


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

It sits right off the Ahmedabad-Himmatnagar Highway, quiet and unassuming. Sabar Institute of Technology for Girls is a five-acre private campus that’s been around since 2007, churning out women engineers under Gujarat Technological University. The institute’s whole identity is built around offering a safe, controlled environment for young women to study engineering. And in that, it largely succeeds. But once you scratch the surface and start talking to the students—current and former—a very different picture emerges, especially around jobs. The placement claim of 60% doesn’t hold up under scrutiny, and that’s where you need to listen closely to what alumni say on CollegeDunia and Shiksha. This profile breaks down what the college gets right, where it falls short, and whether it makes sense for your B.E. journey.
Here’s a snapshot of the essential numbers and facts, drawn from the latest available data and verified student reports.
All undergraduate programs are full-time B.E. degrees under GTU’s curriculum. The sanctioned intake numbers tell you where the demand sits: Computer Engineering leads with 120 seats, followed by IT at 90, and Electronics & Communication at 60. Instrumentation & Control Engineering and Electrical & Electronics Engineering round out the offerings though the brief doesn’t specify intake for those two—smaller batches are the norm for niche streams.
The teaching philosophy, as the college projects it, leans heavily on theoretical rigour with an eye on ethical, social, and sustainability issues. Students consistently rate the faculty a solid 4 out of 5, pointing out that teachers are dedicated, follow a strict syllabus, and are well-behaved. The theory part? Top-notch. The catch is that practical application doesn’t get the same love. Workshops and seminars happen occasionally, but the college’s own documentation admits it needs to build more ties with companies. For a campus that preaches professional problem-solving, that’s a noticeable gap.
Faculty numbers hover around 75+, though the brief notes an earlier count of 50. There’s no clear data on how many hold PhDs or have notable industry backgrounds. That lack of transparency doesn’t inspire confidence if you’re looking for research exposure or strong mentorship networks. The academic calendar, CGPA system, and grading patterns aren’t publicly detailed, which is fairly common for GTU-affiliated colleges, but it’s something you’d want to ask about during a campus visit.
Now we get to the uncomfortable part. The official 2025 numbers: highest package 8 LPA, average 5 LPA, median 4.5 LPA. That looks decent on a college brochure. But student reviews across multiple platforms paint a vastly grimmer picture. Alumni say only 5–10% of the batch actually lands a job through campus placements. That’s a long way from the claimed 60%. The average package, according to those same voices, sits at 3-5 LPA.
This isn’t a case of “maybe the data is slightly off.” The gap is enormous. It could be that the official figure includes students who found jobs off-campus or through other channels. Or it might reflect a very generous interpretation of “placed,” counting even part-time gigs or internships. Either way, if you’re banking on a college placement cell to kick-start your engineering career, you need to adjust expectations.
Recruiters? Tech Infinity is the named go-to. The brief also mentions that Google reportedly visited the campus, but there’s no verified record of anyone actually getting hired there. That’s the kind of detail that fuels more eye-rolls than trust. Internships fare a bit better—about 50-60% of students bag one, but stipends are non-existent. Working for free during your summer break is a tough pill to swallow, especially when you’re paying ₹55,000 a year in tuition.
The sectors that scratch the surface are IT and core engineering. If you’re in Computer Engineering or IT, you might land something in a small to mid-sized firm. Electronics and Electrical students face a harder climb. Overall, placement support from the institute remains, to put it gently, a work in progress.
Despite the placement concerns, the fee structure is relatively gentle on the wallet. Tuition is a flat ₹55,000 per year. Over four years, that’s ₹2,20,000. Add mandatory charges—application fee (₹1,000 one-time), exam fees (₹5,000 per year), library/technology fees (₹3,000 per year), and miscellaneous (₹2,000 per year)—and the total estimated cost for a B.E. degree, excluding hostel, comes to about ₹2,61,000. That’s cheaper than many private engineering colleges in Gujarat.
Hostel costs vary by room sharing:
The 200-bed girls’ hostel has single-seater rooms available. Reviews on the food are mixed—some call it hygienic, others grumble that it’s not great. If you’re a picky eater, you might want to budget for outside meals occasionally, though the campus is near a highway, so options are limited.
Scholarship-wise, the institute points to government schemes: Post Matric Scholarship for SC/ST/OBC students and the Merit-cum-Means Scholarship, both dependent on academic merit, category, and family income. Applications typically go through state or national portals, so students need to be proactive about checking deadlines.
Getting into Sabar Institute of Technology for Girls isn’t a cutthroat affair. Admissions are merit-based, weighing your 10+2 marks alongside scores from GUJCET or JEE Main. The institute doesn’t publish cutoff ranks, which is telling—it’s not a campus where seats fill up in the first round of counselling. For the upcoming cycle (GUJCET 2026 counselling is slated for April 25 to May 5, 2026), you’ll go through the standard state counselling process if you’re using GUJCET. JEE Main scores are accepted as well, but given the low competition, even moderate percentiles should secure a seat.
The application fee is around ₹1,000. There’s no mention of a management or NRI quota, which keeps things simple. If you’re a girl who’s passed 10+2 with Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics, and you’ve taken either entrance exam, you meet the eligibility bar. The real question isn’t getting in—it’s deciding if this is the right place for the next four years.
For a college of this scale, the infrastructure punches above its weight. The campus is relatively new, with well-maintained buildings. Labs are a highlight: the computer lab has the latest software and configurations, and the electronics and electrical labs boast modern instruments. The library houses over 15,000 books, subscribes to printed journals, and provides access to 250 e-journals and e-books, with a reading hall that can seat 250. That’s a solid resource for a self-driven student.
Sports facilities are surprisingly robust. There’s a sports complex with badminton, volleyball, and athletics, plus a gym. The institute’s teams have a history of decent performance—GTU Kho-Kho and Kabaddi championships, a runner-up finish in handball, and multiple athletics medals between 2012 and 2014. That sort of thing adds texture to campus life, and students routinely mention celebrations and activities as a positive.
“Spandan,” the national-level techno-cultural festival, and the Annual Day bring dance, drama, and competitions into the mix. The campus is Wi-Fi enabled, though you’ll likely find the speed adequate rather than blazing. The cafeteria serves hygienic meals, a medical facility handles routine care, and there’s a transport facility for day scholars. No on-campus bank or ATM is mentioned, so you’ll need to plan for that.
Hostel life is decent. It’s a girls-only campus, so the environment feels safe and homely, but the food remains a consistent sore point. Single-seater rooms are a plus for those who need privacy.
If you spend an evening reading CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and Quora threads, a consistent narrative forms. Here’s the distilled version.
The positives: Students love the infrastructure—spacious classrooms, well-equipped labs, and a green, calm campus. The faculty gets a thumbs-up for being supportive, well-educated, and strict about the curriculum. Management is seen as caring, at least on the surface. Campus life, with all its events and sports, is frequently called “awesome.”
The negatives: Placements, hands down. Even students who praise the college otherwise acknowledge that the job scene is disappointing. The theoretical focus means graduates feel underprepared for real-world engineering tasks. Hostel food quality is unpredictable. And while the lab equipment is good, the opportunity to use it for meaningful projects outside the syllabus seems limited.
Teaching quality: As noted, theory is strong. One review reads, “You’ll know your subjects well enough to clear GATE if you put in the effort.” But the lack of practical exposure stings for those who want to get their hands dirty building circuits or coding real-world applications.
Management: Generally responsive to student needs regarding infrastructure and campus activities. Grievance redressal isn’t detailed, but no major red flags pop up.
All in all, the institute delivers a safe, structured, and reasonably affordable education. What it doesn’t deliver is a launchpad into a high-paying tech job. That burden falls squarely on the student.
Sabar Institute of Technology for Girls is a classic low-risk, low-reward proposition. If you’re a girl from a nearby town looking for a secure, no-frills engineering degree at a price that won’t break your family’s bank, it fits the bill. The infrastructure is good, the faculty cares, and you’ll get a GTU degree that ticks the eligibility box for government exams and higher studies. The campus life, with its festivals and sports, adds a layer of holistic development that keeps things from feeling too drab.
But if placements matter—and for most engineering aspirants, they do—this college will test your patience. The gap between the official 60% placement figure and the ground reality of 5-10% is hard to ignore. The average salary, even if you land a job, hovers around ₹3-5 lakh, which is modest by industry standards. And the lack of strong industry ties means you’ll have to hustle on your own, building skills outside the classroom and hunting for off-campus opportunities. For a Computer Science student willing to upskill aggressively online, that might work out fine. For a core engineering stream, it’s a steeper climb.
So who should attend? A student who prioritises safety, affordability, and a supportive all-women environment, and who has a clear plan for either off-campus placements or GATE preparation. Who shouldn’t? Anyone whose primary criterion is a robust placement cell and a handsome package from day one. You won’t find it here, not consistently. Approach with eyes wide open, and you can extract good value. Walk in expecting a job to land in your lap, and you’ll likely walk out frustrated.
1 stream · Fees from ₹2.2 L to ₹2.2 L
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
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Study LibraryThe total tuition fee for the 4-year B.E./B.Tech program is ₹2,20,000 (₹55,000 per year). Additional mandatory fees for application, exams, library/technology, and miscellaneous charges amount to approximately ₹41,000 over four years, bringing the total estimated cost to ₹2,61,000, excluding hostel fees.
The official average package reported for 2025 is 5 LPA, with a highest package of 8 LPA and a median package of 4.5 LPA. However, student reviews indicate a lower placement percentage of 5-10% with an average package ranging from 3-5 LPA.
The institute offers a girls' hostel with a capacity of 200 beds. Reviews describe the hostel quality as ranging from "okay" to "very good," with single-seater rooms available. While some reviews mention hygienic mess facilities, others note that the food quality is not always great.
Admission to the B.E./B.Tech programs at Sabar Institute of Technology for Girls is based on merit, considering performance in 10+2 qualifying examinations and scores from entrance exams such as GUJCET and JEE Main.
Yes, eligible students can apply for government scholarships, including the Post Matric Scholarship for SC/ST/OBC categories and the Merit-cum-Means Scholarship. These scholarships are awarded based on academic merit, reservation category, and family income, with applications typically submitted online through state or national scholarship portals.
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