college ranking news
Fort Worth's TCU has happiest students in America, per Princeton Review

Horned Frogs are all smiles.
Fort Worth's Texas Christian University should be all smiles going into the new school year: It boasts the No. 1 happiest students in the nation.
This, according to The Princeton Review's "The Best 391 Colleges: 2026 Edition."
Released August 12, the comprehensive guide annually ranks the best universities across 50 categories based on a survey of 170,000 current college students. Survey questions covered topics such as a school's academics and administration, student quality of life, politics, campus life, city/town life, extracurricular opportunities, and social environment.
The Princeton Review did not numerically rank the schools overall, but it does report the top 25 schools (out of the total 391) for each of the 50 different categories.
In addition to having the most spirited students in America, Texas Christian University also earned high marks for having the No. 1 highest popularity for intramural sports. The university can also brag about having the second-best quality of life, the fourth most beautiful campus in the U.S., the fifth-best athletic facilities, the sixth-best college dorms, the ninth-best health services, and the 10th best college library. Clearly, there's a lot to like about being a Horned Frog.
"In further accordance with the school's liberal arts ideals, students also cite the thoughtful discussions in their courses: 'Our small class sizes are one of our greatest strengths,'" the school's profile says. "Students speak glowingly of their professors, praising their excellent teaching but also describing strong feelings of camaraderie, especially in the way they feel 'they all will know your name and really get to know you.'"
Three more Dallas-Fort Worth universities - Southern Methodist University, University of Dallas, and the University of Texas at Dallas - were all praised in Princeton Review's new report.
TCU rival SMU appeared in the overall 391 best colleges list, and it also appeared in the regional "Best Southwest" list. According to the school's profile, SMU students feel like their coursework provides challenges similar to what they would face "in the real world" and professors go above and beyond to help them succeed.
"Thanks to the 'strong traditions' and 'top academics' of Southern Methodist University, graduates-especially those from the 'phenomenal business school'-are well-prepared to make a positive impact on the world," the profile says. "Students praise the academic process, which is filled with 'fun and interesting courses,' and which places students in 'a close-knit community of the intellectually elite.'"
SMU has recently earned praise in a separate 2026 ranking of the best universities in the world, and it scored highly in U.S. News and World Report's lists of the best colleges and top grad schools in 2025.
Here's how the two other DFW schools ranked in Princeton Review's lists:
The University of Texas at Dallas
- Best Value Colleges (unranked)
- Best in the Southwest (unranked)
- Green Colleges (unranked)
- The Best 391 Colleges (unranked)
- No. 2 – Top Southwest Undergraduate Programs for Video Game Design
- No. 3 – Top 20 Best Public Schools for Internships
- No. 4 – Top Southwest Schools for Entrepreneurship Studies
- No. 25 – Best Undergraduate Entrepreneurship Programs
- No. 37 – Top College Programs for Video Game Design
- No. 40 – Top 50 Best Value Public Colleges
- Best Value Colleges
- Best in the Southwest
- The Best 391 Colleges
- No. 7 – Most Politically Conservative Students
- No. 7 – LGBTQ-Unfriendly (this list measured "how strongly students disagree that their fellow students treat all persons equally, regardless of their sexual orientation and gender identity/expression")
- No. 8 – Most Religious Students
- No. 10 – Happiest Students
- No. 10 – Professors Get High Marks
- No. 17 – Best College Newspaper
- No. 20 – Pot's Not Hot (this list ranked colleges with the "least marijuana usage based on ratings from real students about the popularity of marijuana on campus")

Fort Worth Convention Center. Courtesy of FWCC