


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

Twenty-six lakhs per annum. That’s what someone from the 2014 batch landed at RemTech, according to the college. And that number, understandably, still dominates the marketing pitch. But fast-forward to what recent graduates post on CollegeDunia or Shiksha, and the story shifts – to packages around ₹25,000 a month, and reviews calling the placement situation “very bad.” The truth lies somewhere in between, but for prospective students, it’s the current reality that matters most. Roorkee Engineering & Management Technology Institute (RemTech) sits 8 km from Shamli on the state highway, a private, AKTU-affiliated campus that has been around since 1999. Here’s an honest look at what you’ll actually get.
RemTech runs a typical private-engineering-institute menu: six B.Tech streams, each with 60–120 seats. Civil, Computer Science, Electrical, Electronics & Communication, Information Technology, and Mechanical Engineering. That’s the bread and butter. Total UG intake sits somewhere between 420 and 480, though the exact distribution varies year-to-year.
You’ll also find a Diploma in Engineering (Polytechnic), B.Tech lateral entry in four specializations, and an MBA program – 60 seats, four disciplines. No doctoral programs here. For the B.Tech, lateral entry options mirror the regular ones pretty closely: CSE, IT, Mechanical, and Civil.
The faculty is described as “a distinguished group of educators, experts, engineers, and administrators with two decades of experience.” That sounds impressive. But classroom reality? Mixed. Some students single out a few professors – JB Singh sir gets a nod – as genuinely motivating, using projectors and decent teaching methods. Others, however, say many teachers “are just mark seekers, not the education.” That inconsistency is a red flag. The curriculum follows AKTU’s calendar, and like most affiliated colleges, RemTech doesn’t control what gets taught; it delivers the syllabus. How well depends entirely on the person at the front of the room.
This is where the gap between brochure and reality yawns wide. The college claims 90% placement, with an ambition to hit 100%. The highest package on record is ₹26 LPA from 2014. The average that year was ₹3 LPA.
But that was over a decade ago. Student reviews from recent batches paint a very different picture. Words like “not up to the mark” and “very bad” surface constantly. Some alumni recount that only “2 to 3 companies come in a year.” The maximum salary students mention for on-campus offers now? Around ₹25,000 a month. Even taking a generous view, you’re looking at a far cry from the ₹26 LPA outlier.
The recruiter list is a long one – Infosys, HCL, Samsung, TCS, Wipro, Amazon, Tech Mahindra, Global Logic, Netsmartz, and others. Yet the reality is that only a handful ever visit, and the roles offered are often what you’d expect from mass-hiring drives rather than niche engineering positions. Internships technically get “comprehensive support,” but multiple students complain the college doesn’t actually provide them; you’re on your own. For placement-dependent families, this is the dealbreaker.
For a private AKTU college, RemTech’s fee structure isn’t exorbitant, but it’s not trivial either. Here’s how the numbers break down (latest available):
| Program | Annual Tuition Fees (INR) | Total Program Fees (INR) |
|---|---|---|
| B.Tech | 1.33–2.45 Lakh | 2.45 Lakhs (2025-2026) |
| MBA | Not available | 1.3–1.45 Lakh; 1.33 Lakhs (2025-2026) |
| Diploma (Polytechnic) | 34,000 | 1.01 Lakhs |
| B.Tech (Lateral) | Not available | 1.84 Lakhs (2025-2026) |
Hostel and mess charges are conspicuously absent from the official fee list – no public breakdown. That’s a problem when you’re budgeting. Scholarships exist, based on academic merit, special categories, and financial need, but there’s no detail on how many students actually get them or how much they cover. Assume you’ll pay close to the full sticker price unless you fit a specific state-government scheme.
Getting in follows the AKTU playbook. The primary route is through UPSEE/UPTAC counselling, with JEE Mains scores also accepted. For B.Tech, you need a minimum 45% in 10+2 with Mathematics; MBA asks for 50% in graduation. Seats get allotted based on rank, category, and branch preference during official counselling rounds. Document verification is the final step.
The application window for UG and PG opens around April and runs through June. For the 2026 cycle, UPTAC B.Tech registration was slated for May 27 to July 15, 2026. Expect to pay an application fee of ₹1,000–1,200. International students can apply, though specific NRI/management quota details aren’t publicised. If you have JEE Mains rank, use it; parallel state-level counselling is smoother.
RemTech’s campus is on State Highway-12, about 8 km from Shamli and 25 km from Panipat. It’s a self-contained setup with separate hostels for boys and girls – well-furnished, clean, but with occasional complaints about congestion. The library stands out: over 10,000 books, national and international journal subscriptions, plus digital access via N-List INFLIBNET and the National Digital Library portal. There’s an automated system (e-granthalaya) and an OPAC for searching. At 149.84 square metres, it’s not massive, but it’s functional.
Lab infrastructure is one of the few things students consistently praise – electronics, digital electronics, PCB, measurement, communication, integrated circuits, microwaves labs; computer labs get a “world-class IT infrastructure” mention. Sports facilities are modest: a basketball court, a volleyball court, and a half football ground. Wi-Fi is available across campus, and transport services cover Muzaffarnagar and nearby areas.
Food splits opinion sharply. The mess is where things go south – reviews call it “very bad” or just “okay.” The canteen, though small, serves decent food. Medical support exists on paper, but one student review flatly denies it; likely it’s a basic first-aid room rather than a proper clinic. There’s no bank on campus. Social life gets a 4.3/5 from some reviewers, with cultural events and workshops sprinkled through the year, but don’t expect a buzzing extracurricular scene.
Scrape through CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and Quora, and the consensus is brutally clear: RemTech does a few things decently, then drops the ball on what matters most.
Positives first. The labs and classrooms are genuinely well-equipped. Some faculty members are exceptional – they motivate, they teach well. The infrastructure overall feels solid. If you’re self-driven, you can use these resources to learn.
Now the pain points. Placements are the elephant in the room. “Very bad.” “Only 2-3 companies come.” “Maximum salary 25,000.” One recent review pleads: “Please do not take admission here because it’s a total waste of time, money and the future.” That’s not one disgruntled voice; it echoes a pattern. Teaching quality is hit-or-miss, and the curriculum doesn’t always align with industry needs. Mess food is a persistent complaint. And internships – despite official claims – students say you’re on your own.
Management behaviour gets a neutral-to-positive nod; the chairman and director are perceived as caring and trying to improve placements. But good intentions haven’t yet translated into better numbers. The social life rating of 4.3 may reflect the campus’s activities, but it doesn’t compensate for weak career outcomes.
If your goal is simply to earn an AKTU engineering degree at a private college with decent labs and a library – and you’re fully prepared to arrange your own placements and internships – RemTech might work. The fees aren’t astronomical, and the physical infrastructure is passable. You’ll survive the four years.
But if you’re banking on campus placements, look elsewhere. The gap between the ₹26 LPA glory story and the ₹25,000-a-month reality is a chasm that hasn’t closed in years. Even the official average of ₹3 LPA from a decade ago masks the current downslide. For students with good state entrance ranks, there are AKTU affiliates with stronger placement cells in Ghaziabad, Noida, or Lucknow. RemTech isn’t a scam; it’s just a college where the career support hasn’t kept up with the brochure. That’s a crucial trade-off only you can weigh.
2 streams · Fees from ₹36.0K to ₹91.8K
SAS
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Hostel
Medical
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryRemTech offers full-time B.Tech programs in Civil, Computer Science, Electrical, Electronics & Communication, Information Technology, and Mechanical Engineering, with a total undergraduate intake of approximately 420–480 seats. It also provides a full-time MBA program with an annual intake of 60 seats, and Diploma in Engineering (Polytechnic) courses.
For B.Tech programs, the annual tuition fees range from INR 1.33–2.45 Lakh, with the total program fees for 2025–2026 being around INR 2.45 Lakhs. The total fee for the MBA program is approximately INR 1.3–1.45 Lakh, or INR 1.33 Lakhs for the entire duration in 2025–2026.
Official claims suggest a 90% placement rate, with a highest package reported as ₹26 LPA (Batch of 2014). However, student reviews indicate that placements are “not up to the mark” for recent batches, with an average package around ₹3 LPA (Batch of 2014) or a maximum of ₹25,000. Top recruiters include Infosys, HCL, Samsung, TCS, Wipro, and Amazon.
Admission to RemTech is merit-based, considering scores from entrance exams such as UPSEE, UPTAC, and JEE Mains. Eligibility for B.Tech requires a minimum of 45% in 10+2 with Mathematics, while MBA requires a minimum of 50% in graduation. The selection process involves entrance exam scores, academic merit, counseling, and document verification.
RemTech provides separate, well-furnished hostel facilities for boys and girls with modern amenities. The library houses over 10,000 books and subscribes to national and international journals. It offers digital access through N-List INFLIBNET and NDL, along with Wi-Fi and computerized book circulation.
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