








Default balanced weighting across all factors.

If you're scanning Chhattisgarh's private engineering landscape, Rungta College of Engineering and Technology (RCET) is one of those names that pops up often — and not just because of that 48 lakh package figure floating around. (Yes, that's a real number from the 2024 placement cycle.) Spread across an 80-acre campus in Bhilai, the college has been around since 1999 under CSVTU affiliation. It holds NBA accreditation valid through 2026, NAAC accreditation since 2018, and AICTE approval. That kind of compliance stack is notable for a private institution, even if you've seen shinier marketing material. I've dug through the data, spoken to students, and read the reviews — here's what you actually get at RCET.
The B.Tech lineup is broad — 14 specializations, including Computer Science, Mechanical, Civil, Electronics & Communication, Electrical, Information Technology, and the newer offerings like Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning and Cyber Security. You'll also find Automobile and Telecommunication tucked in there. If you're looking for a diploma route, the college runs two 3-year after-10th Diploma courses. At the postgraduate level, there's M.Tech in a couple of disciplines, an MBA, and an MCA. PhD programs exist too, so the academic ladder runs all the way up.
And here's something that distinguishes the curriculum: industry-linked certifications. The college has training collaborations with Google and Microsoft, plus academic tie-ups with TCS, Capgemini, and Accenture. You'll get access to NPTEL courses and Virtual Labs. It's not a replacement for solid coursework, but it does add weight to a résumé, especially if you're actively pursuing those certs.
Faculty wise, the teaching staff includes PhD holders, and the teacher-student ratio is described internally as "perfect" — take that as you will. The academic calendar runs two exams per semester, and you'll need to clear a 70% attendance bar. Miss it, and you're sitting out. That's non-negotiable.
The highest package for 2024 hit INR 48 LPA. There's also an INR 38 LPA figure from the 2023-24 cycle and an INR 34 LPA offer by SAP in a recent year. So yes, top-tier tech recruiters do land here: Amazon, Microsoft, Google, DBS Bank, Goldman Sachs, SAP Labs, Persistent, and Steria have all picked up graduates. Major IT service companies — TCS, Infosys, Wipro, Cognizant, Capgemini, Tech Mahindra, HCL — are regulars. You'll also spot LAVA, JUSPAY, Flipkart, BOSCH, ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, and even Adidas in the list. The diversity of recruiters is a genuine plus.
Now let's talk averages, because that's where things get more complicated. The official placement cell claims an average package of INR 6.5 LPA for the recent cycle. The NIRF 2024 data put the median at INR 6.45 lakh for UG and INR 6.25 lakh for PG courses. That lines up neatly. But student feedback on CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and elsewhere often tells a different story. Across dozens of reviews, the working average cited lands between INR 3 and 5 LPA. A few alumni point to INR 4 LPA (2023) or INR 4.5 LPA as the real benchmark. The gap between the official claim and what alumni say on Reddit is notable — and it's likely because a handful of eye-popping offers pull the arithmetic mean upward while the bulk of students get offers in the 3-6 LPA range.
Placement percentage is similarly fuzzy. The institute talks about "100% placement assistance" and one report mentions 87% for RCST in the 2019-20 session. On the ground, CSE and IT students see roughly 80-90% placement of those who are eligible and active in the process. Core and non-technical branches, though, get a much smaller slice of the pie. One review from a CSE student pegged the branch's placement rate at just 30%, which seems low compared to others, but overall I'd say 40-60% of the entire eligible batch gets placed each year — depending heavily on your branch. If you're in CSE or IT and put in the work, the odds are decent. For Mechanical or Civil, you'll need to hustle off-campus or settle for a lower-paying role.
Internships are a weak spot. The college formally allows internships from the third year onward, but the placement cell doesn't actively source them. Most students end up finding internships on their own. Some landed roles at Reliance, TCS, and even Microsoft, and there's mention of 40-45% of CSE students getting internships at these firms. Others say only 2-3% got off-campus internships at reputable organizations. The college did arrange on-campus project training in Machine Learning, which is good, but if you're hoping for a structured summer internship program baked into the curriculum, you'll be mostly on your own. Check the official NIRF Rankings for more on reported salary medians.
B.Tech annual tuition for 2025-2027 is pegged at ₹73,000 to ₹75,000. That's on the affordable side for a private engineering college. Hostel for four years costs ₹3.6 lakh, and the total four-year outlay — tuition, hostel, mess — comes to about ₹6.3 lakh. Other bits: a caution deposit of ₹1,000, admission form ₹1,500, and registration ₹250. If you're looking at a specific branch like CSE (AI & ML), the entire course fee is ₹3.24 lakh.
Scholarships are surprisingly varied. The Dr. Avdhoot Shivanand Scholarship covers tuition for UG and Diploma STEM students on a merit-cum-need basis. The Tuition Fees Waiver Scheme is for meritorious, economically backward students — family income under ₹6 lakh per annum — and waives full tuition for up to 5% of the sanctioned intake. Girls can apply for the Pragati Scholarship (₹50,000 annually), and specially-abled students have the Saksham Scholarship, same amount. Students from J&K can tap the PMSSS, which provides ₹1,00,000 for maintenance plus ₹1,25,000 for academic fees. Minority community students with 55%+ in 10+2 qualify for central government scholarships. Bihar students have the Student Credit Card Scheme. There are also merit scholarships that offer up to 70% tuition fee waivers for high PET ranks, and awards for performance in sports, music, or art. That's a decent safety net if you meet the criteria.
For B.Tech, you'll need a valid score in either JEE Main or the Chhattisgarh Pre-Engineering Test (CGPET). No specific cutoff ranks or percentiles are published — admission happens via merit in these exams and the DTE's online counselling. So while you don't need a stellar rank, a decent JEE Main percentile or CGPET score is necessary to secure a seat in the preferred branch.
Key dates to watch: JEE Main Session 2 results are expected on April 20, 2026. The CGPET 2026 exam is on May 14, with admit cards from May 4. Application forms, fee details, and counselling schedules appear on the college's official website. An M.Tech aspirant needs a GATE score; MBA candidates can use CMAT, MAT, CAT, XAT, or ATMA, plus their BBA marks; MCA admission relies on PRE MCA or NIMCET. Diplomas are through CG-PPT.
Management quota is available. Whether you're from Chhattisgarh or outside, the college handles these admissions internally. Expect additional fees. If you can't crack the entrance cutoffs, this is a possible — albeit costlier — route.
The campus feels expansive: 80+ acres of greenery, with four academic blocks and two new ones under construction. Hostels are separate for boys and girls, offering air-conditioned residential apartments with double, triple, or quadruple occupancy. You get private bathrooms, living rooms with balconies — definitely above the average hostel experience in the region. The mess food, though, is a consistent pain point. Some call it "okay", others say the variety is "nice", but across reviews, it's a recurring complaint. If you're a foodie, you might find yourself gravitating toward the multiple on-campus food courts, Nescafe Corner, Chat Corner, and juice shops.
Infrastructure is solid elsewhere. Over 150 labs are well-maintained. The central library sprawls across 25,000 sq ft with more than 1 lakh books and 500+ online journals, plus access to IEEE, Wiley, Springer, Elsevier, McGraw Hill, J-Gate, and DELNET. It stays open late for residential students. The campus runs on 1 Gbps Wi-Fi with indoor and outdoor access points — free for all students.
There are 124 smart classrooms equipped with LCD projectors, PCs, and IP cameras, and 65 tutorial rooms for smaller groups. Four auditoriums seat 2,000 combined, and an open-air theatre accommodates over 5,000. Sports facilities cover the expected outdoor games — football, basketball, volleyball, cricket, badminton, kabaddi, kho-kho — and indoor ones like table tennis, carrom, chess. A modern gym exists, and squash plus a swimming pool are in the pipeline. On-campus medical facilities include full-time doctors, ambulance, and wheelchairs. There's an ATM, departmental store, stationery shop, and transport from the college. With 600+ CCTV cameras, security is tight. The strictness you'll hear about in reviews extends to the physical spaces too — you can't just lounge around anywhere without a reason.
The location is practical: about 7 km from Bhilai Nagar Railway Station (some say 11 km from Bhilai Railway Station), 6 km from the Durg Urban Transport Bus Depot, and 45-51 km from Swami Vivekananda International Airport in Raipur. Not city-center convenience, but manageable.
Scanning CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and other forums, a few themes emerge clearly.
The good stuff. The campus infrastructure is genuinely appreciated — classrooms, labs, libraries, Wi-Fi. Faculty are seen as supportive and strict about core education; many have PhDs, and they're present for guidance. Placement numbers for CSE and IT are considered strong, with big names showing up. The emphasis on discipline and academic rigor is a plus for many. The college is affordable, and campus life is eventful with festivals and clubs. There's a large cultural festival every year that students seem to enjoy.
What grates. The strict rules pinch. College timing and attendance are rigorously enforced — the 70% minimum is a hard line, and you can't sit just anywhere on campus without a valid reason. Ventilation in classrooms is a problem: no ACs, just fans, which can test patience in Chhattisgarh's heat. Hostel food comes up again and again as a sore point. Internship support from the college is weak; students often complain they have to find opportunities themselves. And if you're not in a technical branch, placement opportunities are substantially thinner. Some reviewers say the library needs more updated resources, and practical, job-ready skill training could be better.
Teaching quality, overall, is rated well. Hostel rooms are good, but the food issue drags down the living experience. Wardens and ragging history aren't explicitly mentioned in any of the reviews I saw, so that may not be a major red flag. The management's strictness can feel stifling to students accustomed to a more relaxed campus culture, but others see it as a structured environment.
RCET makes sense if you're a budget-conscious engineering aspirant in Chhattisgarh, especially in CSE or IT with a realistic salary expectation of around 4-6 LPA and a shot at something higher if you're a top performer. The accreditation stack (NBA, NAAC, AICTE) gives the degree decent academic credibility. Infrastructure is above average, and the placement cell does bring in recruiters that matter.
But the experience comes with strings. The strict discipline, lack of AC in classrooms, hit-or-miss hostel food, and the do-it-yourself internship culture can be draining. If you're in a core or non-technical branch, the placement picture dims considerably. And if your goal is a college that actively hand-holds you toward premium internships or offers a vibrant, flexible campus vibe, RCET might not be the right fit. It's a college that rewards students who are self-driven, comfortable with structure, and aiming squarely for IT sector jobs. For everyone else, the trade-offs might feel too heavy.
53 ranking entries · click any row to see year-by-year trend
Year-on-Year Trends
3 streams · Fees from ₹23.0K to ₹75.1K
2 exams with cutoff data available
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B.Tech Agricultural Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) | 20.204 | 2023 | R1 |
| B.Tech Electrical and Electronics Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) | 24.143 | 2023 | R1 |
| B.Tech Artificial Intelligence | General / Unreserved (UR) | 27.163 | 2023 | R1 |
| B.Tech Agricultural Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) | 33.417 | 2022 | R1 |
| B.Tech Electrical and Electronics Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) | 29.542 | 2022 | R1 |
| B.Tech Artificial Intelligence | General / Unreserved (UR) | 21.167 | 2022 | R1 |
| B.Tech Agricultural Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) | 40.426 | 2021 | R1 |
| B.Tech Electrical and Electronics Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) | 38.297 | 2021 | R1 |
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