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Marwar Engineering College and Research Centre (MECRC) in Jodhpur is a private engineering college that’s been around since 2003. It’s affiliated with Rajasthan Technical University (RTU) and sits on a 15-acre campus a fair distance from the city center. The story here is one of basic infrastructure and very low fees, but it’s a story that comes with significant caveats. Student reviews consistently point to outdated curriculum and faculty quality as major drawbacks. And while the college lists scholarships and hostels as positives, its placement record is a ghost—the most recent official numbers are over a decade old. For a student on an extreme budget who just needs an RTU-affiliated degree, it’s an option. For anyone with career ambitions that hinge on modern training and campus recruitment, the picture gets murky fast.
MECRC offers standard, traditional engineering programs through RTU’s curriculum. There’s no mention of innovative electives or emerging specializations like AI or Data Science. The intake is modest, focused on core disciplines.
The B.Tech program has intakes of 60 seats for Civil and Computer Science, 90 for Electrical and Mechanical, and 120 for Electronics and Communication Engineering. That’s a total of 420 seats across five branches. The lone M.Tech program is in Power System Engineering under the Electrical Engineering department.
This is where student feedback introduces a major red flag. Multiple reviews describe the curriculum as “outdated.” When you combine an RTU syllabus that isn’t known for agility with a college that students say doesn’t supplement it well, you get a skills gap. The college says it supports internships and research projects, but the onus seems heavily on the student. With 61 faculty members and no data on how many hold PhDs, the academic strength is hard to gauge. But the student consensus on teaching quality is clear and negative: “faculty are not so great.” That’s a significant hurdle for any institution.
This is the biggest question mark surrounding MECRC, and the answer isn’t reassuring. The college’s official website provides no contemporary placement statistics. The most recent numbers cited anywhere are from the 2009-2010 and 2010-2011 academic years—claiming 63 and 71 students were placed, respectively. In the context of today’s job market, data that’s over a decade old is functionally irrelevant.
No average package, no highest package, no median package, and no list of top recruiters are available for recent graduating batches. Student reviews echo this void, noting that placement data is “not readily available.” In the absence of official information, the safe assumption is that organized, high-volume campus placements are not a consistent feature here. Students likely need to seek opportunities off-campus or through personal networks. For anyone prioritizing placement assurance, this lack of transparent, current data is a major reason to look elsewhere.
If there’s one unambiguous advantage to MECRC, it’s the cost. The annual tuition fee for both B.Tech and M.Tech programs is listed at ₹47,000 for the 2025-2026 session. Some sources note a first-year B.Tech fee of ₹52,000, which might include a one-time admission or development charge. Even at that slightly higher figure, it’s among the most affordable private engineering tuition fees in Rajasthan.
Total cost estimates from past years suggest a full B.Tech degree could cost between ₹1.88 lakhs to ₹2.1 lakhs in tuition. That’s strikingly low. Hostel and mess fees are not specified in the available data, so the total cost of attendance would be tuition plus those living expenses.
The college does list several scholarship avenues, which is crucial at this price point. These include:
It’s worth noting a contradictory thread in student reviews: some claim “no scholarship” or that only “one or 2 person get fee rebait.” This suggests that while schemes exist, they might not be widely publicized or accessible to all eligible students.
Admission to the B.Tech programs is based on entrance exam scores and merit. The college accepts JEE Main scores and likely participates in the Rajasthan Engineering Admission Process (REAP), the state-level counseling for RTU-affiliated colleges. The basic eligibility is a minimum of 50% aggregate in Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics in 10+2.
Specific cutoff ranks or percentiles for JEE Main or REAP are not available. For a college with this fee structure and profile, cutoffs are typically not extremely high. Admission often goes into later rounds of counseling. For M.Tech, eligibility requires a relevant graduation degree and a GATE score.
The application window generally aligns with the start of the academic year in July or August. An application fee is charged, payable online or at the admissions office. The process involves the standard steps: eligibility check, application, document verification, and admission offer based on the merit list.
The 15-acre campus is described as having “good infrastructure” in student reviews. It’s a self-contained unit, which it needs to be, given its location well outside the city. A fleet of 32 college buses provides transport for day scholars.
The hostel infrastructure is a stated strength. There are separate facilities for boys and girls, with a total capacity for over 3900 boarders. Rooms are called well-furnished, and the environment is described as spacious, safe, and secure. Amenities include round-the-clock Wi-Fi, a health center, and hygienic kitchen/dining halls. The food gets a consistent, middling review: “OK.”
Other facilities include a modern canteen, a gym with trainers, an auditorium, and ample sports grounds for cricket and football. The computer center has about 45 systems. The library holds approximately 15,000 books and provides access to a number of e-journals. There are also separate departmental libraries.
Student life includes the annual techno-cultural fest “Chronicles,” sports meets, workshops, and industrial visits. All festivals are celebrated. The presence of anti-ragging and anti-women harassment cells is a positive administrative note.
Synthesizing available feedback paints a very consistent picture. The positives are almost entirely about the physical and financial aspects: good infrastructure, provided hostel facilities, and very nominal fees. The campus life, with its fests and celebrations, is seen as a plus.
The negatives, however, cut to the core of the educational mission. The most frequent complaints are about outdated curriculum and poor faculty quality. Phrases like “not so great” and “overall experience is not so good” are common. The complete lack of recent, transparent placement data is a major concern for students. Another practical issue is location—with “no other nearby PG options,” you’re somewhat locked into the hostel system.
The contradiction on scholarships (officially available vs. student reports of scarcity) is a trust issue. It points to a potential gap between policy and student experience.
MECRC Jodhpur serves a very specific, narrow segment of the student population. It’s a low-cost, basic-output institution. If your primary, overwhelming constraint is budget and your goal is strictly to obtain an RTU-affiliated B.Tech degree with hostel accommodation, this college checks those boxes. The scholarship options, if you can secure them, make it even more accessible.
However, you must enter with managed expectations. Do not expect a dynamic, updated curriculum or highly engaged faculty. Do not rely on the college for robust campus placements—you will be largely on your own for internships and jobs. The isolated location means your social world will be almost entirely campus-bound.
For a student with academic drive and career aspirations who can stretch their budget slightly, there are likely better-valued options within the RTU system or elsewhere in Rajasthan. MECRC is a functional last resort for price-sensitive students, not a launchpad for ambitious engineering careers. Your education here will be what you make of it, with very little proactive boost from the institution itself.
1 stream · Fees from ₹52.0K to ₹52.0K
Indian air force-IAF
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Gym
Hostel
Medical
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryCandidates must have passed 10+2 with a minimum of 50% aggregate in Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics. Admission is based on a valid score in JEE Main or any other relevant entrance exam approved by the college, followed by the state counseling process (REAP).
The annual tuition fee for both B.Tech and M.Tech programs at MECRC is ₹47,000 for the 2025-2026 academic year. Some sources indicate a first-year B.Tech fee of ₹52,000, which may include additional one-time charges.
Yes, MECRC provides separate, spacious hostels for boys and girls with a total capacity for over 3900 students. Facilities include well-furnished rooms, round-the-clock Wi-Fi, hygienic dining halls, medical facilities, and a secure environment. Student reviews commonly describe the food as "OK."
The campus is spread over 15 acres. It is located in Kharda Bhandu, Barmer Road, Jodhpur, approximately 23 kilometers from Jodhpur Railway Station along National Highway 112.
MECRC offers merit-based awards (₹21,000 for university toppers, ₹5,000 for branch toppers), government post-matric scholarships for SC/ST/OBC students, and merit-cum-means scholarships for minority communities. A dedicated department assists students with applications, though some student reviews suggest accessing these scholarships can be challenging.
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