This case study aimed to benchmark the healthiness, equity, and environmental sustainability of a large, urban Australian university food environment using two cross-sectional audits conducted in 2022 and 2025. The audits were undertaken across two campuses using the Uni-Food tool, a validated framework comprising 68 best-practice indicators spanning three components: policy, campus facilities, and food retail outlets (1). Four assessors independently completed the audits, achieving excellent inter-rater reliability (Cohen’s Kappa = 0.89) (2). Each indicator was scored and weighted to generate final component and overall scores out of 100. Descriptive and inferential statistics, including non-parametric tests, were used to compare outcomes across the two time points (3). The university’s overall score improved modestly from 48% in 2022 to 52% in 2025. The policy component remained low (48%), with strengths in 'Leadership and Planning' (85%) but continued gaps in 'Policies for Food Retail Environments' (36%) and 'Monitoring and Reporting' (40%). The campus facilities component scored 63%, performing well in 'Personal and Community Development' (82%) and 'Environmental Impact' (76%), but poorly in 'Advertising and Sponsorship' (45%). Food retail scored lowest overall at 36%, with 'Nutrition Information' being the weakest domain (19%). The findings highlight incremental progress in food environment improvements, alongside persistent shortfalls in policy coverage and food retail practices. Continued investment in policy development, campus-wide strategies, and retail innovations is essential to foster healthier, more equitable, and environmentally sustainable food environments in tertiary education settings.