


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

At the foot of Odisha's hills in Berhampur, Roland Institute of Technology (RIT) sits on 25 green acres with a simple pitch: an affordable B.Tech that can land you a job. But over the years, that promise has looked different depending on who you ask. Official numbers say six or seven out of ten graduates get placed. Ask alumni on Reddit and Shiksha, and the working figure slips to something more like 30 to 40 percent, especially if you're not in Computer Science. For a private engineering college charging around 60,000 rupees a year in tuition, that gap is worth unpacking.
RIT offers a spread of undergraduate and postgraduate programs, though its bread and butter is clearly the four-year B.Tech. The engineering branches include Computer Science & Engineering (CSE), Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering (often listed as ECE), Electrical & Electronics Engineering (EEE), Civil Engineering, and Mechanical Engineering. Roughly 450 seats are filled each year across these, with Electronics & Communication Engineering alone having just 30 seats — so that's a relatively small, focused class.
Beyond B.Tech, there's a three-year Bachelor of Computer Applications (BCA) with 60 seats. At the postgraduate end, RIT runs a two-year Master of Computer Applications (MCA) and a two-year Master of Business Administration (MBA). No direct PhD programs are offered, though BPUT's doctoral framework exists.
3 streams · Fees from ₹55.0K to ₹65.0K
2 exams with cutoff data available
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B.Tech Electronics & Communication Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 7,16,280 | 2022 | R1 |
| B.Tech Mechanical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 7,99,949 | 2022 | R1 |
| B.Tech Electrical and Electronics Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 8,34,587 | 2022 | R1 |
Symphony
Tecnimont ICB
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Gym
Hostel
Medical
Science LabsThe average salary offered during the 2025 placement drive was between INR 3 LPA and INR 4 LPA, with a median of INR 3.1 LPA reported for 2023. The highest package recorded in 2025 was INR 7 LPA. Keep in mind that computer science students tend to receive better offers than core engineering branches.
For B.Tech in Electronics & Communication Engineering under the General category, the OJEE cutoff in 2024 was rank 1,397,942. In 2023, it was 1,026,944. CSE cutoffs are typically a bit lower (better rank), but RIT's admission thresholds are not very high, making it accessible for many OJEE qualifiers.
RIT provides separate boys' and girls' hostels with both AC and non-AC rooms. The hostel fee including mess is INR 45,000 per year. Student reviews are mixed: some find the rooms "not so well maintained" and the mess food "bad," while others say food is average. The girls' hostel has limited seats, so confirm availability early.
The official placement rate is 60-70%, but student feedback suggests the real figure is often 30-40%, particularly for Civil, Mechanical, and Electrical branches. CSE and IT-related students get placed with companies like Infosys, TCS, Wipro, and Tech Mahindra at packages around 3-4 LPA. Placements have been slowly improving since 2021, but it's still not a high-placement college.
RIT offers B.Tech in Computer Science, Electronics & Communication, Electrical & Electronics, Civil, and Mechanical Engineering with a total intake of 450 seats. It also runs a three-year BCA (60 seats), a two-year MCA, and a two-year MBA. The B.Tech degree from RIT is recognized by 52 foreign universities for higher studies.
Share the lived details brochures skip — what felt worth it, what students should verify, and which questions still need clear answers.
Moderated for quality, not polished into marketing copy.
Useful specifics win: fees paid, placement reality, commute, faculty availability, and what you wish you knew earlier.
BPUT, RourkelaNearby Transit Hubs
One quirky academic detail: the B.Tech degree from RIT is recognized by 52 foreign universities. That's a point the college often mentions, and it could matter if you're thinking about a master's abroad later. The curriculum itself is BPUT-mandated, so you'll see the same core syllabus as other BPUT-affiliated colleges. Professors like Jayadeep Sahu (Mechanical), Dr. Raghunath Kar, and Mr. Himansu Das (CSE) are among the 65-odd faculty members. Student reviews consistently call teachers helpful and friendly, particularly when it comes to practical lab work. Teaching methods, however, get mixed reactions — some students complain the approach is outdated, a sentiment that pops up across multiple reviews.
The academic calendar and CGPA grading pattern follow BPUT norms, and like most Odisha engineering colleges, the rhythm is set by semester exams and a strong focus on lab sessions. That's a decent foundation, but the real test is whether it translates into a job.
The placement story at RIT is where things get complicated. Let's start with the official figures. The college claims 60-70% of students land a campus placement. For 2025, the highest package reported is INR 7 LPA, and the average sits between INR 3 LPA and INR 4 LPA. The NIRF-sourced median salary for 2023 was INR 3.1 LPA. There's also a mention of a 22 LPA offer before 2020 in one student review, but that's an outlier and not repeated in recent cycles.
Now, the student consensus tells a more cautious story. Reviews across CollegeDunia and Shiksha frequently peg the actual placement rate around 70% at best, with plenty of comments suggesting it's closer to 30-40%. The difference often comes down to your branch. Computer Science students tend to fare far better than those in Civil, Mechanical, or Electrical. As one alumni put it, "If you're in CS or IT-related fields, you'll likely get placed. Core branches have a tough time."
Top recruiters include Infosys, Wipro, TCS, Tech Mahindra, Capgemini, HCL, L&T Infotech, and a few niche names like Subex, Zen Technologies, and Bhanzu. That's a respectable list for a tier-2 city college. But the average package of 3-4 LPA suggests these are mostly mass-hiring roles, not niche R&D offers.
Internship support is a mixed bag. RIT arranges internships from the fourth semester onwards, often tapping into AICTE's internship portal. Students can get certifications from Amazon, AWS, IBM, Microsoft, and Google Cloud — which sounds impressive. But word on the ground is that most internships come through external placement agencies like QSpiders, not from on-campus drives. That's not necessarily bad, but it does mean you'll need to be proactive. Alumni note that placement figures have been improving since 2021, so there's a slow upward trend.
One of RIT's strongest selling points is cost. The annual tuition for a B.Tech in 2025-26 is INR 60,000. Some sources show a first-year total (including other fees) ranging from 50,500 to 65,500 INR. A four-year B.Tech will run you about INR 2.4 lakhs in tuition. Add hostel and mess at INR 45,000 per year, and your living costs come to another INR 1.8 lakhs over four years. That's roughly INR 4.2 lakhs all-in, not counting a few mandatory extras like the INR 1,500 semester fee and a one-time INR 5,000 project fee. One review mentions a total four-year cost closer to 6 lakhs, so budgeting around INR 5-6 lakhs is safer.
For MCA and MBA, the total course fees are INR 1.20 lakhs for two years. BCA first-year tuition is INR 45,000.
Scholarship support is fairly broad. Odisha's Post-Matric Scholarship offers up to INR 60,000 per year for SC/ST students and INR 20,000 for OBC/General. The state-level E-Medhabruti scheme provides INR 40,000 over four years. Odisha government scholarships can cover up to 50% of yearly fees. There are also merit-based and need-based scholarships, and the college helps with education loans through State Bank of India, Union Bank of India, and Andhra Bank. For a family looking at an affordable engineering degree, the numbers are manageable.
Getting into RIT's B.Tech program requires either a JEE Main score or a valid OJEE rank. The OJEE cutoff for Electronics & Communication Engineering in 2024 (General category) was a staggering rank of 1,397,942, while in 2023 it was 1,026,944. Those numbers suggest that the cutoff isn't sky-high; if you've cleared the exam, you stand a decent chance. For the more popular CSE branch, the cutoff is typically lower (better rank) but not dramatically different.
For MCA and MBA, the college accepts OJEE, ATMA, CAT, XAT, and a few other tests. Admissions are merit- and entrance-based, followed by counseling, document verification, and fee payment. The OJEE registration timeline for 2026 runs from January 28 to March 22, with exams from May 4 to May 9. Application fees are payable online or at the admissions office. Management quota seats exist, but the college doesn't openly publish those details.
All in all, admission isn't fiercely competitive. The challenge isn't getting in; it's making the most of the four years once you're there.
RIT's campus is tucked near the hills, and students frequently mention its green, calm environment. The 25-acre site includes an auditorium for cultural programs and seminars, batch-wise classrooms with CCTV cameras and biometric attendance, and a range of labs. Labs are described as well-maintained, and the central library gets praise for its size. But digital resources? That information is missing, so don't count on a full-fledged e-library.
Hostel life divides opinion. There are two boys' hostels — one on campus and one in the city — and a single girls' hostel with limited seats. Rooms come in AC and non-AC variants. Quality? "Not so well maintained" crops up in several student comments. Food in the hostel mess is a sensitive topic: some students find it "good and healthy," many others call it "bad" or "not so good." Expect the usual canteen fare to be better, and both vegetarian and non-vegetarian options are served in what the college says is a hygienic environment.
Wi-Fi is a puzzle. Some reviews say every classroom has it; others claim students get no Wi-Fi at all. The truth likely sits somewhere in the middle — perhaps limited to academic blocks and not hostels. Medical facilities are similarly inconsistent. The college says a facility exists; student feedback suggests it's often just a first aid kit.
Sports get a decent mention on paper: outdoor options include cricket, football, basketball, volleyball, athletics, and even biking and camping. Indoor facilities offer chess, carrom, table tennis, and a gym. But the same reviews that praise the list then complain about "limited space for some sports." So you'll have access, but don't expect sprawling fields. Transport is handled by bus services, and the college offers pick-up and drop from railway stations or the airport — a plus for out-of-town students.
Over the last few years, a clear pattern has emerged from student and alumni reviews. The positives are consistent and heartening: teachers are approachable and genuinely helpful. The campus is green and pleasant. Labs and the library are solid. Canteen food is good, and transport is reliable.
But the negatives are equally persistent. Hostel food quality is a recurring grievance, with the word "bad" appearing with depressing regularity. Teaching methods sometimes feel outdated — what one review called "bad" teaching, though not for lack of knowledge, perhaps more a failure of engagement. Wi-Fi accessibility frustrates many. The medical room is, more often than not, just a first aid corner. Management behavior is perceived as "not great," a phrase that hints at frustrating bureaucracy rather than outright hostility. Classrooms with old desks and limited sports space round out the complaints.
The placement reality, as discussed, remains the biggest sore point. If you're in core branches, the campus placement cell won't do you many favors. CS graduates do get picked up, but even then, the packages hover around 3-4 LPA. The college seems to be aware of this — placement rates have been inching upward since 2021, and the industry tie-ups are growing. But for now, it's a work in progress.
RIT works best for a very specific kind of student. If you need an engineering degree that won't break the bank, you're okay with a basic campus experience, and you're ready to hustle for internships and placements on your own, this college will do the job. The fees are low, the location is peaceful, and the faculty will at least try to help. Computer Science applicants have a shot at landing a job through mass recruiters; the rest should weigh their options carefully.
But if you're after top-tier placements, state-of-the-art hostels, or a vibrant campus life, you'll probably feel let down. The gap between the official placement promise and what students experience is wide, and the infrastructure — while adequate — isn't winning any awards. For B.Tech hopefuls with a rank that allows choice, RIT sits in the "budget option" category. It's not a bad college. It's just a college where your own effort will matter a lot more than the brand name on your degree.
Study LibraryGet direct insights about admissions, cutoffs, and placements from detailed brochures.
Claim this listing to update information, respond to enquiries and get a Verified badge.
Claim This Listing