


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

On a compact 1.4-acre campus tucked into Jagadhri city, S.D. Institute of Management & Technology (SDIMT) has been producing management and computer application graduates since 2009—or possibly 1998, as some older records note. What’s clear is its affiliation with Kurukshetra University and a steady, if unglamorous, presence in Yamuna Nagar’s private education space. The institute draws students who want a local, affordable degree and are willing to tolerate a no-frills campus experience.
The academic spread is surprisingly broad for a small institute. On the postgraduate side, SDIMT runs an MBA with 60 seats and an MCA with another 60. At the undergraduate level, you’ll find BBA (90 seats), BCA (90 seats), and three BSc streams—Information Technology, Fashion Designing, and Animation & Multimedia Technology. There’s also an M.Tech programme and a Post Graduate Diploma, though intake numbers for these aren’t publicly pinned down.
All courses follow Kurukshetra University’s syllabus. The specialisations are straightforward: MBA is a general management programme, BBA and BCA follow general tracks, and the BSc offerings dabble in niche creative-technical domains. One institutional talking point is that “ethical education” is woven into the curriculum, though that’s the kind of phrase that sounds good on paper but can be hard to measure in a classroom.
What about the people teaching these courses? The institute claims nine dedicated faculty members—a tiny team by any measure, which brings the student-to-teacher ratio to 1:15. The professors are academically qualified: most hold master’s degrees and doctoral qualifications. For instance, Dr. Shelly Gupta (HOD, Marketing Management) has a doctorate in Marketing Management, Dr. Atul Garg leads the MCA and BCA departments, and Dr. Shilpa Jain serves as Vice Principal and HOD of the MBA department. Student reviews consistently describe the teachers as “highly qualified” and “helpful”—ratings hover around 4.3–4.5 out of 5. Semester exams are reported to be easy, with a roughly 80% pass rate, and attendance rules aren’t strictly enforced, which could be a plus or a red flag depending on your perspective.
Here’s where things get interesting—or frustrating, depending on which numbers you trust.
Official placement data for 2023 reports a highest package of ₹7.5 LPA, an average of ₹5 LPA, and a median of ₹4.5 LPA, with 60 students placed. The recruiter list looks solid on paper: Infosys, Wipro, TCS, IBM, Accenture, Deloitte, BYJU’s, Wise Finserv, and a handful of local companies like Grid India Power Cable and Synergy Institute of Medical Science. Sectors span IT, management, and business services.
But student reviews—particularly from the 2022 MBA and BCA batches—paint a noticeably different picture. An MBA alumnus mentioned a highest offer of ₹3.5 LPA, with the average settling around ₹1.8 to 2 LPA. The placement percentage for MBA was about 60%, while BCA students reported between 40% and 80%, depending on who you asked. One review noted that the number of companies visiting isn’t great, and some students felt placement opportunities were “not very good” during their time. The gap between official claims and user accounts isn’t unusual in private colleges, but at SDIMT it’s worth noting aloud if you’re evaluating ROI.
Internships? Around 90% of students land something—companies like Sarvodya Infotech and Orville Biotek appear—but the catch is that most students find internships on their own. Stipends are typically absent after the second year and sometimes appear only after the third.
SDIMT’s fee structure is one of its strongest selling points if you’re watching your wallet. Annual tuition for BBA and BCA sits at ₹24,000, making the total course outlay ₹72,000 for three years. The MBA costs ₹45,100 per year (₹90,200 total). BSc programmes are pricier, falling between ₹57,000 and ₹93,000 annually, likely reflecting specialised lab costs. M.Tech runs ₹78,000 per annum, and the Post Graduate Diploma is an affordable ₹23,000.
Hostel and mess fees aren’t explicitly detailed in current materials, but hostel charges are applicable. An older review mentions additional costs like library fees (₹1,000), exam fees (₹1,000), and transport charges that vary by distance—so factor those into your budget.
Scholarships are available, mainly on the basis of academic merit and for reserved category or financially needy students. Scheduled caste students reportedly receive the maximum benefits. Loan facilities are also mentioned, though you’ll want to check directly with the institute’s admission office for the latest specifics.
The admission pathway depends on the programme.
For the 2026 academic year, Haryana’s DHE admission window for UG courses runs from May 7 to May 31, 2026. BBA and BCA applicants themselves may have a slightly wider window—May 18 to July 9, 2026 (one source also cites 2025 dates, so confirm nearer the time). An application fee is charged, though the exact amount isn’t publicised upfront. Cutoff ranks for entrance exams aren’t publicly available; the institute tends to fill seats on merit, which likely means relatively accessible cutoffs given the limited competition.
The campus is small but claims a “lush green cover” and a functional layout. Academic spaces include architecturally designed lecture rooms with projectors, glossy whiteboards, and modern furniture, plus air-conditioned seminar halls that seat 100–150 people and come fitted with audiovisual equipment.
Separate hostels for boys and girls are described as hygienic and secure, with ventilated rooms, fans, tube lights, and basic furniture—a chair, table, cupboard. Rooms are non-AC. Students say the hostel quality is “good enough,” and the food in the paid canteen is healthy and professionally managed. Drinking water and generator backup are available.
Labs are a mixed bag. The institute talks up best-in-class computer labs, campus-wide networking, and modern science and technical labs. Physics, Chemistry, Computer, Electrical, and Electronics labs are all present. But at least one student review points out that the number of PCs doesn’t match the student headcount—something to keep in mind if your course depends on lab access.
The library is computerised and described as “huge,” with a large collection of books, journals, magazines, and even CD-ROMs and video cassettes—a bit retro, but functional. General books on literature, psychology, and sports round out the collection.
Sports facilities include indoor and outdoor games: table tennis, lawn tennis, badminton, chess, a football-cum-cricket ground, basketball and volleyball courts, and a gym. Games are organised once a year, and the administration gives sports some importance. Internet is delivered through a dedicated 1 Mbps RF link, with Wi-Fi blanketing the entire campus—canteen, lawns, open theatre, you name it. A medical room handles first-aid needs, and transport is available for students and staff from adjoining areas.
Now for the less rosy part: student life. Reviews repeatedly say there’s “no campus life.” No technical festivals, no sports clubs, no student portals. Some functions happen on festivals and Independence Day, but that’s about it. One BBA student complained that the college “doesn’t provide any kind of curriculum relating to that particular course”—a concerning statement if accurate. The crowd gets harsh criticism: “The crowd of the college is awful. Students even don’t know basic things.” There’s also grumbling about inadequate facilities despite paying fees. On the flip side, management and staff are consistently described as friendly.
Weighing the chatter across CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and other forums, a few themes surface.
Positives:
Negatives:
In short, SDIMT’s academic reputation rests on its professors, but the overall student experience feels transactional—get your degree, sit the easy exams, and hope for the best at placement time.
SDIMT makes sense for a very specific kind of student. If you live in or near Yamuna Nagar, need an affordable BBA, BCA, or MBA, and you’re comfortable with a quiet campus where the real learning happens outside the classroom through self-study and internships, it’s a workable option. The faculty credentials are real, and if you’re a self-starter, you might squeeze decent value out of the programme.
But if you’re chasing a vibrant college life, strong peer networks, and placement numbers you can bank on, SDIMT will probably disappoint. The gulf between official placement figures and alumni reports should give any applicant pause. And the lack of campus culture—no fests, no clubs—means you’ll graduate without many of the soft experiences employers sometimes value. Consider SDIMT as a low-cost launchpad, not a destination.
2 streams · Fees from ₹24.0K to ₹45.1K
Auditorium
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Study LibraryS.D. Institute of Management & Technology offers a range of undergraduate and postgraduate programmes. At the UG level, BBA and BCA each have an annual tuition fee of roughly ₹24,000. The BSc streams (Information Technology, Fashion Designing, Animation & Multimedia Technology) range from ₹57,000 to ₹93,000 per year. At the PG level, the MBA costs around ₹45,100 annually, MCA seats are available, and an M.Tech programme charges approximately ₹78,000 per annum. A Post Graduate Diploma is also offered at about ₹23,000 annually. Additional charges for hostels, exams, and transport apply.
As per official 2023 placement data, the highest package was ₹7.5 LPA, the average ₹5 LPA, and the median ₹4.5 LPA. About 60 students were placed that year. Recruiters include Infosys, Wipro, TCS, IBM, Accenture, Deloitte, BYJU’s, and Wise Finserv, among others. However, student reviews from 2022 suggest a more modest reality—a highest package of around ₹3.5–4.5 LPA, an average of ₹1.8–2 LPA, and placement percentages of 60% for MBA and 40–80% for BCA. Around 90% of students get internships, often without a stipend.
For MBA admission, candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree and appear in a national-level management entrance exam—CAT, MAT, XAT, CMAT, ATMA, or a state-level test. Selection is merit-based, considering undergraduate marks, entrance exam performance, and sometimes work experience. A group discussion and personal interview may be part of the process. BBA admission is simpler: completion of 10+2 in any stream with a minimum of 45% marks. The application window for UG courses typically falls between May and July (for 2026, May 7–31 for DHE admission; May 18–July 9 for BBA/BCA). M.Tech requires a BE/B.Tech with a valid GATE score, though non-GATE candidates can take the institute’s own entrance test.
The 1.4-acre campus provides separate, secure hostels for boys and girls with ventilated, non-AC rooms equipped with basic furniture, fans, and 24-hour water and power backup. Food is served in a hygienic, professionally managed canteen. Academic infrastructure includes air-conditioned seminar halls, projector-equipped classrooms, modern science and computer labs (though some students feel the PCs are insufficient), and a large, computerised library with a wide collection of books and journals. Sports facilities cover table tennis, badminton, lawn tennis, chess, a football-cum-cricket ground, basketball, volleyball, and a gym. The campus is Wi-Fi enabled with a dedicated 1 Mbps link, and a medical room is available. However, student reviews note the absence of technical festivals, clubs, and a vibrant social scene.
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