

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

Mahatma Gandhi Mission College of Engineering & Technology (MGMCET) in Noida’s Sector-62 is a story of affordability versus aspiration. Established in 1999 and affiliated with Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam Technical University (AKTU), its primary draw is a B.Tech fee that’s a fraction of what many private colleges in the NCR charge. But that low cost comes with a trade-off. The placement data tells two different tales: an official website touting a 95% placement rate and a 19 LPA high, and student reviews painting a picture of intense competition for a smaller pool of on-campus offers, with average packages often cited in the 3-4 LPA range. It’s a classic case of a college where you need to read between the glossy lines.
MGMCET runs a standard set of AKTU-affiliated engineering programs. The B.Tech intake totals 300 seats, with Computer Science and Engineering being the largest draw (120 seats), followed by a newer specialization in CSE with AI-ML (60 seats). Mechanical, Electronics & Communication, and Civil Engineering have smaller intakes of 30-60 seats each. Postgraduate M.Tech programs are offered, though specific specializations aren't prominently detailed in recent student-facing material. The curriculum is, as you’d expect, dictated by AKTU’s syllabus and updated periodically.
Faculty strength is listed variably—some sources say 33, others mention 15 experienced members, with a few holding PhDs. Student sentiment on this is generally positive, describing teachers as helpful, qualified, and open to questions. The academic culture seems to be what you make of it. The college emphasizes "practical education" and "industrial requirements," but several student reviews hint that proactivity is key. You’ll get the AKTU framework, but chasing advanced projects or niche skills might fall on you.
This is where you have to separate the brochure from the ground report. The official college website states a 95% placement rate, a highest package of INR 19 LPA, and an average of INR 4.5 LPA. The recruiter list is long and impressive, featuring names like Amazon, TCS, Wipro, Infosys, Lenskart, and many IT/tech firms.
And then you talk to students. The consensus across forums like CollegeDunia and Shiksha suggests a different reality. The placement percentage isn’t a uniform 95%; it’s described as highly branch-dependent, with CSE faring best (maybe 70-80%) and core branches like Mechanical or Civil seeing much lower rates—some reviews mention figures as low as 20-40%. The average package alumni cite clusters around INR 3-4 LPA, with notes that 4.5 LPA might be optimistic for many. Those headline high packages of 18-24 LPA? They exist, but are rare, often attributed to off-campus efforts by exceptional students. One review bluntly stated the highest on-campus offer they knew of was 8-9 LPA for one or two students.
The Training and Placement Cell is active, organizing internship fairs (with one claiming 60% placement) and maintaining those 150+ recruiter ties. But opportunities are overwhelmingly skewed towards IT roles. If you’re in CS, you’ll have shots. If you’re in Mechanical, you’ll likely need to hustle. Internships, while sometimes facilitated through partners like IBM for AI, often require self-sourcing.
This is MGMCET’s undisputed strong suit. For a private B.Tech in the NCR, the fees are strikingly low. The first-year fee for B.Tech programs in 2025 is listed at INR 60,295, with yearly tuition generally ranging from INR 65,000 to INR 91,000 depending on category (Open, OBC, etc.). Over four years, the total cost is estimated between INR 4 lakhs to around INR 5.3 lakhs. You must also budget for AKTU’s separate charges: a pre-enrolment fee (~INR 2300), enrolment/exam fees (~INR 7500), and yearly exam fees (~INR 8000).
Hostel fee data is contradictory. The college mentions separate hostels for boys and girls, but multiple student reviews claim hostel facilities are either non-existent or closed due to low occupancy. If you need lodging, plan to rent privately in Noida.
For financial aid, don’t look to the college for merit scholarships. The support comes via government schemes: UP Government Scholarships, National Scholarships, and the Pragati Scholarship for girls. Economically Backward Class (EBC) students can get a 50% waiver on tuition and exam fees. These are administered by the Uttar Pradesh government, so a domicile certificate is typically needed. Ignore any outdated references to Maharashtra portals.
Admission to the B.Tech program is primarily through Uttar Pradesh state counseling (UPTAC), which uses JEE Main ranks. About 85% of seats are filled this way. The remaining 15% are management quota seats per AKTU norms. Direct admission based on 12th-grade PCM marks is also a possibility if seats are available.
The cutoffs are accessible, reflecting the college’s position in the AKTU ecosystem. For the 2024 UPTAC round, the closing rank for B.Tech CSE (General category) was 12,05,200. For CSE (AI category), it ranged from 7,04,313 to 12,92,636. Cutoffs for other branches and categories are lower. For lateral entry into the second year, CUET scores are accepted.
The process is straightforward: qualify for JEE Main, register for UPTAC counseling, and choose MGMCET when your rank allows. The application window typically opens in January-February for the academic year starting in July-August.
The 10-acre campus in Sector-62 is described as a single, circular red-themed building. It’s functional. Classrooms are spacious and have projectors. The library is stocked with books and e-resources like NPTEL and DELNET, though one review called it small with seating for about 20. Labs are department-based; computer labs are adequate, but some reviews note that equipment in mechanical or civil labs isn’t always modern.
Infrastructure is a mixed bag. Wi-Fi is available but reported to be slow or unreliable. Sports facilities include a cricket/football field, volleyball court, indoor games like table tennis, and a gym, but maintenance isn’t always consistent. The canteen provides basic food, and hygiene is a common point of criticism. A medical center is present. The biggest asterisk is the hostel situation—student accounts strongly suggest you should not rely on getting a college hostel room.
Social life is what a driven, commuter-heavy student body makes it. It’s not a residential campus with a vibrant buzz. It’s a place you go to for classes, labs, and placement drives. Its location in Noida is a plus for accessibility and potential local internships.
Synthesizing the chatter online creates a clear, if nuanced, picture. The overwhelming positive is affordable fees. For many students, this is the deciding factor, making an engineering degree financially feasible.
The biggest gripe is placement hype versus reality. Students feel the official statistics are inflated and don’t reflect the competitive struggle for good on-campus jobs. There’s a sense that you’re largely on your own after paying the fee.
Faculty and teaching quality get decent marks. Most reviewers find the professors knowledgeable and supportive. The location in Noida is also seen as a plus for connectivity and exposure.
On the downside, infrastructure and amenities are frequently cited as just average or in need of upkeep—especially the canteen, Wi-Fi, and some labs. The lack of a reliable hostel is a major practical hurdle for out-of-town students. A recurring theme is that the college provides a basic, no-frills AKTU education. It won’t hand-hold you to a top job, but it won’t bankrupt you either.
MGMCET Noida is a value-for-money proposition with managed expectations. It’s best for cost-conscious students from Uttar Pradesh who have a moderate JEE Main rank and are targeting an IT career. If you get into CSE or AI-ML, are comfortable with self-study, and plan to aggressively prepare for placements and internships from day one, the low fee structure makes it a rational choice. The ROI can work if you leverage the Noida location and secure a decent package.
However, look elsewhere if you prioritize campus life, modern infrastructure, or strong placement support for core engineering branches like Mechanical or Civil. The college’s strengths are narrow: affordability and a functional pathway for IT aspirants in the NCR. For that specific profile, it serves a purpose. For anyone expecting a holistic, high-support engineering education, the reality here will likely fall short. It’s a budget airline, not a luxury carrier. You get from point A to point B, but don’t expect extra legroom.
1 stream · Fees from ₹72.3K to ₹72.3K
3 exams with cutoff data available
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Study LibraryThe fee structure is MGMCET's primary advantage. For the 2025 academic year, the first-year B.Tech fee is approximately INR 60,295, with annual tuition ranging from INR 65,000 to INR 91,000 depending on student category (Open, OBC, etc.). Over four years, the total course cost is estimated between INR 4 lakhs to INR 5.3 lakhs, excluding separate AKTU university fees (enrolment, exam fees) which add roughly INR 10,000-15,000 per year.
Placement outcomes vary significantly by branch and source of information. Officially, the college reports a 95% placement rate, a highest package of INR 19 LPA, and an average of INR 4.5 LPA with recruiters like Amazon and TCS. However, student reviews consistently suggest a more competitive reality, with average packages for many graduates closer to INR 3-4 LPA and placement rates highly dependent on the branch (CSE fares best). Top-tier packages are rare and often secured off-campus.
Admission is primarily through Uttar Pradesh state counseling (UPTAC) based on JEE Main ranks, which fills 85% of seats. Candidates must register for UPTAC and select MGMCET during counseling. The remaining 15% of seats are management quota. Direct admission based on 12th-grade PCM marks is also possible if seats are available. For lateral entry (into the second year), CUET scores are accepted.
Information on hostels is conflicting. While the college mentions separate hostels for boys and girls, numerous student reviews indicate that hostel facilities are either not available or remain closed due to low occupancy. Out-of-town students should plan for private accommodation in Noida and not rely on securing a college hostel room.
The flagship program is B.Tech in Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) with an intake of 120 seats. The college also offers a specialized B.Tech in Computer Science and Engineering with Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning (AI-ML) with 60 seats. Other programs include Mechanical Engineering (60 seats), Electronics and Communication Engineering (30 seats), and Civil Engineering (30 seats).
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