


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

Maharaja Institute of Technology in Coimbatore is a private engineering college that’s been around since 2006. It’s affiliated with Anna University and approved by AICTE. For students looking at colleges in Tamil Nadu, MIT presents a specific proposition: relatively low tuition fees compared to many private institutions, but with a placement record that has sparked significant debate among its own students. The official website claims an 80-85% placement rate, but you’ll find a very different story on student review platforms. That gap between the brochure and the lived experience is the central thing to understand about this college.
MIT offers a standard suite of programs you’d expect from an Anna University-affiliated engineering college. The undergraduate B.E./B.Tech offerings cover the core branches: Civil, Computer Science, Electrical & Electronics, Electronics & Communication, Information Technology, and Mechanical Engineering. They also run lateral entry programs for diploma holders in most of these streams.
At the postgraduate level, the M.E. programs have some decent specializations like VLSI Design, Embedded Systems, and Power Electronics. The MBA program offers specializations in HR, Finance, Marketing, and Systems Management. There’s also an MCA and a few other programs like BCA and M.Sc. in Applied Electronics. With a total faculty count of 151, the student-faculty ratio isn’t terrible for an institute of this size. Student reviews on teaching quality are a mixed bag. You’ll see comments like “teachers are helpful and qualified” right next to ones that say “some of them not qualified.” That’s fairly typical for mid-tier private colleges. The college mentions skills enrichment programs and a Youth Red Cross Unit, which points to some effort beyond just the syllabus.
This is the section that requires the most careful reading. The official placement data for 2023 cites a highest package of ₹4.5 LPA and an average of ₹3 LPA. The college claims a “high placement rate (around 80-85%).”
Now, here’s the reality check from student reviews. Across platforms like CollegeDunia and Shiksha, the sentiment is overwhelmingly different. Students repeatedly describe placements as “for name sake” and report that “most companies that come are either fake or BPO.” The working placement percentage alumni cite is dramatically lower—often in the 30-40% range. There are specific complaints about students not receiving appointment letters after selection interviews, which is a serious red flag. Some reviews flatly state, “No placements inside our college campus.”
The recruiter list includes names like HCL, Tech Mahindra, Accenture, and Dell, but it’s unclear how frequently these majors visit and how many offers they actually make. Other companies mentioned in older reviews are more regional or service-oriented, like Kochar InfoTech and Aqua Pure Plus. Internship opportunities also get poor marks, with one review indicating only about 10% of students in a department secured one.
The takeaway? The official numbers should be viewed with extreme skepticism. The consensus from those who’ve been through it is that securing a job will require significant independent effort from the student, with limited reliable support from the campus placement cell. That’s a crucial factor in the cost-benefit analysis.
Where MIT scores a point is on affordability, at least on paper. The tuition fees are notably low for a private engineering college. For the government quota B.E./B.Tech program, the annual tuition is just ₹50,000, leading to a total program cost of ₹200,000. Even the management quota fees, while higher, are not as exorbitant as some other private institutes.
However, the hostel fees add a substantial chunk to the overall cost. A double-sharing room with mess will cost ₹80,000 annually. A single room pushes it to ₹110,000 per year. When you add the other mandatory fees—application, exam, library, miscellaneous—the total four-year cost for a B.Tech student in a double hostel room can easily approach ₹500,000. And that’s where student complaints come in: many feel the hostel and food quality does not justify that fee. The mess is vegetarian, and reviews on food range from “tasty and healthy” to “not good” and “poor.” Information on scholarships is not readily available, so financial aid options seem limited.
Admissions are routed through the standard Tamil Nadu state systems. For B.E./B.Tech, it’s purely through the Tamil Nadu Engineering Admissions (TNEA) counseling based on your 12th-grade marks. There’s no separate entrance exam for the state quota seats. The official TNEA portal is where you’ll need to apply when the window opens, typically in May.
For M.E./M.Tech, they accept TANCET or CEETA PG scores. For MBA and MCA, it’s TANCET. The application fee for MIT is ₹500. Specific cutoff ranks for TNEA aren’t published by the college, which often means they fill seats in the later rounds of counseling. If you have a decent 12th percentage (often above 80-85% for popular branches like CSE in private colleges), you might have a shot. Management quota seats are available at higher fees for those who don’t make the merit cut.
The key dates to watch are the TNEA 2026 counseling application window (expected May 2026) and the TANCET/CEETA PG exam dates in May 2026. Always confirm dates on the Anna University or official TNEA websites.
The campus in Arasur is described as spacious. Academically, the infrastructure gets generally positive remarks. Classrooms have electronic boards, there’s a central library with a decent collection and digital access, and labs are said to be “state-of-the-art”—though a recurring student gripe is that “some equipment does not work.” The sports facilities are a plus, with a 5-acre playground and facilities for both indoor and outdoor games.
The hostels are a major point of contention. They’re separate for boys and girls, with a capacity for 750 and 400 students respectively. Rooms are often called clean and well-maintained in some reviews, but others criticize the value for money, calling the hostels “very poor” for the fees charged. Safety concerns about personal belongings have also been mentioned. The most consistent complaint, aside from placements, is about connectivity. Students explicitly state there is a “poor internet connection” in the computer lab and that the “entire college doesn’t have Wi-Fi.” In an era of online learning and leetcode, that’s a significant drawback.
Other amenities include a canteen, a health center with first aid, and a fleet of five college buses that cover a 50 km radius. There’s no on-campus bank. Social life doesn’t feature prominently in reviews; the mention of a Youth Red Cross Unit suggests some organized activity, but there’s little chatter about major fests or a vibrant club culture.
Synthesizing the student sentiment is straightforward because the complaints are so consistent. The positives are there: decent infrastructure, some good faculty, and clean hostel rooms. It’s not described as a terrible place to study.
But the negatives are heavy and repetitive. The placement process is the overwhelming theme. Students feel misled by the official statistics. The experience of fake companies, BPO roles masquerading as tech jobs, and low placement rates creates a deep sense of distrust. The second major pain point is the lack of reliable Wi-Fi across campus, which students view as a basic necessity in 2025. The third is hostel food quality and cost.
These reviews paint a picture of a college that might suffice for the academic routine, but one that students feel fails to deliver on the crucial promise of employability and modern campus amenities. When the same issues—placements, internet, food—crop up again and again from different users over time, it’s a pattern that can’t be ignored.
Maharaja Institute of Technology is a study in trade-offs. Its biggest advantage is its low tuition fee, making it one of the more affordable private engineering options in the region. If your primary constraint is budget and your goal is simply to secure an Anna University-affiliated B.Tech degree with minimal tuition expense, MIT could be a functional choice.
However, you must go in with eyes wide open. Do not count on the campus placement cell to land you a job. The student reviews are too unanimous in their criticism. Your job search will likely be a solo mission. You should also be prepared for inconsistent internet access and manage your expectations on hostel life.
So, who is it for? A student with a tight budget, strong self-motivation to build skills independently (through online courses, external certifications), and a plan to aggressively pursue off-campus placements or higher studies. Who should look elsewhere? A student for whom a supportive, active placement cell and a modern, connected campus environment are non-negotiable parts of the engineering college experience. In that case, the lower fee might not be worth the compromise.
3 streams · Fees from ₹41.0K to ₹2.2 L
Auditorium
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Study LibraryAdmission to the B.E./B.Tech programs is based entirely on your 12th standard (10+2) marks. You must apply through the Tamil Nadu Engineering Admissions (TNEA) state counseling process. There is no separate entrance exam for the state quota seats. Eligibility requires passing 10+2 with Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics.
Official 2023 data cites an average package of ₹3 LPA and a highest of ₹4.5 LPA, with an 80-85% placement rate claim. However, student reviews consistently report a different reality, with placement rates perceived to be much lower (30-40%) and concerns about the quality and authenticity of visiting companies. Students advise relying on independent job search efforts.
For the government quota B.Tech program, the annual tuition fee is ₹50,000, totaling ₹200,000 for the 4-year program. Hostel fees are extra: a double-sharing room with mess costs ₹80,000 per year. Additional mandatory fees (application, library, exam) add approximately ₹10,500 over the program duration.
Hostel reviews are mixed. Some students find rooms clean and well-maintained, while others criticize the value for money and food quality (vegetarian only). A major and consistent complaint from students is the lack of reliable Wi-Fi across the campus and poor internet connectivity in computer labs.
For M.E./M.Tech programs, the college accepts scores from TANCET or CEETA PG. For the MBA program, admission is based on the TANCET score. You must apply for these state-level entrance exams and participate in the subsequent counseling process.
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