

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

Kakatiya Institute of Technology & Science (KITSW) has held a steady position in the NIRF rankings for years, consistently landing in the 201-300 band for engineering. That's a decent outcome for a private, autonomous college in Warangal. But rankings only tell part of the story. The real draw here is a combination of a sprawling 65-acre green campus, a solid roster of industry MoUs, and placement numbers that, while not earth-shattering, offer a reliable path into the workforce for Telangana's engineering aspirants. It's an institute that has built a reputation on stability rather than flash, a place where the curriculum quietly follows NEP 2020 guidelines and the basketball courts are always busy.
KITSW runs the standard engineering gamut. You've got 11 B.Tech programs with a total intake north of 1,000 students. The usual suspects—CSE, ECE, ME, Civil—are here in strength. A point of historical pride is that KITSW was the first institute in India to offer a B.Tech in Electronics and Instrumentation Engineering, a program it started back in 1981. On the postgraduate side, there are seven M.Tech specializations and an MBA program. The institute is also a recognized research centre for Kakatiya University, supporting Ph.D. scholars across several engineering departments.
The academic culture is what you'd expect from an autonomous college with a decent NAAC grade. They've implemented an outcome-based education (OBE) system. The semester exams have a reputation. Some students call them "average," others find them "difficult." The consensus is they're manageable if you put in the work and, crucially, if you stay on the faculty's good side. The official pass percentage floats around 75%, but you'll hear alumni cite numbers as low as 65% or even 40% for tougher semesters. Attendance is non-negotiable—fall below 75% in your first semester, and you risk losing your hostel seat for the rest of your degree.
Faculty quality is a mixed bag, according to the student body. Many professors hold doctorates from IITs and NITs, and the majority are helpful and interactive. But there's a recurring note of caution in reviews: some faculty are "not so good with the practical stuff" and can be "sneaky" with internal marks. The relationship seems transactional at its worst—"They fail students a lot, it's frustrating," as one student put it.
Where KITSW shines academically is in its industry linkages. The list of MoUs is impressive and active. A fresh tie-up with the National Small Industries Corporation (NSIC) in April 2025 promises internships and training. There's a collaboration with NIT Warangal running through 2026. They're also a long-standing member of the CII engineering cluster and were recognized by Infosys as a "centre of excellence" for its Campus Connect program. These aren't just brochure points; they feed directly into internship opportunities.
This is where you need to read between the lines of the official reports. The NIRF 2025 data says 677 students were placed in 2024, with a highest package of ₹15 LPA and a B.Tech median of ₹5.5 LPA. For 2025, the institute reported 756 B.Tech placements with a median package of ₹6.5 LPA. The highest package for the 2025 drive was ₹14 LPA, snagged from Oracle. The average package tends to hover between ₹4 LPA and ₹4.5 LPA.
Now, the student perspective. The recruiter list is undeniably strong: Oracle, Cognizant, LTIMindtree, TCS, Wipro, Accenture, Amazon, Deloitte. They all visit. The placement percentage? Officially, it's bounced between 71% and 90% in recent years. Students on review platforms generally agree placements are "good," but they qualify that. The number they cite is more often around 70%. There's a palpable sense that the glittering top packages (one review even mentioned an unverified ₹31 LPA from Amazon for a CSE student) create an expectation that the average package—solidly in the ₹4-5 LPA range—doesn't always meet. "They said the placements are very good while joining in the college. But after coming we got to know that the placements are not that good here," is a telling sentiment.
Internships are a brighter spot. The institute claims about 80% of students get internship certificates, with a significant number landing roles at partners like GE Vernova and Oracle. It's a proactive part of the curriculum.
So, what's the reality check? If you're in CSE or ECE and you're in the top academic quartile, you have a legitimate shot at the double-digit LPA offers from the big tech names. For the majority, a reliable, mass-recruiter driven placement in the ₹4-6 LPA range is the likely outcome. It's a safety net, not a lottery ticket.
Let's talk numbers. For a B.Tech, the annual tuition fee is ₹1,28,000. Over four years, that's roughly ₹4.6 lakhs for tuition alone. Living on campus adds a significant chunk. For the 2025-26 academic year, hostel fees break down like this: a one-time admission fee of ₹2,000, annual room rent of ₹25,000 (₹29,000 for an attached bathroom), a refundable caution deposit of ₹2,000, and a mess advance of ₹38,000. Toss in one-time fees like registration (₹13,600) and per-semester exam fees, and a rough total cost for a four-year B.Tech with standard hostel accommodation lands around ₹7.3 lakhs.
It's not cheap, but the scholarship ecosystem is robust. Telangana's state fee reimbursement schemes are a major avenue, especially for students with EAMCET ranks below 10,000. SC/ST students can often get 100% tuition coverage. Nationally, AICTE schemes like Saksham, Pragati for girls, and Swanath are all applicable here. These typically require annual renewal and have income caps (usually family income below ₹8 lakh).
For B.Tech, your ticket is the state entrance exam. You need a valid rank in TG EAPCET (formerly TS EAMCET). JEE Main scores are also accepted, but the bulk of the seats are filled through the state counselling process. The cutoffs aren't for the faint-hearted. The general B.Tech closing rank for the 2024 cycle was 53,613 in TS-EAMCET. For coveted streams like CSE, you'll need a rank closer to 10,000. For ECE, students with scores above 50 in EAMCET have been eligible.
M.Tech admissions ride on GATE or TS PGECET scores (2024 cutoff rank: 1449). For the MBA program, it's the TS ICET (2024 cutoff: 6378).
The process is straightforward: crack the exam, then participate in the corresponding state-run counselling (TG EAPCET, TS PGECET, or TS ICET counselling). Application windows follow the exam calendars—for example, TS ICET 2026 registration was open until late April 2026 for exams in May. There is an NRI/management quota. The cost for a management seat in CSE has been cited as ₹5,00,000, a stark contrast to the regular fee.
The 65-acre campus is a major selling point. It's described as lush, green, and well-maintained. Infrastructure is modern—AC classrooms, a big auditorium, and a dedicated innovation centre called i²RE for chip design work. The central library is huge, holding over 1,00,000 books and full remote access to AICTE-mandated e-journals. Wi-Fi is free across campus, though a student noted it gets shaky during exam time.
Hostels are separate for boys and girls, with a combined capacity for about 750. Reviews praise them as neat, clean, and well-furnished with 24/7 water and power. Rooms are typically shared between 2-3 students. Amenities include a gym, indoor games, common TV halls, and reading rooms. The mess food, however, splits opinion. Some call it tasty and hygienic; others are less impressed, suggesting the menu needs a refresh. "The quality of meal is not as good as expected... the mess should be improved," sums up the critique.
If you're into sports, you'll be happy. The college boasts multiple grounds for cricket, football, volleyball, tennis, and courts for basketball, badminton, and kabaddi. They take inter-college sports seriously and run annual inter-branch events. Social life revolves around clubs (technical, cultural, NSS) and two major fests: Sumshodhini (technical) and Sanskrithi (cultural). A medical centre with an ambulance and a famously good, affordable canteen round out the on-campus amenities.
Synthesizing the chatter from CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and other forums paints a consistent picture. The positives are strong: excellent infrastructure, a peaceful, green campus, and generally helpful faculty. The placement process is seen as active, with plenty of company visits, even if the average outcomes are tempered expectations.
The negatives are specific and recurring. Food quality in the hostels is a common gripe. Inconsistency in teaching quality surfaces often—while many faculty are great, a subset is criticized for being unhelpful or overly harsh in grading. The most significant gap is between placement perception and reality. The high numbers advertised create an expectation that the median package doesn't always satisfy for every student.
You get the sense of a college that provides a solid, comprehensive engineering education in a good environment. It's not without its bureaucratic frustrations and occasional let-downs, but it delivers on its core promise for most students.
KITSW is a classic, reliable Tier-2 private engineering college in Telangana. It's best for students who have secured a decent EAMCET rank (ideally within 50,000 for a chance at core branches, within 10,000 for CSE) and are looking for a stable, well-established campus with a clear path to placements. The strong industry MoUs and generally good infrastructure are real assets. If your goal is to get a decent engineering degree, participate in a vibrant campus life, and land a job in the ₹4-7 LPA range with a reputable IT or engineering firm, KITSW is a sensible choice. It offers a good return on investment, especially if you can leverage state scholarships.
Who should look elsewhere? If you're chasing top-tier, national-level placement packages above ₹15-20 LPA, you're likely aiming too low here. The institute's strengths are in volume and reliability, not in producing outliers. Also, if you're highly sensitive to inconsistent teaching quality or hostel food, the student reviews suggest you might encounter some friction. For the right candidate—a diligent, state-rank-holding student from Telangana or nearby regions—KITSW represents a safe, solid bet in the crowded engineering landscape.
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2 streams · Fees from ₹65.0K to ₹1.3 L
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Study LibraryAdmission to the B.Tech programs is primarily through the state entrance exam, TG EAPCET (TS EAMCET). JEE Main scores are also accepted. Eligibility is determined by your rank in these exams, followed by mandatory participation in the state counselling process (like TG EAPCET counselling) for seat allocation.
For the 2025 placement drive, the highest package offered was INR 14 LPA by Oracle. The average package was approximately INR 4.5 LPA. According to the official NIRF 2026 report, the median package for B.Tech graduates was INR 6.5 LPA. In the previous year (2024), the highest package was INR 15 LPA.
The annual tuition fee for the B.Tech program is INR 1,28,000. For hostel accommodation in the 2025-26 academic year, expect to pay a one-time admission fee of INR 2,000, annual room rent of INR 25,000 (standard) or INR 29,000 (attached bathroom), a refundable caution deposit of INR 2,000, and an annual mess advance of INR 38,000.
KITSW boasts a 65-acre green campus with separate hostels for boys and girls, a large central and digital library, and modern labs including a dedicated VLSI lab (i²RE). Sports facilities are extensive, with cricket, football, and basketball grounds, a gym, and indoor courts. The campus has free Wi-Fi, a canteen, a health centre with ambulance service, and provides bus transport for day scholars.
Students generally report that the faculty are qualified, helpful, and knowledgeable, contributing to good teaching quality. Hostel life is rated positively for its clean, furnished rooms and amenities like a gym and indoor games. However, reviews on the quality of mess food are mixed, with some students suggesting there is room for improvement in the menu and preparation.
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Kakatiya University, WarangalNearby Transit Hubs
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