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

Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Technology (RGIT) in Mumbai’s Andheri West is a study in contrasts. It’s a private engineering college with a solid NAAC A++ grade (2023) and permanent affiliation to the University of Mumbai, yet it doesn’t crack the NIRF top 100. It sits on a compact 5-acre plot near Versova beach, offering a friendly, disciplined environment where faculty in the CS and IT departments get consistent praise. But you won’t find a hostel on campus, and the placement story is a classic case of official numbers needing a reality check. For a student in Mumbai looking for a decent, affordable engineering degree with a focus on self-driven learning, RGIT presents a viable, if not spectacular, option.
RGIT runs a standard suite of engineering programs under the University of Mumbai syllabus. The intake numbers tell you where the focus is: Computer Engineering and Electronics & Telecommunication have the highest seats (120 each), followed by newer programs like AI & Data Science (60). Mechanical, Civil, and Instrumentation rounds out the list. For postgrads, they offer M.E. in Computer, Mechanical, and E&TC with small intakes (9-18 students), and Ph.D. programs in those three disciplines as a University of Mumbai approved research center.
The academic culture seems to hinge heavily on the department. Student sentiment is clear—the Computer Science and Information Technology faculty are "absolutely lit, super knowledgeable, and always ready to help you out." That’s a significant plus. But the syllabus itself is Mumbai University’s, which some students feel isn’t always cutting-edge; you’ll likely need to supplement with outside learning for current tech roles.
Where RGIT tries to add practical heft is through its professional chapters (IEEE, CSI, IETE, etc.) and project work. The mechanical department, for instance, gets noted for hands-on projects like race cars and solar-powered models. The institute was also certified as industry-linked in an old AICTE-CII survey, suggesting some collaboration history.
This is where you need to read between the lines. The official 2025 headline is a highest package of INR 19.75 LPA and an average between INR 3-4 LPA. The median for 2024 was around INR 3.39 LPA. The placement percentage for 2024 was 63.5% (298 placed out of 469 registered).
Dig into student reviews on platforms like CollegeDunia and Shiksha, and a more nuanced picture emerges. The consensus is that 60-80% of students aiming for placements might get something, but the on-campus placement rate is often perceived as lower. One review starkly puts it: "Out of 120 students, hardly 30 to 35 get placed through campus placement." Another says the percentage is below 40%. The gap between the official 63.5% and these anecdotal figures is the reality check.
Recruiters are a mix of IT service giants and some product names. Capgemini, TCS, Wipro, Infosys, Cognizant, Accenture, and L&T Infotech are consistent visitors. JP Morgan Chase appears in the official list, which is a strong name. You’ll see unverified student claims about Amazon, Adobe, or Flipkart, but treat those with caution—they aren’t in the confirmed recruiter set.
A major caveat is for core branches. Mechanical, Civil, and Biomedical students report that on-campus opportunities are overwhelmingly in IT services. Securing a core engineering role often requires an off-campus hunt. Internship support is also a common griake; the college doesn’t directly provide them and isn’t always flexible with external internship schedules. About 50-68% of students reportedly secure internships on their own, mostly in software roles.
The fee structure is one of RGIT’s compelling arguments. For the 2025-26 academic year, the first-year tuition for a B.E./B.Tech is approximately ₹1.31 lakhs. The total tuition over four years is estimated between ₹4.24 lakhs to ₹5.25 lakhs. Add a one-time, refundable Caution Money Deposit of ₹500, and your direct academic cost is around ₹4.25 lakhs. That’s genuinely affordable for a private engineering college in Mumbai.
The big asterisk is accommodation. RGIT has no on-campus hostels. Students live in PGs and rented apartments in Andheri and nearby suburbs. The college might assist in finding a PG, but you’re looking at Mumbai rental prices—easily adding ₹1-1.5 lakhs per year to your total cost. There’s also no official mess, so food costs are on you.
Scholarship information isn’t prominently detailed on their site. Students are generally pointed toward state and central government schemes. It’s an area where you’d need to do your own digging.
Admission is strictly through the Maharashtra state centralized process (CAP rounds). For B.E., they accept MHT-CET and JEE Main scores. The 2025 cutoffs show the hierarchy:
For M.E., you need a GATE or MHT CET (M.Tech) score. Ph.D. admissions involve a written test and interview.
The application window typically opens in June-July. Keep an eye on the Directorate of Technical Education, Maharashtra site for CAP round schedules. RGIT also has a Management Quota for a percentage of seats, but details on procedure and fees are not publicly specified.
The campus is a C-shaped, six-floor building on 5 acres. It’s functional. Classrooms are spacious, and the library is well-stocked and computerized. Labs are described as well-equipped—computer labs have advanced systems for AI/DS work, mechanical labs have CNC and robotics tools. But some labs are small, fitting only 20 students. A common complaint from older reviews is the lack of air-conditioning, which can be brutal in Mumbai summers.
The lack of a hostel fundamentally shapes student life. There’s no traditional hostel culture. Everyone is a day scholar or lives in scattered PGs. This makes the on-campus social scene crucial.
Positively, the vibe is consistently called friendly and easy for making friends. Clubs and festivals are active—all major festivals are celebrated. There’s a sports complex, gym, and courts for basketball and volleyball. But some students say sports get less importance and big inter-college fests are rare.
The canteen gets middling reviews—average food, sometimes pricey, with limited seating. The college is well-connected: the Azad Nagar metro station is under 1 km away, and Andheri railway station is 3 km. Being next to Versova beach is a nice perk.
Synthesizing the chatter from review sites gives you the real RGIT experience.
The Good:
The Not-So-Good:
RGIT is a pragmatic choice, not a dream college. Its strengths are clear: an excellent NAAC A++ grade, strong faculty in key tech departments, a disciplined environment, and very affordable tuition for a Mumbai private college. If you’re a student from the Mumbai region looking to minimize living costs by staying at home, or if you’re set on computer engineering and are a self-starter, RGIT offers a solid, reputable platform. You’ll get a decent education and a shot at campus placements, primarily in IT services.
But you have to go in with eyes open. The small campus and lack of a hostel mean the classic residential college experience is absent. Placement success, especially for non-CS branches, is not guaranteed and requires significant off-campus effort. The institute provides the runway, but you have to do a lot of the take-off work yourself—securing internships, updating skills beyond the syllabus, and aggressively job-hunting.
Who should look elsewhere? Students seeking a vibrant campus life with hostels and major fests, or those aiming for top-tier placement packages from product companies directly off-campus, might find RGIT limiting. It’s a workmanlike institute that rewards the proactive and disciplined student.
1 stream · Fees from ₹90.0K to ₹1.2 L
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Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Hostel
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryAdmission to the B.E./B.Tech programs is based on your rank in the Maharashtra state counseling (CAP) rounds, which use your MHT-CET or JEE Main score. You must have passed 10+2 with at least 45% marks. The final selection is done through the centralized process run by the Directorate of Technical Education, Maharashtra.
No, RGIT does not have any on-campus hostel facilities. Students need to arrange for private Paying Guest (PG) accommodations or rentals in Andheri and nearby areas. The college may offer some assistance in finding nearby PGs, but it is not a guaranteed service.
For the 2025 placement cycle, the highest package reported was INR 19.75 LPA. The average package typically ranges between INR 3 LPA and INR 4 LPA. In 2024, the placement percentage was 63.5%, with 298 students placed out of 469 registered for placements.
For the 2025-26 academic year, the first-year tuition fee for B.E./B.Tech is approximately ₹1.31 Lakhs. The total program fee is around ₹4.24-5.25 lakhs. For M.E./M.Tech, the first-year fee is ₹35,000, with a total two-year cost of approximately ₹68,000 to ₹1.31 lakhs. These figures do not include accommodation costs.
Key strengths include highly supportive faculty (especially in CS/IT), a friendly and disciplined campus environment, and good value for money given the affordable fees. Major weaknesses are the lack of on-campus hostels, limited college support for internships, a compact 5-acre campus, and placement outcomes that often require significant off-campus effort from students.
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Mumbai University, MumbaiNearby Transit Hubs
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