


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

SGBM Institute of Technology and Science (SGBMITS) sits along the Bineki Patan Road, with the Bargi Hills not far off and the edge of Jabalpur’s bustle about 17 km away. The college is young by engineering-school standards — established in 2008 — and it shows in both the crispness of its regal campus blocks and the patchiness of its track record. It’s one of those institutions where you can have a genuinely solid classroom experience if you land in the right department, but where older placement numbers are enough to make any aspirant pause.
Undergraduate B.E./B.Tech programs come in five flavours: Civil, Computer Science, Electronics & Communication, Mechanical, and Industrial Engineering & Management. The intake is modest — around 60 seats for CSE, with combined strength topping out near 360 across all branches. That small-batch setup is something students regularly point to as a plus. Less competition for lab time, more faculty attention. A lateral-entry B.E. pathway (3 years) is available for diploma holders.
At the postgraduate level, you’ll find a 2-year MBA run under Rani Durgavati Vishwavidyalaya. The MBA is a generalist offering; the briefs don’t spell out marketing or finance tracks explicitly, which is worth double-checking if you’re set on a specific specialisation. Diploma programs (post-10th) in Civil, CSE, Electrical, and Mechanical round out the portfolio, with lateral-entry options in Mechanical.
Faculty quality generally lands in the “helpful and knowledgeable” bracket according to reviews on Shiksha, where the Faculty & Course rating sits at 4.7/5. That’s a decent number. But a 2018 review mentioning a “lack of faculty in each n every department” suggests the experience hasn’t been uniform over time. The advertised student-teacher ratio is 1:20, though older data once claimed 10:1, so it’s fair to assume the classroom reality depends on which batch and which semester you’re talking about.
The official numbers for 2023 look respectable on paper: a top offer of ₹7 LPA, an average hovering around ₹3.5 LPA, and a median of ₹3.2 LPA. Infosys, HCL, and Wipro turned up. That’s a solid set of mass recruiters for a private college in central India. And if you go back further, 72 companies were reportedly part of the 2014 drive.
But the cracks appear when you talk to alumni from earlier batches. For the 2013–2017 cohort, reviews on platforms like CollegeDunia and Getmyuni use phrases like “totally null” to describe on-campus placements. The 2016 placement percentage was pegged at 65%, which isn’t terrible, but those students also reported zero internships through the college and no industry exposure. One review from 2018 flat-out stated that while labs existed, students “don’t provide any practical.”
The gap between the college’s recent placement claims and what older alumni say is noticeable. It’s possible the institute has genuinely turned a corner — or that the 2023 figures reflect only a handful of placed students from a motivated CSE batch. Either way, if you’re banking on placements, talk to current final-year students before you commit.
Tuition costs vary enough that it’s worth looking at the fine print. For a standard 4-year B.Tech, the annual fee can be as low as ₹45,000 or as high as ₹1.82 Lakhs, depending on the branch and your admission route. A conservative estimate puts the total 4-year B.Tech tab around ₹7.28 Lakhs. The lateral-entry B.E. path runs about ₹1.37 Lakhs total, with a ₹45,600 first-year hit. MBA students are looking at ₹90,000 – ₹91,200 for the full two years. Diploma programmes clock in at roughly ₹91,200 for three years.
Hostel fees aren’t publicly listed with any clarity, and that’s consistent with the broader confusion about whether hostels even exist in a structured form (more on that later).
Scholarships exist, and they’re varied. The institute offers merit-based fee waivers that can reach up to ₹50,000 a year. Need-based support targets families with income below ₹2–5 Lakhs. There are also category-specific awards — state domicile, single girl child, sports achievers, children of defence personnel, alumni wards — plus access to national schemes like the Central Sector Scholarship and the Mukhyamantri Medhwai Chatra Yojna. Eligibility generally requires 60–75% in prior exams.
For B.Tech seats, you’ll need a JEE Main score and a seat through MP DTE’s centralised counselling. The most recent hard cutoff available is from 2022: a JEE Main closing rank of 4,02,585 for CSE (General, MP home state quota). That’s a wide net — there isn’t fierce competition at that rank. For later years, the institute hasn’t published official cutoffs, which makes it difficult to gauge demand trends.
MBA admissions run on CMAT scores and RDVV counselling. Diploma seats go through MPPET and the state CAP rounds. Application windows for 2025–26 are set: May 26 to September 14 for B.E., and June 15 to August 13 for the MBA programme. Management quota routes are also mentioned, which should be noted if you’re looking for direct admission.
Here’s where things get hazy. The college describes separate hostels for boys and girls with modern amenities, but other official sources say hostel facilities are not available. A 2018 student review puts it bluntly: “Hostel Availability: Yes” from one corner, while another flatly denies it. If you need a hostel, get written confirmation from the administration before you pay a rupee. Food quality, where hostels do seem to exist, is described as “not good not bad literally you can it is okay” — not a ringing endorsement, but passable.
The academic infrastructure gets higher marks. Departmental labs — chemistry, physics, mechanical, electronics, computer, civil — are reportedly well-equipped with current instruments. The central library holds textbooks, e-books, journals, project reports, and CD ROMs, plus internet-enabled terminals. A spacious canteen, a health centre with first aid, and a fleet of college buses make daily life manageable. The campus itself is frequently called lush green.
Sports? The gallery page on the official site says “Sports Coming Soon…,” which is either a very outdated placeholder or a promise that hasn’t been fulfilled. Students do mention games and sports activities, so some informal facilities likely exist. A techfest blends cultural, technical, and sports events, and the social life rating of 4.2/5 suggests students are keeping themselves entertained.
Aggregating sentiment from Shiksha, CollegeDunia, Getmyuni, and CollegeDekho, a few themes repeat. On the positive side, infrastructure routinely earns praise: well-maintained labs, clean classrooms, a green campus. Teaching quality is described by many as “too good” or at least “not bad,” with faculty willing to explain concepts when class sizes are small. The low strength in some branches works to a student’s advantage, creating a focused learning environment. Value for money lands at 4.3/5 on Shiksha.
On the negative side, the placement picture from older batches remains a sore point. The 2013–2017 group got no college-facilitated internships and saw “totally null” on-campus offers. Industry exposure was reportedly absent. One review cited “internal interference in owner family and by brokers” as a factor eroding the institute’s reputation. Another complained that labs, while present, didn’t provide actual practical skill-building.
Management behaviour and the hostel question aren’t resolved in any recent reviews, so prospective students are navigating some blind spots. The buzz around cultural activities and tech fests is one of the few reliable bright spots.
SGBMITS is best suited for the student who needs an affordable private engineering seat in Madhya Pradesh, doesn’t mind a small-class environment, and has the discipline to supplement classroom learning with self-study or external projects. The infrastructure is decent, and the faculty, by most accounts, will help if you ask. If you’re in CSE and actively build your skills, you might crack the ₹7 LPA ceiling; Infosys and Wipro do visit, after all.
The deal looks less appealing if you’re counting on the college to deliver a placement on a platter, or if you need guaranteed hostel accommodation. The older placement record is shaky enough that it’s worth treating recent salary figures as aspirational, not assured. For an MBA aspirant, the low fees and RDVV affiliation could be a pragmatic bet, provided you research the specialisation offerings directly with the institute. In short: verify the hostel situation, talk to current students about placements, and only then sign up.
2 streams · Fees from ₹45.6K to ₹45.6K
2 exams with cutoff data available
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 3,82,662 | 2022 | R1 |
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,07,253 | 2022 | R1 |
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | General / Unreserved (UR) / male | 4,02,585 | 2022 | R1 |
Accenture
Bajaj Capital
HCL Technologies
Hero Motocorp
Hindustan Copper Limited (HCL)
IBM
Infosys
Larsen & Toubro Ltd.
Reliance
TCS
TVS Motors
Yamaha
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Campus Security
Campus Shuttle
Computer Labs
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryFor B.Tech students, annual tuition ranges from ₹45,000 to ₹1,82,000 depending on the branch, with a total 4‑year cost estimated around ₹7.28 Lakhs. The MBA programme costs ₹90,000 – ₹91,200 for the full two years, which breaks down to roughly ₹45,000 – ₹45,600 annually. These figures are for 2025–2026 and don’t include hostel or other mandatory fees, so budget accordingly.
The picture is muddy. Some official sources claim separate boys’ and girls’ hostels with modern amenities, while other citations flatly state that no hostel facility exists. Student reviews from the 2018 period mention hostel food as “okay” but don’t clarify availability reliably. If you need a hostel, get written confirmation from the college administration before relying on it.
In 2023, the highest package reported was ₹7 LPA, with an average of ₹3.5 LPA and a median of ₹3.2 LPA. Infosys, HCL, and Wipro were among the recruiters. However, older alumni accounts from the 2013–2017 batch describe placements as “totally null” and note no internships were offered through the college. The 2016 batch recorded a 65% placement rate. These contrasting narratives suggest recent improvement for some students, but placement guarantees aren’t universal.
Admission to B.Tech programmes relies on JEE Main scores and subsequent MP DTE centralised counselling (MP CAP). MBA aspirants must sit for CMAT, with seats allotted through RDVV Jabalpur’s counselling. Diploma courses use MPPET scores and the same state CAP process. A management quota pathway also exists for direct admission.
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