
A data-driven quality benchmark by Admission Guardian, based on factors like NAAC rating, NIRF rank, placements, fees & student reviews.

Hi-Tech Institute of Technology (HIT) in Aurangabad is a study in pragmatic compromise. Established in 2001, this private engineering college has built a reputation as a budget-conscious option for students with moderate MHT-CET scores who want to stay in the Marathwada region. It’s not a campus that makes headlines for groundbreaking research or record-breaking packages. Instead, it’s a functional, no-frills institution where the value proposition is straightforward: get an AICTE-approved B.Tech degree from an institute affiliated with Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Technological University (DBATU) without a crippling financial burden. The location within the Waluj MIDC industrial belt is its secret weapon, offering a tangible, if sometimes underutilized, link to local manufacturing and automotive companies. For many students, that’s the trade-off—accessibility over prestige, practicality over glamour.
HIT focuses squarely on undergraduate engineering. With a total intake of 360 students, the portfolio is lean: Computer Science and Engineering (180 seats), CSE with a specialization in Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning (60 seats), Mechanical Engineering (60), and Civil Engineering (60). That’s it. There’s a direct second-year lateral entry for diploma holders. The academic rhythm follows the DBATU semester system, and the grading is the standard 10-point CGPA.
The faculty situation is where student reviews get real. The total teaching staff hovers around 50, but the number of PhD holders is notably low—students online suggest it might be as few as two to five. That’s a significant data point. What you often hear, though, is praise for the junior faculty. Many students find them approachable and genuinely helpful with coursework, which can be a saving grace. The college has formal MoUs with local industries and is a nodal center for TCS, but the depth of these collaborations for everyday learning seems limited. For core branches, the aging lab equipment mentioned in reviews is a concern. You’re getting a baseline, accredited curriculum. For anything beyond that, the onus is heavily on the student.
This is the section where you need to read between the lines. The official placement cell, led by Prof. J.K. Bhor, publishes numbers. The highest package for 2024-25 is cited as ₹8.6 to ₹10 LPA (ignore the lone ₹22 LPA outlier you might see). The average sits at ₹3.5-3.6 LPA, and the median—often a more telling figure—was ₹2.4-2.5 LPA for 2023-24.
Now, the reality check from alumni forums and review sites paints a different picture on volume. While the college claims a 60-65% placement rate, the consensus from students is that the actual on-campus placement rate is closer to 25-30% for core branches like Mechanical and Civil, and maybe a bit higher for CSE. The top 10-15% of the CSE cohort tends to land the better IT offers.
Recruiters are a mix of IT service giants and local industrial units. TCS, Infosys, Capgemini, Wipro, and Cognizant are the regulars for software roles. For Mechanical and Civil students, the college’s Waluj location pays off with companies like Bosch, Siemens, Tata Motors, and Varroc Engineering showing up. Persistent Systems is another notable name. About 60% of offers are in IT services, 30% in core manufacturing, and the rest scattered. Internship support is described as limited; proactive students find their own opportunities in the surrounding MIDC.
HIT’s strongest selling point is its cost. For a General category student, the annual tuition is between ₹80,000 and ₹88,000. Add a hostel fee of ₹22,000 for accommodation and a mess cost of roughly ₹2,500-₹3,000 per month, and you’re looking at a total 4-year cost of around ₹3.8 to ₹4.5 lakhs. That’s remarkably affordable for a private B.Tech.
Where it gets even more affordable is through state scholarships. The EBC scheme offers a 50% tuition waiver for General and SEBC students with family income under ₹8 LPA. The Top in Family Welfare Scheme (TFWS) provides a full tuition waiver for top merit students. For reserved categories, fees are largely covered via the MahaDBT portal: 100% for SC/ST and 50-90% for OBC/VJNT students. For many in these categories, the effective cost of the degree is near zero.
Admission is through the Maharashtra state centralized process. MHT-CET is the primary exam, though JEE Main scores are also accepted. The cutoffs reflect the college’s position in the market. For the 2024 admission cycle, the General All-India cutoff ranks for CSE were around 72,000-76,000 (roughly 65-70 percentile). For the newer AI & ML branch, it was slightly lower at 75,000-80,000. For Mechanical and Civil Engineering, cutoffs can drop significantly, often available to students with percentiles in the 15-30 range in later CAP rounds.
The process is handled by the DTE Maharashtra CAP rounds, typically from June to August. There is a management quota (institutional level seats) of about 20%, which requires direct contact with the college administration.
The campus is compact, about 2.5 to 3 acres, and feels functional rather than vibrant. The hostels—capacity for 100 boys and 125 girls—are described as basic but adequate. Rooms come with a bed, table, chair, and cupboard. The food in the mess gets average reviews, with many students opting for outside tiffin services.
Infrastructure is a common pain point in student reviews. While the library has a decent number of books and digital access, comments about labs—especially for Mechanical and Civil engineering—often use words like “aging” or “not well-maintained.” Wi-Fi is available in the computer center but reportedly spotty in hostels. There’s a small ground for cricket and football, and basic indoor games facilities. The canteen serves standard fare. It’s a campus that meets the minimum requirements, but don’t expect lush quads or state-of-the-art recreational centers.
A unique and frequently criticized aspect of campus life is the strict discipline. Multiple reviews mention a “school-like” atmosphere, with a mandatory 75% attendance rule enforced by a substantial ₹4,000 penalty for non-compliance. This extends to missing certain college events. Students describe the principal’s approach as “unpolite” and restrictive. On the positive side, the same strictness ensures a ragging-free environment, which is consistently noted as a plus.
Synthesizing the chatter from CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and Reddit gives you a clear, if bifurcated, picture. The median student sentiment is that HIT is a “backup” or “budget” college.
The positives are practical: supportive junior faculty, a great location for industrial exposure in Waluj MIDC, and exceptional value for money, especially for scholarship recipients. As one Shiksha review put it, “If you have low marks in CET and want a degree without high donations, this is the place.”
The negatives are about experience and outcomes: a strict, penalizing administrative culture (that ₹4,000 fine is a major sore point), overstated placement statistics, and subpar infrastructure in key areas. A CollegeDunia review from 4 captures the frustration: “It's like a school. 75% attendance is mandatory, and if you fail, they charge a ₹4000 fine. No independence.”
HIT Aurangabad serves a specific niche. It’s worth serious consideration if you are a student from the region with a moderate MHT-CET score (say, 50-70 percentile) and need an affordable, accredited B.Tech degree. It’s particularly compelling for SC/ST/OBC students who can access full or substantial fee waivers—the return on investment there is hard to beat. If you’re in Mechanical or Civil and proactive about leveraging the local industries in Waluj for projects and internships, the location is a genuine asset.
You should probably look elsewhere if you have high academic ambitions, prioritize a vibrant campus life with top-tier facilities, or are banking solely on the college’s placement cell to land you a high-paying job. The gap between official claims and student-reported realities in placements and infrastructure is notable. HIT is a pragmatic choice for a specific set of circumstances, not a launchpad for the top tier of engineering careers. It provides a degree, not necessarily a transformative college experience. For many students and families, that’s enough.
1 stream · Fees from ₹77.0K to ₹77.0K
3 exams with cutoff data available — showing recent entries
Amdocs
Badve group
Bentley Systems
Bosch Limited
Capgemini
Infosys
Johnson & Johnson
NRB Bearing
Persistent Ltd
Quick Heal
Siemens
TCS
Varroc Excellence
Webtech Developers
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Gym
Hostel
Medical
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryCampus media
The Computer Science Engineering (CSE) branch is considered the best-performing at HIT Aurangabad in terms of placements. However, the overall academic environment is regarded as average, and students are advised to engage in self-study to prepare for high-end technology roles.
For a General category student, the total tuition fee for the 4-year B.Tech program is approximately ₹3.2 to ₹3.5 Lakhs. When including hostel and mess charges, the total estimated cost for the entire course reaches around ₹4.5 Lakhs.
No, recent student reviews indicate that Hi-Tech Institute of Technology maintains a strict anti-ragging policy. The college is reported to have a generally safe and secure environment for new students.
Yes, admission is possible with a lower MHT-CET score, particularly for branches like Civil Engineering and Mechanical Engineering. The cutoff ranks for these programs often drop significantly during the CAP Round 3 of the state counseling process.
Yes, the college provides transportation services for students and staff across Aurangabad city. The annual fee for this bus facility ranges from ₹9,600 to ₹14,400.
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