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SLN College of Engineering has been quietly chugging along in Raichur since 1979. That's longer than most of its current students have been alive. And yet, the college remains something of a mystery in Karnataka's crowded private engineering landscape—a place where a 77-acre campus and an NBA-accredited set of programmes sit alongside classrooms with broken windows and placement numbers that shift wildly depending on whom you ask.
The college runs a broad engineering portfolio under VTU's framework. On paper, the choices are modern enough—you'll find B.E. specialisations in Computer Science & Engineering, Information Science & Engineering, AI & ML, Cyber Security, Data Science, plus the traditional streams (Civil, Mechanical, Electronics & Communication). There's also a Textile Technology programme that's a bit unusual for the region. Intake numbers are generous: Civil alone had 270 seats in the 2023-24 cycle, according to one unverified source. The postgraduate side includes an MBA (established in 2011) and M.Tech offerings across several VTU-recognised disciplines. A doctoral programme exists too, hosted in collaboration with VTU.
Academically, the curriculum follows VTU's semester pattern, with internal assessments conducted by the college. The internal pass percentage is set at 55%. No mystery there. The faculty force is a talking point: the brief claims that 75% of staff have over 25 years of teaching experience, and that all faculty hold a Ph.D. in their subject. That last part feels optimistic. It's not unusual for colleges to stretch the truth on qualifications, and student reviews don't uniformly praise the teaching. One review notes that lecturers help the top students but neglect average ones. The college's own description leans heavily on phrases like “technical expertise, social responsibility, leadership, and ethical values,” but that's brochure language. What's real are the year-long technical activities, training programmes, and occasional industrial visits—with partial financial assistance, which is a small but useful gesture for students who can't afford trip costs.
Right, let's tackle the numbers head-on. Official VTU-submitted data for 2023 gives a 21.97% placement rate for Engineering & Architecture, with a median salary of ₹2.5 LPA. The MBA batch fared a little better at 40% placed, also at a median of ₹2.5 LPA. The highest package reported for MBA students is ₹12 LPA. For engineering, the official peak was ₹2.5 LPA in 2023—which is essentially the same as the median, implying a very flat distribution. One unverified number floating around claims an ₹80 LPA outlier, but that is almost certainly either fake or a very generous interpretation of an off-campus offer.
Now, steer away from the official table and onto student forums, and the picture gets a whole lot murkier. Multiple reviews on CollegeDunia and Shiksha peg placement percentages at 10% or less for some batches. One review flatly says, “0% for some batches.” Another says the average salary was ₹12,000 per month, which would be under ₹1.5 LPA annually if full-time. That's tough. The placement cell itself is described as “not active” or “not at all functioning properly” in several reviews. So the gap between the college's collected recruiter list—HP, GM, TCS, Toyota, Whirlpool, QSpiders, Capgemini, Infosys (for semiconductor with 6 CGPA) and Kyndril—and the on-ground reality is stark. Those companies do visit occasionally, but the volume of hires appears to be very low. Internship numbers are similarly inconsistent: claims of 60-70% internship placement coexist with reviews stating “no internships offered.” A rumoured minimum internship stipend of ₹25,000 seems unverified.
For a student who is capable of landing a 3 LPA job on their own, the placement cell might not add much. That's the honest takeaway. You'll likely need to hustle outside the campus, and that's not unusual for a college in this tier. But the college's own marketing often obscures that.
Tuition costs are, at least, transparent. For B.E. programmes in the 2025-26 session, annual fees range from ₹75,000 to ₹90,000. That puts the total tuition outlay for a four-year degree somewhere between ₹2.21 lakh and ₹7.2 lakh, depending heavily on whether you're in a government-quota seat or management quota. The MBA programme costs ₹54,390 to ₹75,000 per year. Hostel accommodation is separate and not cheap: expect ₹60,000 for a single-sharing room plus ₹30,000 for the mess, or ₹40,000 hostel + mess for double sharing. Add about ₹10,000 to ₹15,000 annually for miscellaneous charges—library, sports, student activities—and a one-time non-refundable fee of ₹20,000.
Scholarships do exist, many from government schemes: Merit-cum-Means, MHRD, Kitturu Rani Channamma Puraskara, Devaraj Urs Backward Classes Development Corporation, and Sitarama Jindal Foundation scholarships. The Hyderabad Zakat & Charitable Trust scholarship is another one. The college says it offers its own merit scholarships too, plus fee concessions for reserved category students. None of this is unusual for Karnataka, but a student who can string together a couple of these could bring the effective cost down considerably.
You get into SLN College of Engineering through the usual Karnataka routes: KCET, COMEDK UGET, or JEE Main for B.E. programmes. For MBA, it's CAT, MAT, XAT, or CMAT. The principal mode is KCET counselling, which governs the majority of seats. Specific cutoff ranks aren't available in the brief, but given the college's tier, you shouldn't need a top-10,000 rank. Management quota seats—typically 30-35% of intake—are filled directly through the college. For the 2026-27 session, applications are already open. COMEDK UGET 2026 admit cards were postponed to April 30, and the exam is scheduled for May 9. Karnataka PGCET 2026 for M.Tech and MBA will be held on May 23 and 24 respectively. KCET 2026 has concluded, with results imminent.
Management quota admission involves contacting the college, paying a registration deposit, and completing document verification. First-year management fees for popular CSE branches and AI&ML are ₹1,50,000, including a development/donation fee. That's notably higher than the government-quota fee, so families need to budget accordingly.
A 77-acre campus is large. That's a genuine plus, even if much of it feels underdeveloped. The library holds around 29,000 books and offers digital resources—reviews call it “wide with good books quantity” and “so good,” though some note it's not updated. Laboratories are generally well-equipped, though the EC lab lacks AC. Classrooms are a weak point: air conditioning is absent, and multiple reviews describe them as “very old and very clumsy with broken windows.” The campus does have Wi-Fi, but students uniformly complain it's “very bad” and “very slow.”
Hostel facilities are available for both genders, with 174 bedspaces for men and 128 for women. The college touts 24/7 water supply and internet, but student reviews are split. Some like the “nicely decorated rooms with a small balcony” and clean common areas. Others call the hostel “very vintage (old)” and “in very bad condition with no facility.” The food is “okay,” and given that mess fees are ₹30,000 a year, that probably stings a bit.
Sports infrastructure exists on paper: cricket ground, 400-metre track, basketball, volleyball, indoor games. But some reviews say sports are “so bad” and “always in controversy.” The canteen is spacious and hygienic. There's an on-campus ATM and health centre. Transport services run for students and staff. Social life gets a terse “no enjoyment” in one review, which, alongside the lack of air-conditioned classrooms, might make the Raichur heat feel longer.
I've combed through reviews across several platforms, and a pattern emerges. The positive notes cluster around faculty: “highly qualified,” “knowledgeable,” “helpful to top students.” The library gets genuine praise. The lab facilities are acceptable. The campus is big.
The negatives are louder and more consistent. Placements are the biggest sore point. Even the 21.97% official figure is low, but many students report far worse. Infrastructure complaints recur: old classrooms, poor Wi-Fi, indifferent hostel maintenance, drinking water quality issues. Teaching quality is uneven—top students get attention, average ones get left behind. The 2022 scheme, in particular, draws flak. One student complained that workshops are conducted “for money purposes.” Another said the placement cell is not at all functioning.
And yet, the college does produce some graduates who end up at TCS or Infosys, likely through off-campus drives or sheer persistence. So if you're self-motivated and treat the degree as a VTU certificate with a campus attached, it's workable. If you expect the college to hand you a job, you'll be disappointed.
For a student from Raichur or a nearby district who needs an affordable engineering seat and can manage the commute, SLN College of Engineering is an option. Not a great one, but a viable one if you have a plan for your own placement and don't rely on the campus recruitment process. The fees are moderate, scholarships can soften the blow, and the VTU affiliation gives your degree official weight. The NBA accreditation of undergraduate programmes is a quiet but real mark of quality.
However, if you have a choice between this college and a better-ranked private institution in Hubli or Bangalore, take the other one. The infrastructure issues, inconsistent teaching support, and weak placement assistance mean you'll be fighting against the college's limitations as much as studying. The glowing website copy about “nurturing engineers with ethical values” doesn't match what students describe. That gap is what matters. So come here with your eyes open, bring your own career hustle, and you might walk out with a functional degree and a manageable debt load. Expect more than that, and you're setting yourself up for frustration.
2 streams · Fees from ₹68.0K to ₹1.0 L
3 exams with cutoff data available — showing recent entries
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | GM | 76,751 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | GM | 74,902 | 2023 | R1 |
| BE Computer Science and Engineering | GM | 74,616 | 2023 | R1 |
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Study LibrarySLN College of Engineering, Raichur, established in 1979, is affiliated with Visvesvaraya Technological University (VTU), Belagavi. It is approved by the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) and accredited by NAAC with a B+ grade. Its undergraduate programmes are also accredited by the National Board of Accreditation (NBA).
For the 2025-2026 academic year, the annual tuition fees for B.E. programmes at SLN College of Engineering range from approximately ₹75,000 to ₹90,000. The annual tuition fees for the MBA programme are approximately ₹54,390 to ₹75,000. These figures may vary slightly based on the specific course and student category.
In 2023, the placement percentage for Engineering & Architecture was 21.97%, with a median salary of ₹2.5 LPA. For Management and Business Administration, the placement percentage was 40.00%, also with a median salary of ₹2.5 LPA. The highest package reported for MBA students is ₹12 LPA, while for engineering, it was ₹2.5 LPA in 2023.
Students generally appreciate the spacious campus, well-equipped laboratories, and a wide library with a good collection of books. Hostel facilities include separate accommodations for boys and girls with basic amenities and hygienic food. However, common complaints include old classrooms lacking AC, slow Wi-Fi, and some reviews describe hostels as "vintage" or in "very bad condition."
For undergraduate B.E. programmes, SLN College of Engineering accepts scores from the Karnataka Common Entrance Test (KCET), Consortium of Medical, Engineering and Dental Colleges of Karnataka (COMEDK UGET), and Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Main. For the postgraduate MBA programme, candidates need a valid score in entrance exams such as CAT, MAT, XAT, or CMAT.
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