Adelaide University

Adelaide University
Tirkangkaku (Kaurna)
Other name
The University of Adelaide
(1874–31 March 2026)
University of South Australia
(1991–31 March 2026)
Motto
A university for the future
TypePublic research university
Established8 March 2024 (2024-03-08)
AccreditationTEQSA
AffiliationGroup of Eight
ChancellorPauline Carr
Co-Vice ChancellorsPeter Høj
David Lloyd
Academic staff
3,133 (2024)
Administrative staff
3,822 (2024)
Total staff
6,955 (2024)
Students64,391 (2024)
Undergraduates44,539 (2024)
Postgraduates18,656 (2024)
Other students
1,196 (2024)
Address, , ,
5001
,
CampusMetropolitan and regional with multiple sites
Colours  White
  Dark Blue
  Bright Blue
  Limestone
  Purple
Websiteadelaideuni.edu.au

Adelaide University (Kaurna: Tirkangkaku) is a public research university based in Adelaide, Australia. Founded in 2024, it merged the University of Adelaide, the third-oldest university in Australia, and the University of South Australia (UniSA), which had an antecedent history dating back to 1856. Its two main campuses are located in the Adelaide city centre, one, City East, adjacent to the Adelaide BioMed City and Lot Fourteen tech precincts, and the other, City West, located at the west end of North Terrace near the Royal Adelaide Hospital, with additional campuses located across its home state of South Australia.

The two antecedent universities' histories date back to the former Royal South Australian Society of Arts. The University of Adelaide was founded in 1874 by the Union College with studies initially conducted at the now-state library. The society was also the birthplace of the South Australian Institute of Technology (SAIT) founded in 1889 as the School of Mines and Industries. SAIT later became the University of South Australia during the Dawkins Revolution following a merger with amalgamated colleges dating back to the School of Art, also founded at the society. After a failed attempt to agree to a merger in 2018, the two universities agreed to merge in mid-2023. The combined Adelaide University was incorporated the following year and opened after two years of concurrent operations.

The university has seven campuses including the combined flagship Adelaide City campus in North Terrace, a STEM-oriented campus in Mawson Lakes, the Magill campus specialising in social sciences, the Waite campus in Urrbrae and regional campuses in Roseworthy, Mount Gambier and Whyalla. Its academic activities are organised into six constituent colleges which are subdivided into 29 academic schools. It also manages several museums and exhibits, including the Samstag Museum and Adelaide Planetarium. It is a member of the Group of Eight, an association of research-intensive universities in Australia, and is co-located with the Australian Space Agency and various defence technology companies.

Adelaide University alumni, which include those of the two antecedent universities, include the first female prime minister of Australia, two presidents of Singapore, the first astronaut born in Australia and the first demonstrator of nuclear fusion. The two universities have also produced a combined 117 Rhodes scholars, 173 Fulbright scholars and is associated with five Nobel laureates.