. Mulder, Christophorus H. D. Buys Ballot and Franciscus Donders among the leading scientists. They introduced the educational laboratory as a practical learning place for their students. The National Veterinary School became Utrecht University's Faculty of Veterinary Medicine in 1918.
As the university grew, the academic buildings in the historic city centre were unable to meet the university's increasing need for space. Therefore, starting from the 1960s, a significant part of the university moved to the De Uithof campus, which occupies the easternmost part of the city and is located south of De Bilt. However, the university continued to retain its academic buildings and presence in the historic city centre.
The university is represented in the Stichting Academisch Erfgoed, a foundation with the goal of preserving the university's heritage and collections.

Organisation

The university consists of seven faculties, 772 research units which offer 58 undergraduate degree programmes and over 148 graduate programmes.
FacultySchool/Department
Faculty of Geosciences
Faculty of Humanities
  • Department of History and Art History
  • Department of Languages, Literature and Communication
  • Department of Media and Culture Studies
  • Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies
  • Faculty of Law, Economics and Governance
  • Utrecht University School of Law
  • Utrecht University School of Economics
  • Utrecht University School of Governance
  • Faculty of Medical Sciences-
    Faculty of Science
  • Department of Biology
  • Department of Chemistry
  • Department of Information and Computing Sciences
  • Department of Mathematics
  • Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences
  • Department of Physics and Astronomy
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
  • Department of Education and Pedagogy
  • Department of Social Sciences
  • Department of Psychology
  • Faculty of Veterinary Medicine-
    There are also three interfaculty units:
    • University College Utrecht
    • University College Roosevelt
    • Centre for Education and Learning

      Campus

    The two large faculties of Humanities and Law & Governance are situated in the inner city of Utrecht. The other five faculties and most of the administrative services are located in Utrecht Science Park De Uithof, a campus area on the outskirts of the city. University College Utrecht, along with the Utrecht School of Economics, are situated in the former Kromhout Kazerne, which used to be a Dutch military base. University College Roosevelt is located off-campus in the city of Middelburg in the south-west of the Netherlands.

    International rankings

    In the 2025 Academic Ranking of World Universities, the University of Utrecht was ranked 56th globally, the highest in the Netherlands but down from 40th in 2003. Top subjects include public administration and earth sciences. Other notable rankings are in water resources, and pharmacy, oceanography, psychology, veterinary sciences, law, geography, atmospheric science:, education, environmental science and engineering:, biological sciences, clinical medicine, ecology, public health, medical technology, nursing, biotechnology, physics, artificial intelligence, economics.
    In the 2024 U.S. News & World Report Best Global Universities Ranking, Utrecht University was ranked 46th in the world. Its top-performing subjects included microbiology, geosciences, meteorology and atmospheric sciences, surgery, infectious diseases, public health, education and educational research, psychiatry/psychology, pharmacology and toxicology, plant and animal science, radiology, nuclear medicine, and medical imaging, cardiac and cardiovascular systems, water resources, marine biology, environment/ecology, cell biology, immunology, and biology and biochemistry.
    In the 2023 Times Higher Education World University Rankings, the university was ranked 66th. Best-ranked subjects were education, psychology, medicine and dentistry, biological sciences, veterinary sciences, physical sciences, and law.
    • THE Reputation : 67th worldwide
    • THE Employability 100th worldwide
    In the 2025 QS World University Rankings by subject, the rankings are as follows: veterinary science, geophysics, geology, public administration, geography, Earth & marine sciences, psychology, pharmacy & pharmacology, life sciences and medicine, environmental sciences, education, biological sciences, medicine, law, natural sciences, nursing, development studies.
    In 2025 the analytics company Clarivate ranked Utrecht University 43th in the world and 8th in Europe, with 28 highly cited researchers in the top 1% by citations for their field and publication year in the Web of Science over the past decade.
    Utrecht University was also mentioned in the BlueSky Ranking Of University Rankings 2025/26 published by Matt Symonds, co-founder of QS. BlueSky Ranking Of University Rankings considers the aggregation of the performance of schools across four major rankings: AWRU, QS, THE, and USNWR. In this ranking, Utrecht University was placed 58th worldwide, 19th in Europe, and 2nd in the Netherlands.

    Affiliations

    Utrecht University is a member of:
    Utrecht University operates strategic international partnership with KU Leuven, University College London, Chinese University of Hong Kong, University of Toronto, University of Sydney.

    Notable alumni and faculty

    Utrecht University counts a number of distinguished scholars among its alumni and faculty, including 12 Nobel Prize, 1 Pulitzer Prize, 2 Wolf Prize, 2 National Medal of Science, 22 Spinoza Prize and 4 Stevin Prize laureates. The university counts several heads of state and government amongst its graduates, including: 4 members of Dutch royal house, 6 Prime Ministers of the Netherlands, 6 foreign heads of state or government, and 35 Ministers of the Cabinet of the Netherlands.
    Utrecht University alumni have won a total of 13 gold Olympic medals.