


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

SB Jain Institute of Technology Management and Research (SBJITMR) occupies a curious spot on Nagpur’s engineering map. On one hand, the institute has NAAC ‘A’ accreditation, three NBA-accredited programs, and a new autonomous status it brags about in every brochure. On the other, the hard placement data submitted to NIRF for 2023–24 shows only 31.94% of students placed, with a median salary of ₹3.38 lakh. That gap—between what the college promises and what the official numbers quietly admit—is the first thing any serious applicant needs to stare at.
SBJITMR runs a typical Nagpur engineering buffet: plenty of B.Tech flavors, a side of management and computer applications, and a small doctoral kitchen. The institute offers seven B.Tech specialisations—Computer Science & Engineering (intake 180), Artificial Intelligence with Data Science (60), AI with Machine Learning (60), Electronics & Telecommunication (60), Electrical Engineering (30), Mechanical Engineering (30), and Information Technology. There’s also a BCA program. Total B.Tech intake touches 720. At the master’s level, you’ll find M.Tech in Electronics Engineering, an MBA (240 seats) and MCA. PhD programs exist in both engineering and management.
Because the college has been autonomous since the 2020–21 session, it designs its own curriculum and says it updates things to line up with NEP 2020. The marketing phrase is “Education Redefined.” What that translates to on the ground is a push for activity-based learning, audit courses for soft skills, and some industry exposure. Faculty numbers hover around 150 (some sources cite 127 or 118—the headcount seems fluid), and about 25 of them hold PhDs. The good news from students: most reviewers call teachers knowledgeable and supportive, with practical presentations used in theory classes. The not-so-good news: the autonomous curriculum’s industry readiness is a claim that’s easier to make than prove without strong placement data.
Placement figures at SBJITMR are a jumble of official numbers and student anecdotes that don’t always line up. Let’s unpack the hard data first. For the 2023–24 batch, the institute’s reported placement percentage stood at 31.94%, with a median salary of ₹3.38 lakh. Fast forward to 2025, and the numbers being floated are a highest of ₹12 LPA and an average of ₹4.2 LPA. Those are the headlines. The footnotes matter.
Student reviews on platforms like CollegeDunia and Shiksha throw out wildly different claims. One review says the CSE batch (2024) achieved 85% placement. Another says IT and core branches saw 60% placement “last year.” Older data from the college itself shows 80% placement in 2020 and 2021, and a full 100% in 2019. The drop-off since then is steep, and the 31.94% figure—if accurate—makes you wonder how many of those ₹12 LPA offers even exist. A handful of high fliers can pull up the average without helping the median much, and the median is a far more honest number for any parent.
Recruiters that visit include a mix of IT service giants (TCS, Infosys, Wipro, Cognizant, Capgemini, HCL, Tech Mahindra) and a smattering of core engineering firms like Schwing Stetter, Voltas, Siemens, BHEL, and KPIT Cummins. You’ll also spot names like Flipkart, Amazon, Genpact, and Byjus in the list. The college claims 450+ students secure internships each year, with 75% landing roles at companies like Havells, Crompton, and TCS. Internship activity is decent, but a full-time conversion rate would tell the real story.
Annual tuition depends heavily on your category. General category students pay ₹1,04,000 per year. OBC/EBC candidates pay ₹59,437 annually, and SC/ST students benefit from significantly reduced fees. Taken at face value, a general category B.Tech student will spend roughly ₹4.16 lakh on tuition over four years; some estimates put the total cost between ₹3.51 lakh and ₹5 lakh depending on hostel, exam fees, and other overheads. Hostel and mess charges aren’t published as a clean all-inclusive figure, though the food quality is described as decent.
Scholarships exist, but they don’t exactly blanket the student body. Government schemes cover SC, ST, OBC, and primary-teacher concessions, and there’s the state-level tuition fee waiver scheme (TFWS). The institute itself offers a “late Mrs. Jaswantiben Anantrai Parekh need-based scholarship” for economically weaker families, plus an institute-funded scholarship of ₹50,000 for university and class toppers. EBC scholarships apply if parental income is below ₹8 lakh. However, at least one student review explicitly states the college “not really tends to help, as I saw many financially weak students facing the problem.” That’s a red flag worth noting alongside the listed scholarships.
Admission to B.Tech at SBJITMR is through JEE Main or MHT CET, with seats allocated via the Centralised Admission Process (CAP) conducted by DTE Maharashtra. The 2024 MHT CET cutoff for the institute was 81.21 (percentile). For the computer science department, unverified student sources mention an 80 percentile requirement. MBA admissions rely on CAT, CMAT, MAH MBA CET, XAT, MAT, or ATMA; the Round 3 MAH MBA/MMS CET cutoff for the general category was 47.57. M.Tech admissions consider GATE or GPAT scores, while MCA uses MAH-MCA-CET.
A key wrinkle: being a Hindi linguistic minority institute, 51% of seats are reserved for students from that community. Management seats can be booked by filling the college form and paying ₹1,000. Application forms are available on the official website. Important dates for the 2026 cycle include MHT CET registration from January 5 to February 27, 2026, JEE Main result on February 19, 2026, and GATE exams on February 14-15, 2026. For MBA aspirants, CAT 2025 registration opens around the first week of August 2025.
Spread over 12–14 acres on Kalmeshwar Road, the campus tries for a British architectural aesthetic with plenty of landscaping. Classrooms are airy and equipped with projectors and whiteboards. The library boasts over 25,000 books, is fully computerized with barcoding and OPAC, and gives students digital access to e-journals. Labs across mechanical, electrical, electronics, and CSE departments are considered well-equipped, though one student review points out that computer monitors in the electrical engineering labs badly need replacement.
Sports infrastructure looks strong on the list: cricket, football, basketball, volleyball, table tennis, badminton, a gym, a swimming pool, and even a synthetic lawn tennis court. But the student voice complicates the picture. One reviews complains the college didn’t support sports if an exam clashed with a game. Another says sports facilities need improvement. The hostel setup separates boys and girls, with decent food and good overall accommodation, though capacity isn’t mentioned. Wi-Fi spans the campus, a modern auditorium seats 1,200+, and there’s a hygienic cafeteria, a medical centre, a bus service, and a tie-up with Central Bank of India for education loans.
Recurring positives cluster around campus life and teaching. Students describe the campus as green and spacious, with a dynamic community that runs annual cultural fests, technical events (Technotsav is the national-level one), hackathons, and sports meets. Faculty are consistently praised as qualified, supportive, and able to blend practical insights into theory classes. The autonomous curriculum gets some credit for trying to be industry-relevant.
But the critical notes are worth holding onto. The discrepancy between claimed placement percentages and the NIRF-submitted 31.94% is glaring. Infrastructure complaints, though minor, exist — particularly around old lab monitors and underwhelming sports support when academics interfere. Financial aid and fee value come up in a blunt review: “It is not value for money to much expensive.” That sentiment, paired with the observation that financially weak students don’t seem to get enough help, makes the value equation trickier than the glossy brochures suggest.
SBJITMR works best for a student who wants a private engineering degree in Nagpur with NAAC ‘A’ backing, a functional campus, and respectable—if not spectacular—IT services hiring. The autonomous tag can add some curriculum flexibility, and the teaching staff generally earns good marks. However, the 31.94% official placement percentage in 2023–24, combined with fees that edge past ₹4 lakh for a general category four-year run, makes this a questionable buy if placement is your primary metric. The top recruiters list is real, but the median numbers suggest most graduates walk away with packages well below the ₹4.2 LPA average that gets trotted out. If you have a better state-government or established private option, compare the NIRF placement data, not just the marketing claims, before you commit. SBJITMR isn’t a lost cause, but it’s not a hidden gem either — it’s a college that demands a careful, numbers-first evaluation.
4 ranking entries · click any row to see year-by-year trend
Year-on-Year Trends
2 streams · Fees from ₹65.0K to ₹1.0 L
5 exams with cutoff data available — showing recent entries
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 3,60,383 | 2025 | R1 |
| BE Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 3,72,220 | 2025 | R1 |
| BE (Information Technology) | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,12,915 | 2025 | R1 |
| BE Data Science | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,19,434 | 2025 | R1 |
| BE Electronics & Telecom Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,72,697 | 2025 | R1 |
| BE Electrical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 5,66,330 | 2025 | R1 |
| BE Mechanical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 6,35,129 | 2025 | R1 |
| BE Mechanical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 5,28,400 | 2024 | R1 |
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 17,741 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 19,876 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Data Science | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 20,620 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 17,478 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 19,302 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Data Science | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 20,891 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Electronics & Telecom Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 26,136 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Electrical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 28,482 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Mechanical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 44,006 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 11,065 | 2022 | R1 |
| BE Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 14,600 | 2022 | R1 |
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 11,003 | 2022 | R1 |
| BE Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 14,421 | 2022 | R1 |
| BE Electronics & Telecom Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 18,570 | 2022 | R1 |
| BE Electrical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 28,078 | 2022 | R1 |
| BE Mechanical Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 28,644 | 2022 | R1 |
Accenture
Amazon
Amsoft
Blue Star
Byju's
CMC Limited
Cognizant
Cybage Software
Eternus Solution
Genpact
Global Logic
GODREJ Pvt. Ltd
IBM
IGATE
Indian Army
Indian Navy
Infocepts
Infosys
INNOEYE
KEANE India Ltd( NTT DATA)
KPIT Cummins
L&T Infotech
L&T Ltd.
Motif Inc
Mphasis
Persistent Ltd
Satyam Venture Engineering Services
Shield Research
Smart Data
Syntel
TCS
Tech Mahindra
Unisys
Videocon
Xoriant Solutions
Zappkode Solutions
Zensar
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Gym
Hostel
Medical
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryThe highest package reported for 2025 is ₹12 LPA. However, the official NIRF-submitted median for 2023–24 was only ₹3.38 lakh. The average package touted is ₹4.2 LPA, but the lower placement percentage (31.94% in 2023–24) suggests that top offers are outliers. Focus on the median, not the maximum.
SB Jain Institute of Technology Management and Research is a private, autonomous engineering college affiliated to Rashtrasant Tukadoji Maharaj Nagpur University (RTMNU). It is a Hindi linguistic minority institute, meaning 51% of seats are reserved for students from that community.
For the 2024 batch, the MHT CET cutoff was 81.21 percentile through the CAP rounds. Unverified student sources suggest the computer science department requires around 80 percentile. JEE Main scores are also accepted, but specific ranks are not publicly disclosed. MBA cutoffs for the general category (MAH CET, Round 3) stood at 47.57 percentile.
The 12–14 acre campus features well-ventilated smart classrooms, a library with 25,000+ books and digital access, Wi-Fi, a 1,200-seat auditorium, separate hostels, and sports facilities that include a swimming pool, gym, and synthetic tennis court. However, a student review noted that computer monitors in the EE lab need replacement and sports support wavers when exams conflict. Overall it’s functional, not luxurious.
Student reviews consistently describe the faculty as highly qualified, knowledgeable, and supportive. They use practical presentations and industry examples in theory classes. With around 150 faculty members, about 25 hold PhDs. Teaching quality is one of the college’s stronger points, though the autonomous curriculum’s industry-readiness remains a claim that placement outcomes don’t fully support.
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