


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

Meghnad Saha Institute of Technology (MSIT) in Kolkata has built a reputation as a solid, if unspectacular, private engineering college. Its main draw is a wide array of B.Tech specializations, particularly in computer science, and a placement record that delivers decent outcomes for students who put in the work. The college claims a highest package of INR 32 LPA from Amazon, a figure that pops up in official reports from 2022 through 2025. But the real story, as told by students, is more about the median package of INR 4.5 LPA and a placement rate hovering around 70%. For a student with a WBJEE rank between 60,000 and 1,00,000, MSIT often becomes a practical choice—a place where the curriculum is industry-aligned and the labs are well-stocked, even if the campus itself feels a bit cramped.
MSIT’s academic portfolio is heavily skewed towards engineering and technology, with a clear focus on what the job market wants. The B.Tech program is the centerpiece, offering a staggering number of computer science variants. Beyond the standard CSE, you can opt for Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning, Data Science, Cyber Security, Internet of Things, or the TCS-linked Computer Science & Business Systems (CSBS) program. That’s a smart move, giving students a branded specialization from day one. Intakes are healthy—180 for CSE, 60 for IT.
The core branches—Civil, Mechanical, Electrical—are also there, but student sentiment suggests they play second fiddle in terms of placement attention. For undergraduates not looking at engineering, there are standard BCA, BBA, and B.Sc. programs. At the postgraduate level, M.Tech, MBA, and MCA round out the offerings. The MBA has a niche focus on Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Venture Development.
Academically, the college pushes an industry-ready model. You’ll find workshops, bootcamps, and certifications woven into the syllabus. The faculty, as per most reviews, is qualified and supportive, which isn’t a given in all private colleges. The tie-ups are impressive on paper: a partnership with CII for mentorship, MoUs with tech firms, and that direct TCS pipeline for CSBS students. It’s a curriculum designed less for pure theory and more for getting you through an interview.
This is where you need to read between the lines. The official headline numbers are a highest package of INR 32 LPA (Amazon) and an average package of INR 6 LPA. The NIRF report for 2025 provides more sober, and likely more reliable, data: a median package of INR 4.5 LPA for B.Tech and INR 4 LPA for M.Tech in 2024. That’s a decent, middle-of-the-road outcome for a private college in this tier.
The placement percentage tells a similar story. Officially, it was 70.16% in 2024 (298 offers for 439 eligible students). Student reviews consistently peg it between 60% and 70%, with a notable caveat: it’s heavily branch-dependent. For CSE, IT, and ECE, students talk about 70-90% placement rates. For core branches like Civil or Mechanical, that number can plummet below 40%. The college states that nearly 70% of students secure internships, with names like TCS and Microsoft partners on the list.
The recruiter list is long and features the usual IT services giants: TCS, Infosys, Wipro, Capgemini, Accenture, Cognizant, HCL. There are also appearances from more selective firms like Amazon, Microsoft, Deloitte, PwC, Ernst & Young, and BNY Mellon. Don’t get the wrong idea, though. The bulk of the offers come from the mass recruiters. The eligibility bar is clear: a CGPA of 7.0 or above with no backlogs is often the minimum to sit for placements. The verdict? The placement cell is active and brings in companies, but securing a good offer is squarely on the student’s shoulders.
Let’s be direct: MSIT is not cheap for a West Bengal private college. The total tuition fee for a B.Tech degree ranges from INR 5.55 lakhs to INR 6.97 lakhs over four years, with a first semester fee of INR 98,500. When you add in hostel and other costs, the total four-year outlay can easily touch INR 7.2 lakhs or more for a general category student. Postgraduate fees are lower: M.Tech is INR 1.9 lakhs total, MBA is INR 5.17 lakhs.
The hostel situation requires attention. The college lists hostel fees of INR 50,000 to 80,000 per year (inclusive of mess). However, multiple student reviews claim the college doesn’t have its own hostels, instead relying on third-party accommodations. Private hostels and PGs nearby cost between INR 3,000 to 8,000 per month.
Where MSIT scores points is in scholarship options. There are substantial merit-based waivers for WBJEE rank holders: 50% off first-year tuition for top 5,000 ranks, 25% for ranks 5,001-15,000, and 10% for ranks 15,001-30,000. On top of that, they facilitate a slew of government schemes: the Tuition Fee Waiver (TFW), Swami Vivekananda Merit Cum Means Scholarship (up to INR 60,000/year), OASIS, Aikyashree, Kanyashree, and national portal scholarships. If you have the rank or the economic need, you can significantly reduce the financial load.
Admission is entrance-exam driven and follows the state counseling process. For B.Tech, you need a valid WBJEE or JEE Main score. The cutoffs for 2025 tell the story of demand:
The selection is purely merit-based through the WBJEEB or JOSAA counseling. You fill your choices, get allocated a seat based on your rank and preferences, then verify documents and pay the fee. There is a management quota (about 20% of seats) where admission is possible via JEE Main scores or direct application, with total fees ranging from INR 7-9 lakhs and a possible one-time donation.
For other programs: M.Tech requires GATE or WBUT PGET; MBA needs CAT/MAT/JEMAT; MCA requires WBJEE JECA; and BCA/BBA admissions are through the MAKAUT CET.
The infrastructure is a mixed bag, and students are vocal about it. On the plus side, the academic facilities are strong. There are over 35 well-equipped, department-specific labs, air-conditioned computer centers with 600+ systems, and smart classrooms. The library is a genuine asset, with over 53,000 books and digital access to IEEE and Springer journals—a real boon for project work.
Now, the downsides. The campus size is 8 acres, which students consistently describe as very small. There’s no own playground, though there are outdoor spaces for cricket and football. The Wi-Fi is decent in speed but not ubiquitous across the campus.
The hostel situation is the biggest point of contention. While the college lists facilities, a recurring theme in reviews is that these are third-party arrangements. The quality of these private hostels is described as basic to decent, with average food. It’s not a unified campus hostel life.
Student life, however, seems active. There are multiple fests—tech, cultural, freshers’ parties—run by student groups. The location near Ruby General Hospital is well-connected and has plenty of eateries around. The college has a gym, indoor sports areas, a canteen, and an on-campus ATM. It’s a functional, if compact, environment.
Synthesizing the student sentiment from various forums paints a clear, balanced picture.
They like: The faculty quality and support. The well-equipped labs and library resources. The decent Wi-Fi in academic blocks. The active fest culture and social life. The location and its connectivity.
They complain about: The small campus size and lack of a playground. The absence of true college-owned hostels, relying on variable private PGs. The fee, which is considered high for West Bengal and increases yearly. Some feel the curriculum has redundant topics.
On placements, there’s a consensus that the official highest package is real but rare. The working average package students quote is between INR 3.5 to 5 LPA. They confirm the branch-wise disparity: computer branches do okay; core branches struggle. The message is clear: manage your expectations, maintain a good CGPA, and you’ll likely land a job, but it probably won’t be at Amazon.
MSIT is a pragmatic choice for a specific type of student. If you have a WBJEE rank between 60,000 and 1,00,000 and are keen on a computer science specialization (CSE, AI, Data Science, etc.), it offers a clear path. The labs are good, the faculty is supportive, and the placement cell will give you a shot at the IT services industry. The scholarship options for WBJEE rankers can make the fee palatable.
However, if you’re looking for a sprawling campus with vibrant in-house hostel life, look elsewhere. If you’re interested in core engineering branches like Mechanical or Civil, be wary—placement support there is notably weaker. The value proposition is straightforward: it’s a no-frills, industry-focused college that gets the job done for students in the middle of the rank spectrum. It’s not a top-tier institute, but for its target audience, it fulfills a need reliably. You’ll get out what you put in, and you probably won’t be disappointed if your expectations are calibrated to the median package, not the highest one.
3 streams · Fees from ₹1.1 L to ₹2.7 L
4 exams with cutoff data available — showing recent entries
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B.Tech Cyber Security | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,55,954 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Data Science and Artificial Intelligence | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,67,672 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Computer Science Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 5,03,483 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 5,29,787 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Information Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 5,99,448 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Electronics & Communication Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 6,79,886 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Mechanical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 8,25,138 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Internet of Things | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 7,89,006 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Computer Science and Information Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 8,48,548 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Civil Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 14,36,216 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Cyber Security | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,42,262 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Data Science and Artificial Intelligence | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,89,067 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Computer Science Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,67,590 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 5,79,709 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Information Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 5,66,448 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Electronics & Communication Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 6,49,426 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Mechanical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 7,89,823 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Internet of Things | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 8,32,857 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Computer Science and Information Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 8,28,431 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Civil Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 13,93,558 | 2025 | R2 |
| B.Tech Cyber Security | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 1,10,782 | 2024 | R2 |
| B.Tech Data Science and Artificial Intelligence | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 1,07,069 | 2024 | R2 |
| B.Tech Computer Science Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 51,834 | 2024 | R2 |
| B.Tech Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 81,991 | 2024 | R2 |
| B.Tech Information Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 83,379 | 2024 | R2 |
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Study LibraryAdmission to the B.Tech programs at Meghnad Saha Institute of Technology is primarily based on your rank in the West Bengal Joint Entrance Examination (WBJEE) or your All India Rank in JEE Main. You must apply for and appear in one of these national or state-level engineering entrance tests. After the results are declared, you need to participate in the centralized counseling process conducted by WBJEEB (for WBJEE scores) or JOSAA (for JEE Main scores) to be considered for a seat.
Based on the latest official data from the NIRF 2025 report, which covers the 2024 placement cycle, the highest package offered at MSIT Kolkata was INR 32 Lakhs Per Annum (LPA) from Amazon. The average package is reported to be around INR 6 LPA, while the median package for B.Tech graduates provides a more realistic benchmark at INR 4.5 LPA. The placement percentage for eligible students in 2024 was approximately 70%.
MSIT Kolkata facilitates hostel accommodation, though student reviews often note that these are managed by third-party providers rather than being college-owned. The officially listed annual hostel fees range from ₹50,000 to ₹80,000 for girls and ₹60,000 to ₹75,000 for boys, which typically includes both accommodation and mess charges. Many students also opt for private hostels or paying guest (PG) accommodations in the nearby area, which can cost between ₹3,000 to ₹8,000 per month.
MSIT offers several financial aid options. The most direct are merit-based tuition fee waivers for WBJEE rank holders: 50% waiver for ranks 1-5,000, 25% for ranks 5,001-15,000, and 10% for ranks 15,001-30,000. The college also actively supports students in applying for government scholarships like the Swami Vivekananda Merit Cum Means Scholarship, Tuition Fee Waiver (TFW) scheme, OASIS for SC/ST students, Kanyashree Prakalpa for girls, Aikyashree for minorities, and various central government schemes listed on the National Scholarship Portal.
Student feedback on infrastructure is mixed. Positively, they frequently praise the well-equipped, modern laboratories, the extensive library with digital journal access, and the availability of decent-speed Wi-Fi in academic blocks. The recurring criticism, however, centers on the compact 8-acre campus size, which students find too small for an engineering college, and the notable absence of a college-owned playground. While academic infrastructure is rated well, the overall campus footprint is a common point of contention.
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