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Best Alumni Societies

Ranked by community votes
Updated in real-time

1
H

Harvard Alumni Association

Explore the latest happenings and get involved with your Harvard alumni community

2
S

Stanford University Alumni Association

From connecting you with 230,000+ alumni worldwide to bringing you the latest Stanford stories, SAA helps you keep Stanford close wherever you are

3
O

Oxford University Alumni Society

The main page for the Oxford Alumni groups, with an interactive map showing the location of groups, a calendar of activities, and links to other resources for alumni groups

4
U

University of Tokyo Alumni Association

Fosters exchange and mutual support among its members who number around 240,000 worldwide.

5
N

National University of Singapore (NUS) Society

Empowers a global network of more than 200,000 NUS alumni to stay connected, engaged and involved.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best alumni societies in 2026?

Based on 0 community votes, Harvard Alumni Association is currently ranked #1 in Alumni Societies with a score of pending more votes.

How are alumni societies ranked on Peakd?

Peakd ranks alumni societies using trust-weighted community votes. Each user rates on a 1-10 scale, and votes are weighted by the user's trust score (based on account age, consistency, and verification). Rankings cannot be bought or manipulated by companies.

How to choose the best alumni societies?

Look at the overall community score, read discussions, and compare specific aspects like value, performance, and ease of use. You can also use the head-to-head comparison feature to see two options side by side.

What are the most popular alumni societies?

The top-rated alumni societies based on community votes are: #1 Harvard Alumni Association, #2 Stanford University Alumni Association, #3 Oxford University Alumni Society. See the full rankings above.

Are Peakd alumni societies rankings trustworthy?

Yes. Peakd uses trust-weighted voting to prevent manipulation. Rankings are based purely on community opinion — companies cannot pay for a higher position. All methodology is transparent.

What happens when two alumni societies have the same score?

When scores are tied, the one with more community votes ranks higher (more votes means a more reliable score). If votes are also equal, the entity that has been on the platform longer takes priority.