


Tier 1 weights NAAC accreditation and NIRF ranking highest — national reputation and academic quality drive the score.

If you're looking at undergraduate business education in India, Shaheed Sukhdev College of Business Studies (SSCBS) is the name that comes up first. Not just in Delhi University, but nationally. It's a government college with a private-sector sheen, where the annual tuition is less than a month's salary at the average placement. That's the draw. For around ₹30,000 a year, you get a shot at a classroom seat next to future IIM toppers and a recruitment process that pulls in McKinsey, Goldman Sachs, and Google. The 2024-25 average package was ₹11.73 LPA, but the median was actually a tick higher at ₹11.79 LPA, which tells you the distribution is pretty solid. It's a pressure cooker, no doubt. The five-acre vertical campus in Rohini feels more like a corporate HQ than a typical DU college, and the culture is intensely competitive. But for students aiming straight for corporate leadership from undergrad, the return on investment is almost absurdly good.
SSCBS runs a tight, focused ship with just three undergraduate programs, and that's by design. The Bachelor of Management Studies (BMS) is the flagship, with an intake of about 231. It's a broad-based management degree where you can specialize in Finance, Marketing, HR, or Global Business. Then there's the BBA in Financial Investment Analysis (BFIA), which is their niche, finance-heavy offering for about 113 students. Think investment banking, equity research, and corporate finance from day one. The B.Sc. (Hons) in Computer Science is the smallest batch, around 57 seats, and it's known for a rigorous curriculum heavy on software engineering and data structures.
The academic vibe is professional. They use the Choice Based Credit System (CBCS) and the faculty is a strong point—over 80% of the permanent staff hold PhDs from places like DU, IITs, and IIMs. It's not a place to coast. The 66% attendance rule is strictly enforced, with exam barring as a real consequence. Beyond the core, they've got a popular 1-year PG Diploma in Cyber Security and Law and certificate courses in areas like FinTech and Data Analytics. They also have MoUs with institutions like the National Institute of Securities Markets (NISM) and the University of Leeds for student exchanges, which adds a layer of practical exposure.
This is where SSCBS separates itself from the pack. It's routinely called the best undergraduate placement college in India, and the data backs it up. For the 2024-25 cycle, the average package was ₹11.73 LPA and the median was ₹11.79 LPA. The highest package was ₹28 LPA. For context, the previous year saw a peak of ₹44.45 LPA from Bain & Company. The college claims about 90% placement, and the students who don't get placed typically aren't struggling—they're usually the ones headed for higher studies at IIMs or abroad.
The sectoral split is telling. A massive 59.5% of offers come from consulting. Firms like McKinsey, BCG, and Bain are regulars. Finance makes up 15.5%, with recruiters like Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan. The Big 4 accounting firms (Deloitte, PwC, EY, KPMG) are also staple recruiters. Even the B.Sc. CS students often land roles in analytics and consulting here, though pure tech placements are fewer.
The internship scene is just as robust, with over 300 offers annually and stipends ranging from ₹20,000 to a lakh per month. The Corporate Development Cell (CDC) is famously efficient, and the student-run finance and marketing societies act as feeder systems. The reality check? The pressure to secure these roles is immense, and the competition starts early. It's a high-stakes environment, but the outcomes for those who navigate it are exceptional.
The value proposition is SSCBS's killer feature. The annual tuition fee for the BMS and BFIA programs is between ₹25,000 and ₹35,000. For B.Sc. CS, it's around ₹30,000 to ₹40,000. That's for the academic year. So, for a three-year degree, a day scholar might spend just about ₹1 lakh in total tuition.
Hostel fees are a different, and significantly larger, part of the equation. There are only about 166 hostel seats total (88 for boys, 78 for girls), so getting one is competitive. The fees are billed per semester: roughly ₹80,344 for the odd semester and ₹64,344 for the even semester. That adds up to about ₹1.45 lakhs per year. A three-year stay, therefore, pushes the total cost to around ₹5.5 lakhs. Most students who don't get a hostel seat live in PGs in nearby Rohini sectors.
Scholarships are available through standard Delhi University and Delhi Government schemes, particularly for students from EWS, SC, and ST categories, like the Post Matric Scholarship.
Getting in is the first big hurdle. Since Delhi University moved to CUET, the process is centralized. For any of SSCBS's programs, passing Class 12 with Mathematics (or Applied Mathematics) as a subject is non-negotiable. You can't even apply without it.
The CUET combination required is English, Mathematics, and the General Test. Your normalized score across these determines everything. The cutoffs are notoriously high. For the 2024 session, General category candidates needed scores in the ballpark of 550-600 out of 650 for BMS/BFIA. For B.Sc. Computer Science, the cutoff hovered around 700 out of 800. These numbers shift each year based on the applicant pool, but they consistently sit at the very top of the DU spectrum.
Selection is purely merit-based through the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS). There is no management quota. Standard DU reservations for OBC, SC, ST, EWS, PwD, and other categories apply. Once you accept a seat, you must complete the admission process directly with the college, submitting all original documents for verification.
The campus is a modern, 8-floor vertical building on 5 acres in Rohini. It doesn't look or feel like a traditional government college. Students often joke it looks like a hospital from the outside but a corporate office or hotel inside. Infrastructure is a major plus: high-speed Wi-Fi everywhere, over eight computer labs loaded with software like Python and Tableau, a well-stocked library, and a 500-seater auditorium.
Hostel life, for the lucky few who get in, is considered premium by DU standards. Rooms are AC, typically triple-sharing with attached washrooms. The food—four meals a day—gets a decent rating. The downside is the severe shortage of seats, forcing most students into the local PG market.
Social life is centered heavily around college societies. The Finance Society (FinX), the Marketing Society (Mark-It), and the Corporate Development Cell (CDC) are power centers. They provide incredible industry exposure and CV-building opportunities but, as per widespread student reviews, can foster a toxic, hierarchical culture. The location in Rohini also means you're a bit isolated from the classic North Campus social scene. It's a trade-off: you gain a professional bubble but lose some of the typical DU college experience.
Scouring platforms like Quora, Reddit, and CollegeDunia reveals a consistent, polarized narrative. The praise is effusive for the ROI and peer group. "Paying 30k a year and getting a 15 LPA job is unbeatable," sums up the dominant sentiment. Students call it a "mini-IIM" and rave about the corporate grooming and smart, ambitious classmates.
But the negatives are just as sharply defined. The phrase "toxic society culture" appears repeatedly. Students describe intense pressure, hierarchical bullying, and societies that demand an all-consuming commitment. The strict 66% attendance policy is a frequent gripe. There's also a consensus that the constant competition for internships and case competitions creates a high-stress environment. It's not a laid-back college. You're signing up for three years of high-pressure, corporate-style preparation. For many, the ends justify the means. For others, the culture can be a real grind.
If your singular goal is to launch a high-flying corporate career directly after a bachelor's degree, SSCBS is arguably the best place in the country to do it. The combination of minuscule tuition fees and elite placement outcomes is unmatched. The academic environment is serious, the peer group is stellar, and the brand carries immense weight in consulting and finance corridors.
But it's not for everyone. You need to be academically strong (with top-tier CUET scores) and, just as importantly, psychologically prepared for a competitive, sometimes cutthroat atmosphere. If you thrive on pressure and see college purely as a career launchpad, you'll likely excel. If you're looking for a more holistic, exploratory, or relaxed university experience, the isolated Rohini campus and intense society culture might feel stifling. It's a trade-off: unparalleled professional ROI for a slice of your typical college life. For the right student, it's an undeniable win.
13 ranking entries · click any row to see year-by-year trend
Year-on-Year Trends
3 streams · Fees from ₹26.5K to ₹77.0K
2 exams with cutoff data available
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMS | General / Unreserved (UR) | 565 | 2025 | R1 |
| BBA Financial Investment Analysis | General / Unreserved (UR) | 583 | 2025 | R1 |
| B.Sc (Hons.) Computer Science | General / Unreserved (UR) | 734 | 2025 | R1 |
| BMS | General / Unreserved (UR) | 476 | 2024 | R1 |
| BBA Financial Investment Analysis | General / Unreserved (UR) | 503 | 2024 | R1 |
| B.Sc (Hons.) Computer Science | General / Unreserved (UR) | 666 | 2024 | R1 |
| BMS | General / Unreserved (UR) | 614.4 | 2023 | R1 |
| BBA Financial Investment Analysis | General / Unreserved (UR) | 614.4 | 2023 | R1 |
| B.Sc (Hons.) Computer Science | General / Unreserved (UR) | 739.2 | 2023 | R1 |
| BMS | General / Unreserved (UR) | 599 | 2023 | R1 |
| BBA Financial Investment Analysis | General / Unreserved (UR) | 590 | 2023 | R1 |
| B.Sc (Hons.) Computer Science | General / Unreserved (UR) | 730 | 2023 | R1 |
| BMS | General / Unreserved (UR) | 624 | 2022 | R1 |
| BBA Financial Investment Analysis | General / Unreserved (UR) | 624 | 2022 | R1 |
| B.Sc (Hons.) Computer Science | General / Unreserved (UR) | 768 | 2022 | R1 |
| BMS | General / Unreserved (UR) | 625 | 2022 | R1 |
| BBA Financial Investment Analysis | General / Unreserved (UR) | 614 | 2022 | R1 |
| B.Sc (Hons.) Computer Science | General / Unreserved (UR) | 791 | 2022 | R1 |
Axis Bank
Bain & Company India Private Limited
Bajaj Capital
Boston Scientific
Byju's
CBRE
Colgate Palmolive India Ltd.
Confederation of Indian Industry (CII)
Dabur India Ltd.
Deloitte
Ernst & Young
FundWave
Genpact
Goldman Sachs
Grail Research
Grant Thornton India Private Limited
Grofers
IHS Markit
Internshala
JLL India
KPMG
NJ Invest India
NSMX
PWC
Sattva
Tata Steel
The Parthenon Group
Tresvista Financial Services
United Biotech Pvt. Ltd.
Verity knowledge Solutions Pvt ltd ( UBS affiliate)
Vinsol
White Panda
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Hostel
Medical
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryYes, Mathematics or Applied Mathematics is a mandatory subject in Class 12 and must be taken in the CUET exam for admission to the BMS, BBA FIA, and B.Sc. Computer Science programs at Shaheed Sukhdev College of Business Studies.
The BMS program is a general management degree covering areas like Marketing, HR, and Finance. The BBA FIA program is highly specialized, focusing intensely on Finance for careers in fields like Investment Banking and Equity Research.
Hostel infrastructure at SSCBS is excellent with amenities like AC and attached bathrooms, but seats are very limited (only around 160 total). Most students live in nearby paying guest accommodations in Rohini's Sector 16 and 17.
Yes, B.Sc. Computer Science students can get placements. While dedicated tech placements are fewer compared to management roles, many students secure positions in consulting and analytics, or choose to pursue higher studies like MCA or MS.
For the BMS and BBA FIA programs, SSCBS is considered superior and more corporate-focused. For traditional courses like B.Com (Hons) and Economics, Shri Ram College of Commerce (SRCC) remains the top choice.
Share the lived details brochures skip — what felt worth it, what students should verify, and which questions still need clear answers.
Moderated for quality, not polished into marketing copy.
Useful specifics win: fees paid, placement reality, commute, faculty availability, and what you wish you knew earlier.
DU, New DelhiNearby Transit Hubs








Get direct insights about admissions, cutoffs, and placements from detailed brochures.
Claim this listing to update information, respond to enquiries and get a Verified badge.
Claim This Listing