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Established in 1980 and quietly holding a NAAC A+ grade—something many of its peers in Andhra Pradesh can't match—Sagi Ramakrishnam Raju Engineering College (SRKR) sits on a compact 30-acre campus in Chinnamiram, Bhimavaram. It’s autonomous, JNTUK-affiliated, and AICTE-approved. The college runs a broad set of B.Tech specializations, from Civil Engineering to AI & Data Science, with a student-faculty ratio of 15:1 and an official placement average around ₹4.5 LPA. But students will tell you the real numbers on the ground can look very different. That doesn’t mean the degree isn’t worth it—it’s just that how you experience SRKR often depends on what department you’re in and whether you live in the hostel.
The NAAC A+ grade is a genuine differentiator here. You can cross-check that on the NAAC website, and the college’s NIRF profile is available on the NIRF rankings portal. Those aren't minor details—they directly affect how a degree from here is perceived in the Andhra Pradesh government sector and for higher studies.
SRKR runs a wide portfolio of B.Tech programs, many added in the last few years to ride the AI wave. The intake figures give a sense of where the demand is:
M.Tech offerings are smaller—Structural Engineering (12), Computer Science & Technology (12), Communication Systems (6), Power System & Automation (6), Information Technology (6), and CAD/CAM (6). Ph.D. programmes are also running, and there's a BBA programme with 60 seats.
Academically, the college leans on industry tie-ups that add some heft to the curriculum. MoUs with Cisco NetAcad, Oracle Academy, Google Cloud, Infosys Spring Board, IIT Bombay Spoken Tutorial, and an MoU with Purdue University (since 2018) for research collaboration signal that the college isn’t completely inside its own bubble. The Atal Community Innovation Center is supposed to push entrepreneurship, and faculty have published work on diabetes detection using machine learning and rapid image recognition in remote sensing.
Most students rate the teaching quality a 4 out of 5. That’s not surprising given the 415 faculty members and a 1:15 ratio. But a few reviews mention that some computer labs run on older machines—so the “updated systems” claim is true in the main labs, not everywhere.
The placement narrative at SRKR requires a careful reading. The college’s official placement report for 2023-24 says 735 students out of 1320 eligible were placed, yielding a placement rate of 55.68%. That same year, 697 of 1494 graduates were placed, which lands at 48.57%. Student reviews on CollegeDunia and Shiksha often cite 70–90% placement rates for CSE and IT branches, which may include off-campus offers that aren’t tracked in the centralized report.
The highest packages tell a similar story of two sides. An unverified student review claims a ₹47.6 LPA offer, but the verifiable official highs for 2023-24 include ₹25 LPA from HackerRank, ₹18 LPA from Data Insights, and ₹16.3 LPA from Darwinbox. In 2024-25, the top offer dropped to ₹14.2 LPA. For perspective, the 2021-22 season saw a ₹29 LPA high—so the trend has cooled.
Average and median packages reflect the bulk of offers:
Recruiters include TCS, Infosys, Cognizant, Accenture, Capgemini, Virtusa, Mphasis, MEIL, TATA Steel, JSW, Darwinbox, HackerRank, and occasionally Amazon. The IT sector dominates, though mechanical and civil students can land core roles with companies like MEIL and TATA Steel.
Internships are a work in progress. While the college promotes internships and recently won an Excellence Award under the Junifar Network (2025), student reviews still call them “rare” in some branches. That’s a concern if you’re banking on a pre-placement offer.
So, what’s the real placement picture? If you’re a CSE or AI-stream student with solid coding skills, you can expect multiple mass-recruiting offers with the chance of a standout package. For civil and mechanical, the numbers are thinner, and a 55% overall placement rate suggests nearly half the batch doesn’t walk away with a campus job. That’s a decent outcome for a state-run private college, but set expectations accordingly.
The fee structure is competitive for an autonomous private college in Andhra Pradesh:
Hostel and mess expenses add ₹70,000 to ₹90,000 annually, depending on AC availability. There’s no official cap on AC room supplements, but the no-AC option is around ₹86,000.
Scholarships follow AP State Government norms, which means tuition fee reimbursement for eligible categories. Management quota seats (30%) don’t get that benefit. Overall, a four-year B.Tech degree with hostel will run you roughly ₹7–9 lakhs, which is in line with many private engineering colleges in the region.
B.Tech admissions hinge on AP EAPCET (formerly EAMCET) scores. The selection process is merit-based, followed by counseling. JEE Main scores are also accepted, but the bulk of seats fill through state-level counseling.
Cutoffs for 2023 (last round closing ranks for AP EAMCET) ranged from 3793 to 38990, with CSE being the most competitive. The 2025 cutoff for the General AI category (last round) sits between 2005 and 27879. That’s a wide band—top specializations like CSE close early, while Civil and Mechanical drop significantly.
Seat allocation follows the government’s 70:30 rule: 70% under Convener Quota (Category A) and 30% Management Quota (Category B). The management quota is split evenly between NRI and non-NRI students. Eligibility for Category B requires Class 12 with specified aggregate in PCM and a qualifying AP EAMCET score. Application deadlines for 2026 AP EAPCET have already passed; the exam is scheduled for May 12-15, 2026. PG admissions use AP PGECET or GATE, with GATE COAP rounds active in May 2026.
SRKR’s 30-acre campus is compact but functional. The greenery and cleanliness get consistent praise. Smart classrooms, seminar halls with projection tech, and a digital learning centre with 252 systems are solid infrastructure for an autonomous college. But not everything is shiny.
Hostels: separate blocks for boys (400 capacity) and girls (800 capacity). Rooms are spacious, furnished, and generally well-ventilated—many students say they’re “considerably good.” The women’s hostel benefits from more recent construction. However, several reviews paint a different picture of hostel life. One Shiksha review sums it up: “The hostel is located outside of the college. It is very boring, and the timings are very hard and harsh.” Others mention wardens who “treat students like prisoners.” That’s consistent enough to be a pattern. No ragging, though, and that matters.
Food quality is the single biggest complaint. It’s described as “average,” “eatable,” or “not to the mark.” Snacks and milk in the evening are a small plus. The hostel mess is a known weakness—you’ll adapt or figure out outside food, but don’t expect a culinary highlight.
Wi-Fi: campus-wide coverage with a 1 Gbps LAN backbone and a 1000 Mbps leased line sounds great. In the academic blocks and library, it works. In hostels, multiple reviews call it “horrible” or “not efficient.” That disparity is frustrating if you’re working on projects late at night.
Library: the central and digital libraries hold over 75,000 books, subscriptions to IEEE, Springer, Elsevier, and 6,458 e-journals. RFID-based automation and DELNET membership add value. It’s open 9 AM to 8 PM on weekdays, shorter on weekends. A genuine strength.
Sports: the array is impressive—cricket ground with a running track, two synthetic badminton courts, tennis, basketball, volleyball, football, hockey, kabaddi, archery, and a multi-station gym. That’s more than many larger universities can boast.
Canteen and transport: the canteen is newly modified and gets decent reviews. College buses connect major nearby areas. There’s an on-campus medical centre for basic needs. No bank on campus, though.
The consensus online, across Shiksha, CollegeDunia, and Quora, splits neatly into three camps.
Positive camp (the majority): campus infrastructure is beautiful and peaceful. Faculty are supportive and qualified. Labs and library are good. Festivals, clubs (Toastmasters, Coding Club, Start-Up Club, Cine Club, and many others), and an annual day give the social scene enough momentum. Placements, at least in computer science streams, land many students in TCS, Infosys, and Cognizant.
On-the-fence camp: they’ll concede the infrastructure is good but will tell you the Wi-Fi in hostels doesn’t work, the computers in some labs need updating, and the placement numbers the college advertises don’t match what they see in non-CS branches. They’ll also point out that the highest packages are rare, and the average for most is closer to ₹4–5 LPA.
Critical camp: the hostel rules and food are the main trigger. “We have to compromise a bit with food” is the polite version. The less polite version says the food is “awful” and wardens over-police students. Some also note that placements have been on a downward trend—highest salaries have fallen, and the pandemic’s momentum has faded.
Nobody complains about ragging, and almost nobody questions the teachers’ competence. That’s a quiet sign of institutional health.
SRKR is a solid choice for a particular kind of student: someone from Andhra Pradesh who wants an affordable, accredited B.Tech degree with a reasonable shot at a mass-recruiting IT job, and who values a peaceful campus over a party scene. If you’re prepared to handle the hostel food and can work around patchy hostel Wi-Fi, the return on your degree works out mathematically—₹8–9 lakhs all-in over four years against a starting salary of ₹4.5–6 LPA is a fair deal.
But if you’re dead set on a ₹15+ LPA package straight out of college or a vibrant hostel culture, you’ll feel out of place. The placements are heavily skewed toward IT, and even within IT, top offers are few. For mechanical and civil engineers, the campus job pathway is narrower. The college works quietly and steadily—it’s not a launchpad, but it’s also not a gamble.
15 ranking entries · click any row to see year-by-year trend
Year-on-Year Trends
2 streams · Fees from ₹54.0K to ₹77.0K
1 exam with cutoff data available — showing recent entries
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B.Tech Computer Science Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,702 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 8,478 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Artificial Intelligence and Data Science | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 9,227 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Electronics & Communication Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 11,473 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Internet of Things & Cyber Security Including Blockchain Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 11,768 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Information Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 14,065 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Computer Science and Design | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 14,004 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Computer Science and Information Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 15,332 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Computer Science and Business Systems | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 15,950 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Electrical and Electronics Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 26,742 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Mechanical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 42,481 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Civil Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 55,446 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Computer Science Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 5,104 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 7,738 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Artificial Intelligence and Data Science | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 9,951 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Electronics & Communication Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 11,379 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Internet of Things & Cyber Security Including Blockchain Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 11,730 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Information Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 14,638 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Computer Science and Design | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 14,842 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Computer Science and Information Technology | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 15,653 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Computer Science and Business Systems | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 15,440 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Electrical and Electronics Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 28,561 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Mechanical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 45,876 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Civil Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 57,540 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Tech Computer Science Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 1,07,338 | 2024 | R1 |
Auditorium
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Study LibrarySRKR Engineering College is an autonomous institution established in 1980 and affiliated with Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University Kakinada (JNTUK). It is AICTE-approved, UGC-recognized, and holds a NAAC A+ grade. Six B.Tech programs are NBA accredited, and the college is ISO 9001:2015 certified.
The official placement data for 2023-24 shows an average package of ₹4.5 LPA for UG students and a median of ₹4.50 LPA. The highest verified offer that year was ₹25 LPA from HackerRank, followed by ₹18 LPA from Data Insights. In 2024-25, the top package dropped to ₹14.2 LPA. Top recruiters include TCS, Infosys, Cognizant, Darwinbox, Accenture, Data Insights, Intel, and MEIL. Student reviews sometimes cite higher averages (₹6-8 LPA), but the college’s own placement rate for 2023-24 was 55.68%.
Admission to B.Tech programs is based on merit through AP EAPCET scores; JEE Main scores are also accepted. Candidates must have passed Class 12 with Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics. The selection process involves qualifying the entrance exam and participating in state-level counseling. The college reserves 70% of seats for convener quota and 30% for management quota (including NRI).
SRKR provides separate hostels for boys (capacity 400) and girls (800) with furnished, spacious rooms. Annual hostel fees range from ₹70,000 to ₹90,000, with AC rooms charged extra. While rooms and hygiene are generally praised, food quality gets mixed reviews—ranging from "good" to "awful"—and hostel rules are considered strict, with limited freedom and wardens described by some as too harsh. Wi-Fi in hostels is often reported as inefficient.
SRKR was ranked in the Band 151-300 (Innovation) by NIRF 2023. In Times Engineering 2024, it stood at #53 for B.Tech and 3rd among Top Private Engineering Institutes in AP in 2023. Careers360 awarded it AAA+ rating in 2023 and 2024, and Silicon India ranked it 31st nationally in 2024. Other recognitions include NAAC A+, South Central Zone Best Performing Institute Award (2025), and a Diamond Band rating for campus life in the MHW World Institutional Ranking.
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