


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

SKR Engineering College sits on 23 acres right on the Bangalore highway, in Nazarathpet, Poonamallee. That's about 20 km from Chennai Central and the airport—close enough for city access, far enough to have a campus thick with trees and a genuinely quiet vibe. It’s a private, self-financing setup, established in 2001, and affiliated with Anna University. You’ll find the usual engineering disciplines, but also a couple of less common undergrad picks like Mechatronics and Bio-Medical Engineering. The college holds an NAAC ‘A’ grade, NBA accreditation for its programmes, and a NIRF ranking that’s hovered in the 151-200 band for engineering in recent years. Not earth-shattering, but steady. What’s interesting is the gap between what the placement brochure implies and what students say once they’re through the gates—more on that in a bit.
The programme list is wider than what you’d expect from a mid-tier engineering college. At the undergrad level, you get nine B.E./B.Tech options: Bio-Medical, Civil, Computer Science, EEE, ECE, Mechanical, Mechatronics, Information Technology, and CS & Business Systems. The last one is a slightly newer blend that ties engineering with management basics—practical if you’re thinking of product roles later. Postgraduate offerings include M.E. in CSE, VLSI Design, and Power Electronics & Drives, plus an MBA. A Ph.D. in Computer Science is available, recognised as a research centre by Anna University.
Faculty strength is 91. That’s not a huge number for 887 students, but the institution runs a tight academic calendar: five exams a year (two major, three minor), weekly tests, project work assigned twice per subject, and a daily eight-period schedule. Students talk about continuous assessment and internal marks—so yes, there’s pressure, but also regular feedback. Teaching quality gets consistent mention in student reviews: “caring,” “mentoring,” “good at explaining.” Nothing extraordinary, but solid. The curriculum sticks to Anna University’s professional-oriented syllabi, with an emphasis on analytical thinking and problem-solving—buzzwords, sure, but the internal exam structure does push engagement.
Industry collaborations exist, though they aren’t as showy as some of the larger private players. Internships have been arranged with HCL and the European Centre for Mechatronics. About 40% of Mechanical students reportedly landed internships at Hyundai and TVS. That’s a decent hit rate for a core branch in Chennai.
Here’s where you need to read between the lines. The official number from 2022 says the highest package was ₹5.5 LPA and the average ₹4 LPA, with an 85% placement rate. Some sources floating around online throw out figures like ₹60,000 LPA for 2024, but that’s almost certainly a typo—ignore it. The college itself doesn’t publish audited placement reports as transparently as some peers, and student reviews consistently paint a more cautious picture. Across CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and informal alumni chatter, the working median that people cite is around ₹4 LPA, and the real placement percentage is often closer to 60–75% for on-campus offers. A few students have landed roles at Amazon (Tech Support Analyst) and Tech Mahindra, but those are exceptions, not the baseline.
Recruiters that show up regularly include TCS, Wipro, HCL, Infosys, Cognizant, Sutherland, Mphasis, Genpact, Dell, Zoho, IBM, and some core companies like Royal Enfield, Hyundai Motors, Tata Motors, and Bosch. The spread is decent for an affiliated college, with IT services dominating. Sectors span IT, core engineering, finance, and consulting, though the volume remains in IT.
Internship stats are more promising: 90–95% of students reportedly get some form of internship, even if not all are stipend-based. The tie-ups with HCL and the European Centre for Mechatronics help, and a handful of students secure pre-placement offers through these. Overall, if you’re clear-eyed about the fact that the ₹12 LPA+ offers are rare, you’ll manage expectations.
For the 2025 academic year, annual tuition for B.E. programmes ranges from ₹55,000 to ₹87,000, while B.Tech can stretch up to ₹2,00,000 depending on the specialization. The MBA comes in at a surprisingly low ₹19,000–₹41,000, and M.Tech tuition sits between ₹27,500 and ₹50,000. Hostel and mess charges are separate—the college mentions them but doesn’t pin down a single figure, so you’ll need to budget an additional ₹60,000–₹90,000 yearly for accommodation and food, based on similar institutions in the area. Book fees and transport are also billed separately.
The total four-year tuition for a B.E./B.Tech degree is estimated at ₹3.48 Lakhs (2025), which is competitive for a private engineering college in Chennai.
Scholarships help. The college runs a merit-based scheme: full tuition fee waiver for Tamil Nadu students who score 190+ in PCM (2026-2027), and for other-state students with 95% and above. Other scholarships cover Anna University rank holders, department toppers, and those with a CGPA of 9.00+. Government support for BC/SC/ST students, need-based aid, and fee waivers for first-generation graduates (₹20,000 per year reduction) are available. There’s an additional ₹20,000 reduction for SC/ST students, and specific scholarships for domicile, single girl child, sports, EWS, and children of defence personnel. So if you’ve got strong marks, the financial load lightens considerably.
Entry to the B.E./B.Tech programmes is through TNEA counselling (based on Class 12 PCM marks) or JEE Main scores. For the 2023 cycle, the TNEA general cutoff for SC category candidates ranged roughly between 1,34,727 and 1,76,109. That’s on the higher side, but cutoffs can swing wildly year to year. Scholarship eligibility for 2026-2027 gives a clearer benchmark: TN State board PCM 190+ for full tuition waiver; other state boards need 95%+.
For the MBA, TANCET scores are required. M.E./M.Tech admissions use GATE scores, and Ph.D. aspirants need GATE or NET, plus a personal interview. The TNEA 2026 registration window is expected May–June 2026; TANCET 2026 registration deadline is April 15, 2026, with the exam on May 9, 2026. No management or NRI quota is mentioned, so the process is merit-driven for these seats.
Selection overall is straightforward: score well in the relevant entrance, meet the cutoffs, and go through counselling. There’s no hidden back door, which is refreshing.
The 23-acre campus is one of SKR’s quiet strengths. It’s green, peaceful, and well away from city chaos, with plenty of tree cover. Campus highlights include a 2000-capacity Tin Jubilee Auditorium, a smaller AC auditorium for 600, two seminar halls, and classrooms fitted with projectors and audio-visual aids. CCTV is everywhere, and the buildings, while not brand-new, are functional. Some students describe classrooms as average or a bit old; not all are air-conditioned, but that’s par for Chennai engineering colleges at this fee level.
Hostels are separate for boys and girls, with rooms that are spacious and reasonably furnished. Live-in wardens are present. The Wi-Fi is 24x7, both in hostels and across campus—but there’s a daily 1GB cap that drives students up the wall. Speed is reportedly good, at least. Common rooms, TV, indoor games, and a gym are available. Food quality draws a split vote: some say “excellent” and “hygienic,” others settle on “average” or “okay.” One reviewer grumbled about the MBA department trekking a long way to a canteen for lunch, so layouts might be a bit spread out.
The library is genuinely impressive: 50,000 books, 12,000 titles, access to IEEE, IET digital library, Delnet, and a fully computerised OPAC system. That’s a serious resource if you’re self-motivated. Sports facilities are extensive—two cricket grounds, courts for volleyball, tennis, basketball, football, hockey, badminton, plus indoor games and a gym. Students participate in zonal and inter-zonal tournaments. There’s a health centre with first aid and an ambulance on call, banks/ATMs on campus, and college buses covering routes from Thiruvallur, Kanchipuram, Guduvancheri, and beyond.
Aggregating student sentiment across CollegeDunia, Shiksha, and Reddit threads, a few themes keep surfacing.
What students like: The campus. Over and over, people mention the peaceful environment, the trees, and the spaciousness. The library and lab facilities get praise, particularly the computer labs and the mechanical workshops. Teaching quality is described as caring and supportive—internal marks and weekly assessments are seen as a grind but they do keep you on track. Hostel rooms find favour for being comfortable, and the Wi-Fi, apart from the data limit, works. Sports facilities are a big plus.
What grates: Placements. It’s the number one friction point. The college’s claim of 80-85% doesn’t match the fragmented reality students report. Not everyone gets placed, and the packages on offer hover in the ₹3-4 LPA range for most. The 1GB daily Wi-Fi cap draws ire, especially for IT and CSE students who need more data for projects. Hostel food is inconsistent—love it or tolerate it, depending on the week. A few reviews mention that classrooms feel dated, and one noted that post-COVID, teacher support and college life have dipped. Extracurriculars and skill development events could be stepped up; suggestions for more sports and soft-skills training appear regularly.
No significant ragging issues, and management is generally hands-off unless you need something. The social scene is built around annual sports and cultural days, Rotaract, Red Ribbon Club, and department symposiums—moderate, not a party college.
SKR Engineering College is a solid, middle-of-the-pack choice for students who want a decent engineering education in a green, calm campus without spending a fortune. If you’ve got marks that land you somewhere in the TNEA general cutoff range for this college and you’re realistic about placements—meaning you’ll probably land a service-based IT job in the ₹3.5–5 LPA bracket, with core placements being rarer—then it’s a fair deal. The library, labs, and teaching aren’t going to blow anyone away, but they’re better than many affiliated colleges in the Chennai belt. The scholarship programme sweetens the pot if you’re a high scorer.
Who should look elsewhere? If you’re chasing a ₹10 LPA+ package from campus or want top-tier corporate exposure right out of the gate, you’ll feel frustrated. The placement machinery isn’t built for that. Students who need a strong startup or research ecosystem will also find it lacking. And if you can’t bear a 1GB daily Wi-Fi cap, prepare to buy a separate data plan. Ultimately, SKR delivers what its price tag and NAAC grade imply—a steady, unflashy engineering degree that works for students who are willing to hustle on their own for the bigger opportunities.
2 streams · Fees from ₹41.0K to ₹2.2 L
2 exams with cutoff data available
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MBA | OC | 26 | 2024 | R1 |
| MBA | OC | 26 | 2024 | R1 |
| MBA | OC | 10 | 2022 | R1 |
| MBA | OC | 10.707 | 2022 | R1 |
| MBA | OC | 10 | 2022 | R1 |
Auditorium
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Study LibraryThe latest official placement data from 2022 shows a highest package of ₹5.5 LPA and an average of ₹4 LPA, with an 85% placement rate. Top recruiters include TCS, Wipro, HCL, and Infosys. However, student reviews suggest that the actual on-campus placement percentage is closer to 60–75%, with most offers in the ₹3–4 LPA range.
For B.E. and B.Tech programmes, the total tuition fee for four years is approximately ₹3.48 Lakhs, with annual tuition ranging from ₹55,000 to ₹2,00,000 depending on the branch. The MBA programme costs around ₹41,000 for two years. Hostel, mess, book, and transport fees are additional.
B.E./B.Tech admissions are through TNEA (based on Class 12 PCM marks) or JEE Main scores. For the MBA, TANCET is required. M.E./M.Tech and Ph.D. admissions accept GATE scores; Ph.D. candidates may also use NET scores, followed by a personal interview.
The college offers merit scholarships for high academic performance—including full tuition fee waivers for Tamil Nadu students with 190+ PCM and for other-state students with 95%+ PCM. Additional scholarships cover Anna University rank holders, department toppers, and students with 9.00+ CGPA. Need-based aid, government scholarships for BC/SC/ST, first-graduate compensation (₹20,000/year), domicile, single girl child, sports, EWS, and defence personnel children are also supported.
Separate hostels for boys and girls offer spacious, well-furnished rooms with 24x7 Wi-Fi (subject to a 1GB daily limit). Facilities include common rooms, TV, indoor games, a gym, and live-in wardens. Food quality is mixed—some students rate it as hygienic and excellent, while others find it average or okay. Hostel accommodation is subject to availability and fees are separate from tuition.
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