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Shaheed Udham Singh Engineering College (SUSEC) in Mohali claims a highest placement package of ₹37.47 LPA — for its broader group of institutions. The reality on the ground, at this one campus, is far quieter. Students from recent batches talk about average offers between ₹3 LPA and ₹6 LPA, and roughly half the class lands a job through college channels. That gap is worth sitting with if you're weighing a four-year B.Tech here. Let's break down what SUSEC actually delivers, from courses and fees to the honest placement scene, based on official numbers and unfiltered student voices.
SUSEC runs a compact engineering roster. At the undergraduate level, it offers a full-time B.Tech (4 years) in Computer Science and Engineering, Electronics and Communication Engineering, Electrical and Electronics Engineering, and Civil Engineering. Lateral entry to the third semester shaves a year off for diploma holders, and there’s a three-year B.Sc in Medical Lab Science that sits a little apart from the core engineering suite. Postgraduate students can pursue a two-year M.Tech, and the polytechnic diploma adds a vocational track.
With just 135 sanctioned seats across all B.Tech branches, the intake is modest — that can mean smaller batch sizes, but also fewer peer networks. The academic model stresses practical work: labs, design projects, industry training, and teamwork. Corporate collaborations aim to plug gaps between classroom theory and floor-level engineering, though their depth isn't always clear in student feedback.
The teaching workforce comprises 42 faculty members. No public data breaks down how many hold PhDs, and the often-cited student-teacher ratio of 1:30 cannot be verified independently, so take it with a pinch of salt. On the whole, students rate teaching quality positively — one review describes teachers as “very helpful,” and the academic environment gets a solid 7 out of 10 on some aggregator platforms. Not a research powerhouse, then, but a place that can deliver decent instruction if you’re self-motivated.
If you’re reading college profiles, you’ve probably seen the headline number: ₹37.47 LPA as the highest package for the Shaheed Udham Singh Group of Institutions in 2024. Let’s be direct: that figure almost certainly does not originate from SUSEC’s B.Tech campus. Student reviews — the most ground-level source we have — tell a different story.
One graduate from the 2018-2022 batch reports a peak of ₹6 LPA and an average of ₹3 LPA, with only half the batch placed. Another review, this one from someone enrolled in 2017, mentions a slightly higher average of ₹6 LPA across departments, but the consistency isn’t there. The official UG average range is quoted as ₹3.5–5 LPA, and ₹4.5–6.5 LPA for postgraduate programs. For B.Tech Computer Science, placement claims jump to 100% — a bright spot — while biotechnology hovers around 1%. And mechanical engineering students voice blunt frustration: “Placement offices do not interact with mechanical students” and “don’t even make any efforts for mechanical students.” That should give non-CSE aspirants serious pause.
The recruiter roster on brochures reads like a who’s-who of Indian industry: Dell, IBM, Infosys, Wipro, TCS, Accenture, BHEL, DRDO, Honeywell, Tech Mahindra, Birlasoft, and several smaller firms like Bebo Technologies and Impinge Solutions. But the disconnect between that list and student-reported outcomes suggests these names are either inherited from the larger group or show up inconsistently. Internship support exists, though at least one student noted they didn’t opt for any, which implies it’s not mandatory.
Bottom line: if you’re chasing CSE and are okay with an average package in the ₹4–6 LPA range, the numbers look tolerable. For other branches, assume you’ll largely be on your own in the job market.
B.Tech tuition is set at ₹80,000 for the first year in 2025-26, adding up to ₹3.2 Lakhs over four years. Lateral entry students pay ₹60,000 in the first year, totalling ₹1.8 Lakhs for three years. An M.Tech will cost ₹96,400 for one year or ₹1.2 Lakhs for the full two-year span. The B.Sc in Medical Lab Science runs ₹1.9 Lakhs for three years, and a polytechnic diploma is the most affordable at ₹32,000 per annum.
Hostel fees, though, swing significantly. For 2025-26, the range is ₹50,000 to ₹1 Lakh per year; by 2026, both boys’ and girls’ hostels are pegged at ₹1 Lakh. A 3-seater without mess once cost as low as ₹20,000 in 2023, so prices have clearly been climbing. Factor in mess charges (revised annually) and a laundry list of other payments like examination fees, counseling charges, and smart card costs, and the four-year B.Tech bill lands somewhere around ₹7.2 Lakhs — and that’s before adding travel, books, and personal expenses.
There are a few scholarships that take the edge off. Merit-based concessions give a ₹10,000 discount over the first two semesters for students who scored 80%+ in Class 12. If you crack 90%+ in your first year of engineering, the college says it will waive 100% of the semester fee. Need-based support covers OBC, SC, ST, and minority categories, and the PMSSS scholarship is mentioned by at least one student. Employees’ wards get a flat 25% fee concession. While the sums aren’t earth-shattering, they can make the difference for families sitting on the margin.
Entry to the B.Tech programs runs through JEE Main scores, though final selection is merit-based using your 10+2 marks in Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics. Seats are allocated during official Punjab Technical University counselling, where your JEE rank, category, and branch preference determine the outcome. There’s no published cutoff data for recent cycles, so you’ll have to watch the counselling rounds or reach out to the admission cell directly.
The application window typically opens in February 2025, with counselling stretching from May to June and final allotments by July 2025. There’s an application fee, and international students are eligible to apply. No explicit management or NRI quota information is available, which might mean seats are strictly filled through the counselling route.
One thing to note: a handful of students have grumbled about the admission process itself — not a deal-breaker, but expect some administrative back-and-forth.
The 5.36-acre campus sits a little outside urban Mohali, which students often describe as peaceful — a welcome break from city noise if that’s your vibe. The area is well-linked by bus to Chandigarh, Panchkula, Ropar, Patiala, and Ambala, and a fleet of college buses handles daily commutes. A pick-and-drop service for the railway station or airport exists, though it’s documented primarily for the group’s other campus.
The academic backbone rests on a central Wi-Fi enabled library with over 35,000 books and stacks of e-journals, plus a computer centre boasting 14 air-conditioned labs with around 25 machines each. Laboratories overall are described as modern and well-equipped. An auditorium, a gymnasium, and an ATM round out the basic infrastructure.
Hostel life draws a 4.0 out of 5 rating in student reviews. Boys and girls get separate blocks, with modern amenities: wireless internet, a common room, study space, and gym access. AC and non-AC rooms are available, and private rooms cost extra. The food is called “good and affordable,” which is more than many engineering hostels manage. Outdoor sports include cricket, football, basketball, and even kabaddi; indoors, you’ll find chess, table tennis, carrom, and badminton. Social life scores a 4.4 in aggregator ratings, buoyed by Diwali and Holi fests.
A sick room and full-time ambulance provide basic medical cover. For a small private college, the infrastructure package isn’t flashy but it’s functional.
The consensus from aggregator sites like Collegedunia and Zollege is mixed but leans favorable on campus experience, while throwing a cold bucket of water on placement promises outside CSE.
Positives come through clearly for the campus environment: well-maintained grounds, ample space, and a quiet, out-of-city location that students find ideal for studying without distraction. Teaching quality is consistently praised as helpful, and the academic atmosphere earns a gentle thumbs-up. Hostel facilities and food are rated 4.0, an unusual bright spot in budget private colleges. Infrastructure — labs, library, Wi-Fi — is seen as more than adequate for undergraduate work.
Then the mood shifts. Graduates across multiple review cycles flag the same issues. Placement connectivity for core branches is described as virtually absent: mechanical students, in particular, feel ignored by the placement cell. The discrepancy between the 100% placement claim for CSE and the 1% for biotechnology underlines a deep branch-based divide. The high package touted by the group’s publicity machine never materializes for SUSEC students, who see offers topping out at ₹6 LPA. Some also voice irritation with the admission process and hostel room allocation, though these complaints appear less widespread.
So, in summary: if you’re in CSE and willing to hustle, the reviews suggest you’ll find an okay launchpad. For everyone else, the student sentiment is a caution flag you’d be wise not to ignore.
SUSEC works for a very specific profile of student. If you’re targeting B.Tech Computer Science, can swing the ₹7+ Lakhs over four years, and are prepared to build your own career momentum beyond what the placement cell delivers, this college offers a decent infrastructure, supportive teachers, and a calm campus. The 100% CSE placement claim, even if it means mass recruitment roles at ₹3–5 LPA, gives you a floor.
But. If you’re eyeing mechanical, civil, EEE, or ECE, or if you need a vibrant, high-exposure engineering ecosystem, look elsewhere. The placement office’s apparent neglect of non-IT branches and a median package that barely crosses ₹3 LPA on a good day make a four-year investment hard to justify. The ₹37.47 LPA figure is marketing smoke for this campus — don’t let it cloud your judgment. For the right branch and the right mindset, SUSEC is a functional, peaceful mid-tier college. For most others, it’s a risk you shouldn’t take lightly.
1 stream · Fees from ₹32.0K to ₹80.0K
Accenture
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Bharti Airtel
BioCon Ltd.
Birla Sun Life Insurance
Birlasoft
BSNL
CDAC R&D
CEAT
Convergys
CSIR India
Dell
Dr. Reddy's Laboratories
DRDO
Eicher Motors
Godrej & Boyce
HCL
Hero Honda Motors
Honeywell
IBM
IDS Infotech
Infosys
Larsen & Toubro Limited
Motorola India Limited
Mphasis
Polaris
Punj Lloyd
Ranbaxy pvt ltd
Sasken Communications
Satyam
Sebiz
Syntel
Tata Consultancy Services
Tata Indicom
TCIL
TCS
Tech Mahindra
TNS India
Toyota
Wipro
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Gym
Hostel
Medical
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryAdmission to B.Tech programs at SUSEC is based on JEE Main scores, followed by merit in 10+2 with Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics. Seats are filled through official I.K. Gujral Punjab Technical University counselling, where rank, category, and branch preferences determine the final allotment. The application window usually opens in February and counselling runs May–July 2025.
The first-year B.Tech tuition fee for 2025-26 is ₹80,000. Over four years, total tuition amounts to about ₹3.2 Lakhs. Hostel charges range from ₹50,000 to ₹1 Lakh per year, bringing the estimated total cost of attendance to roughly ₹7.2 Lakhs, excluding personal expenses and other mandatory fees like examination charges.
Placement outcomes vary sharply by branch. For B.Tech Computer Science, the college claims close to 100% placement, with average packages reported between ₹3 LPA and ₹6 LPA. For other branches like mechanical and biotechnology, placements are extremely weak — mechanical students report little to no placement office support, and biotechnology placements are as low as 1%. Overall, only about 50% of all students secure campus placements.
Yes, SUSEC offers merit-based and need-based scholarships. Students with 80%+ in Class 12 can get a fee discount, and 90%+ in first-year engineering may receive a full semester fee waiver. Scholarships are also available for OBC, SC, ST, and minority categories. The PMSSS scheme and a 25% fee concession for employees’ wards add further support.
No official cutoff ranks or percentiles are publicly available for recent JEE Main counselling cycles. Admission is competitive only within the PTU counselling process, and cutoffs depend on the applicant pool each year. Contacting the college directly or tracking the counselling rounds is the best way to gauge the realistic entry threshold.
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