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

MBM Engineering College in Jodhpur is one of those old-guard institutions that feels like it's been there forever—because it has. Established in 1951, it's a government-owned pillar of Rajasthan's technical education. The big shift came in 2021 when it was elevated from an affiliate of Jai Narain Vyas University to a full-fledged autonomous state university, now called MBM University. That autonomy is a double-edged sword: it promises more control over curriculum and pace, but also places the onus squarely on the college's own administration to deliver. With a sprawling 98-acre campus right in the Ratanada area of Jodhpur, it's deeply embedded in the city's fabric. The NAAC B++ grade is a decent, if not stellar, accreditation score for a state-run institution. What you're looking at here is a legacy college trying to modernize, with placement numbers that tell a story of solid, if unspectacular, outcomes for its price point.
MBM offers a classic, broad-based engineering curriculum across 14 B.Tech specializations, plus B.Arch and B.Plan. The intake numbers tell you where the focus is: Civil Engineering has the largest batch size at 132 seats, followed by core branches like Mechanical and Electrical at 66 each. The newer, trendier programs like Artificial Intelligence & Data Science and Building and Construction Technology also have 66 seats, signaling an attempt to stay current. The college breaks down seats into two categories: the majority filled via JEE Main/REAP, and a smaller number (like the '+6' in many branches) reserved for the Lateral Entry Entry Program (LEEP) for diploma holders.
The academic culture, from what students describe, is traditional. The emphasis is on strong fundamentals and "interdisciplinary analysis." That often translates to a rigorous schedule of theory and practicals, with semester exams every six months. A mandatory element is over three months of practical training in industry, which is a plus. The faculty count is listed at around 170, with many holding M.Tech or Ph.D. degrees. The legacy of professors like the late Prof. BC Punamia, who authored over 20 civil engineering textbooks, hints at a history of academic contribution, particularly in core engineering fields. As an autonomous university now, MBM has the chance to update its syllabi faster—whether that's happening effectively is a key question for prospective students.
This is where you need to read between the lines. The official numbers and student-shared data present a range, not a single tidy figure.
The highest package touted is INR 20.71 LPA for a B.Tech Petroleum Engineering student in 2024. You'll also see claims of INR 22 LPA and even INR 32 LPA from off-campus efforts. These are outliers. The real story is in the average and median figures. For the 2024-25 cycle, you'll see averages quoted from INR 5.06 LPA up to about INR 7.6 LPA. The college's own 2025-26 placement brochure cites an average of INR 6.25 LPA. The median package—often a more honest metric—is reported at INR 6.8 LPA by some sources and as low as INR 4.20 LPA by others. For Computer Science, the 2024 average was INR 6.55 LPA. For Petroleum, it was INR 7.63 LPA.
Placement percentages are equally variable. The overall figure seems to hover between 55% and 70%. For 2024, 70% is claimed. Some branches, like Mining Engineering, boast of 100% placement according to student reviews, while CSE is said to be in the 70-80% range. The bulk of offers (60-70%) come from the IT services sector: TCS, Capgemini, Wipro, Infosys, HCL. Core engineering recruiters are present too—Adani Group, Vedanta, L&T, Tata Steel, Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL)—but the number of core roles is naturally smaller.
The reality check? MBM isn't a mass recruiter campus like some top-tier NITs or private colleges. Placement is decent for a government college at this fee level, but not guaranteed for everyone. The TPO (Training and Placement Office) is active, and internship support is provided, with most students reportedly getting summer internships. If you're in a niche branch like Mining or Petroleum, your placement odds might be surprisingly good due to targeted recruiters. For CSE/IT, you're competing for the standard IT company roles that visit most engineering colleges.
This is arguably MBM's strongest card. For a government autonomous university, the fees are remarkably low. For B.Tech, annual tuition typically falls between INR 45,000 and INR 65,000. The total four-year cost is estimated to be around INR 2.97 lakhs for the 2026-27 cycle. There's a crucial split in fee structure:
Other programs: B.Arch is about INR 55,000 per year, M.Tech ranges from INR 70,000–90,000 annually, and MCA total fees are around INR 93,700.
On top of tuition, budget for a one-time caution deposit (INR 7,500-8,500), enrollment fee (INR 500), and semester exam fees (INR 3,000-5,000). Hostel fees, according to students, are about INR 6,000 per month, with mess meals costing around INR 50 each.
Financial aid is available. There's the central Tuition Fee Waiver Scheme (TFWS) for eligible students from disadvantaged groups. Beyond that, MBM has several donor-funded scholarships like the Hari Vidya Scholarship, the 1972 Batch Scholarship, and Prof. V.S. Bansal Scholarships, which provide amounts from INR 4,000 to INR 12,000. It's not a huge sum, but it helps.
Admission is primarily merit-based through entrance exam ranks. For B.Tech, you need a valid JEE Main score. For Rajasthan state candidates, the REAP (Rajasthan Engineering Admission Process) counseling is the main channel. The cutoffs give you a sense of the competition. For General category students in Computer Science, you're looking at a JEE Main percentile around 96. For OBC, it's roughly 93. For other popular branches, a General Home State candidate with about 85.6 percentile (or a CRL rank near 2.12 lakhs) might expect a seat in Mechanical, Civil, or Mining. Getting Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE) with that score would be tougher.
For B.Arch, you must have a valid NATA score. For M.Tech, it's GATE. For MCA, exams like NIMCET or the state's RMCAAT are accepted.
The process is straightforward: qualify in the exam, register for the relevant counseling (JoSAA for All-India JEE seats, REAP for Rajasthan seats), and get allotted a seat based on your rank and choices. With autonomy, MBM might have some minor discretion, but the entrance exam rank remains king.
The 98-acre campus in central Jodhpur is a mix of old and new. You get the sense of space and history, but infrastructure reviews from students are mixed. Some academic blocks and labs are dated, while others have seen upgrades. It's a common story for government colleges of this vintage. The location is a major plus for connectivity—the railway station is just 4 km away, the airport 6-7 km.
Hostel accommodation is available, but it's not always guaranteed for all. The hostels are functional. At about INR 6,000 per month, they're affordable, but don't expect luxury. The food in the mess is described as basic and affordable (~INR 50/meal). Student life revolves around the campus and the city of Jodhpur itself. There are technical festivals, cultural events, and sports facilities. It's not a hyper-active, cosmopolitan campus life you might find in a metro, but it's a real, grounded college experience. The social scene is what you make of it, with the historic Blue City as your backdrop.
Scouring platforms like CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and Quora paints a consistent picture. The positives always start with value for money. For the ultra-low tuition fees, getting a decent engineering education and a shot at placements with companies like TCS and Wipro is seen as a fair deal. Alumni from core branches (Mining, Petroleum, Civil) often speak more favorably, citing strong department-specific recruitment and dedicated faculty.
The criticisms are equally predictable. Placement uncertainty for average students in crowded branches like IT or Mechanical is a frequent concern. The infrastructure is called out for being outdated in parts—Wi-Fi can be spotty, some labs need modernization. The bureaucracy of a government system can be slow and frustrating. Academics are described as demanding and traditional, which some see as rigorous and others as rigid.
A common thread is that MBM is what you make of it. It provides a low-cost platform. Students who are proactive—securing their own internships, building skills outside the syllabus, leveraging the TPO's connections—do well. Those who expect the college to hand them a top job might be disappointed. The alumni network is strong within Rajasthan and in certain public sector industries.
MBM Engineering College is a clear, pragmatic choice for a specific type of student. If you are a Rajasthan resident with a JEE Main rank that won't get you into the top-tier NITs or IIITs, and your priority is getting a recognized engineering degree with minimal financial burden, MBM makes a lot of sense. The return on investment is hard to beat—for less than INR 3 lakhs total, you get a pathway to placements that typically offer INR 5-7 LPA. That's a sensible financial equation. It's also a solid pick for students genuinely interested in core engineering fields like Mining, Petroleum, or Civil, where the college has a long-standing reputation and dedicated recruiters.
However, if you're aiming for the highest-paying tech jobs, a vibrant metro campus life, or cutting-edge, flexible pedagogy, you should probably look elsewhere. MBM is a traditional, government-run institution. It moves at its own pace. Your success will depend heavily on your own drive and initiative. For the right candidate—cost-conscious, focused on core engineering or a stable IT career, and comfortable in a no-frills academic environment—MBM University is a worthwhile and respectable option. Check the official website mbm.ac.in for the most current admission brochures and notices.
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Study LibraryThe average placement package for the 2024-25 cycle is reported between INR 5.06 LPA and INR 7.6 LPA, with the college's official 2025-26 placement brochure citing an average of INR 6.25 LPA. The median package is around INR 6.8 LPA. Packages vary by branch, with Computer Science averaging INR 6.55 LPA and Petroleum Engineering averaging INR 7.63 LPA for the 2024 batch.
The annual tuition fee for B.Tech at MBM is approximately INR 45,000 to INR 65,000. There are two main categories: Government Aided Seats (GAS) cost about INR 38,400 per year, while Self-Financed Seats (SFS) range from INR 70,800 to INR 80,000 annually. The total estimated cost for the four-year B.Tech program is around INR 2.97 lakhs for the 2026-27 academic cycle.
For admission to the Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) program, the JEE Main cutoff for the General category is approximately 96 percentile. For OBC category candidates, the cutoff is around 93 percentile. These cutoffs are for the latest available admission cycle and can vary slightly year to year.
Yes, MBM Engineering College is a government-owned institution. It was established in 1951 and was elevated to an autonomous state university in 2021, now known as MBM University. It is accredited with a NAAC B++ grade and is approved by the UGC and AICTE.
Top recruiters at MBM include major IT services firms like TCS, Capgemini, Wipro, Infosys, and HCL. Core engineering and manufacturing companies such as Adani Group, Vedanta, Larsen & Toubro, Tata Steel, Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL), Aditya Birla Group, and JK Lakshmi Cement also recruit from the campus. The IT sector accounts for about 60-70% of the offers.
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