Trinity Business School strengthens standing in global MBA rankings
John E. Kaye
- Published
- Executive Education, News

Marking its centenary year, Trinity Business School has secured strong showings in global MBA and master’s rankings, with its programmes recognised for diversity, teaching quality and graduate employability
Trinity Business School has consolidated its position among the world’s leading business schools, according to two international rankings published this month.
The Dublin institution, which marks its 100th anniversary this year, was again named Ireland’s top MBA provider in LinkedIn’s global list of 2025 programmes.
Its full-time MBA rose three places to 70th, making Trinity the only Irish university to feature in the ranking two years running.
LinkedIn’s assessment draws on the career performance of graduates, including their progression into senior roles, the demand for their skills among employers, and the strength of their professional networks.
In a separate league table compiled by QS, one of the best-known international ranking agencies, the Trinity MBA returned to the global top 100 for 2026.
It climbed to 94th place out of 400 programmes assessed worldwide, with particular strengths in diversity — ranked 23rd — and employability, where it was placed 31st in Europe.
Trinity’s Flexible Executive MBA, designed for working professionals and delivered mainly online, also made progress. It rose 10 places to 29th globally in the QS online MBA category, and ranked 11th in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. It was placed 13th in the world for the quality of its teaching faculty.
The school’s specialist master’s degrees also secured high positions, with supply chain management ranked 12th globally, marketing 26th, business analytics 34th, finance 48th and management 46th.
Laurent Muzellec, Dean of Trinity Business School, said the results highlighted the institution’s international reach and the calibre of its teaching. “Being among the world’s best reflects the excellence of our faculty, students and alumni. These results validate our approach to delivering a transformative education that drives positive impact in business and society,” he said.
Trinity Business School was founded in 1925 and is part of Trinity College Dublin. It has more than 1,800 undergraduates, 1,000 postgraduates and 64 core faculty members.
READ MORE: École de Management Appliqué’s MBA programme is helping to redefine what modern management education looks like. Combining real-world experience with academic rigour, the Paris-based school is preparing a new generation of globally minded leaders.
Main image, courtesy Trinity Business School
TOP STORIES
-
‘Sleeper-cell’ hackers are stealing company data now for future attacks, warns ISF chief -
Juncker and Keller-Sutter to address Zurich finance summit as banks face AI and regulation shake-up -
Liechtenstein keeps Triple-A rating as S&P points to low debt and deep reserves -
UK hedgehog charity backs bid to put endangered mammal on new banknotes -
Nature loss could trigger ‘grim’ debt crisis for governments, economists warn -
Lisbon named ‘world’s most liveable city’ for expats -
Could these animals replace Churchill, Austen, Turner and Turing on Britain’s banknotes? -
Universal’s £5bn Bedfordshire theme park will become 'UK's most popular tourist attraction' -
Holiday hotspots fight back as tourist numbers surge -
Costa Rica’s US$10bn medtech boom defies global investment chill -
Could this mile-long floating city become the world’s most extreme property market? -
WATCH: this tiny plane could let passengers fly from rooftops instead of airports -
‘Shadow AI’ poses growing boardroom cyber risk as staff feed company data into chatbots -
UK net zero economy worth £105bn and supports 1.1m jobs -
BOC Macau strengthens role as China finance bridge after six award wins -
Top British chefs warn restaurants are fighting for survival as closures hit three-a-day -
Claude maker Anthropic valued at nearly $1tn after record AI funding round -
Felled Sycamore Gap tree ‘to speak again’ in UK national memorial -
NASA to send rabbit-like drones to scout site for first Moon base -
Apollo, Artemis, Ali and Live Aid satellite station set for new Moon role in £37m deal -
BrewDog founder pours free shares into new beer firm -
Inside gaming billionaire Gabe Newell’s next-level gigayacht -
Machiavell-AI? Autonomous artificial intelligence systems ‘could become dangerously manipulative’, experts warn -
Prague targets high-value business travellers after global congress ranking boost -
eBay rejects GameStop bid


























