


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

SR College of Science and Engineering in Jhansi flies a bit under the radar, but its B.Tech programmes have quietly added a raft of modern specialisations—AI, Cybersecurity, Data Science, IoT. That’s a draw for students looking beyond the usual circuit branches. Yet talk to alumni, and you’ll hear a very different story about placements. The official 85%+ claim sits oddly alongside reviews that peg the real on-campus figure closer to 40–50%. We sifted through official numbers, student reviews, and fee structures to give you the unvarnished picture.
The college runs a surprisingly broad portfolio, from engineering and pharmacy to law and agriculture. B.Tech remains the centrepiece, with 11 specialisations including the usual civil, mechanical, and electrical, plus the newer AI, ML, Data Science, Cyber Security, and IoT. A lateral-entry B.Tech (3 years) picks up diploma and B.Sc holders for a shorter route. The B.Pharm (4 years) and D.Pharm (2 years) programmes carry PCI approval, while BBA, BCA, and B.Sc (Agriculture) widen the undergrad offering. At the postgraduate level, you’ll find an MBA with five specialisations (Finance, HR, International Business, Marketing, IT), an M.Tech in Electronics and Communication, and an MCA.
Faculty numbers aren’t public, but the institute points to PhD-qualified teachers. Dr. Archana Lala (Group Director) and Prof. (Dr.) Asish Kr. Mukhopadhyay (Director) head the academic leadership. Student reviews consistently praise the faculty’s knowledge and approachability. “Teachers here are really talented and super smart,” one review notes. Teaching quality, they say, is good—though some feel it’s not always backed by a sense of responsibility from the administration.
Academically, exams come three times a semester, and they’re described as “pretty tough.” The passing grade sits at 65–70% for some, 30% for others—a confusing split that suggests varying standards across departments. There’s no explicit CGPA system detailed. A bright spot is the Google Developer Student Clubs (GDSC) chapter run by senior students and teachers, which helps build technical skills outside the classroom. Elective choices remain limited compared to larger private universities.
Let’s start with what the college says. The training and placement cell reports a highest package of INR 20 LPA (2023) and an average that has meandered from INR 4 LPA in 2021 to INR 5 LPA in 2023, with an expected INR 4–5 LPA band for 2026. A one-off off-campus INR 41 LPA figure also floats around, but no one should bank on that. Top recruiters include Wipro, TCS, Infosys, IBM, Tech Mahindra, Accenture, Capgemini, HCL, and Maruti Suzuki, with some newer names like Amazon, Byju’s, and Myntra.
And then there’s the reality check. The official placement percentage is routinely claimed as 85%+ (88% in 2022). But when you dig into student reviews on CollegeDunia and Shiksha, the numbers shatter into a dozen different pieces. Some claim 80–90% of computer science students got placed; others say the real rate is closer to 30%, or even 0.01%—an obvious exaggeration, but a sign of deep dissatisfaction. Multiple alumni allege that the placement cell asked for money for job offers that turned out to be scams. The phrase “the college didn’t help any students get placements” appears bluntly in one review.
What seems to be happening is this: the college does host a few mass recruiters, and a slice of CS/IT students with strong skills land decent offers around INR 4–6 LPA. Everyone else—especially those in core branches—scrambles for off-campus opportunities. Internships paint a similarly uneven picture. The college says 90% of students do internships. Some reviews confirm that “everyone gets an internship for practical experience,” but others retort that only 20% got internships with companies like Wipro and TCS, often unpaid. Paid internships when they happen pay ₹5,000–10,000 per month.
Bottom line: if you’re a self-starter in a CS specialisation, you might grab a Wipro or TCS offer. If you’re in civil or mechanical, or you expect the placement cell to hand you a job, you’re in for a rough ride.
Tuition here is refreshingly moderate for a private engineering college. B.Tech annual fees range from ₹61,200 to ₹66,000, putting the total programme cost at ₹2.29–2.45 Lakhs. Other courses are cheaper still: BBA at ₹27,000 a year, BCA at ₹20,000, and law courses at ₹20,000 per year. M.Tech and MCA follow the ₹61,200 pattern. Pharmacy: ₹60,000 annual for B.Pharm, ₹50,100 for D.Pharm.
But the posted tuition isn’t the full story. The Student Development Programme (SDP) fee adds ₹6,000–15,000 each year, covering insurance, library, internet, training, workshops, fests, and sports. New admittees also cough up a one-time ₹2,000 blazer charge and a ₹1,000 form fee. University exam fees are paid separately to AKTU. A rough total for a 4-year B.Tech (excluding hostel and transport) comes to around ₹3.08 Lakhs, assuming the higher end of tuition and SDP. Hostel charges run ₹70,000–80,000 a year for boys, ₹64,000 for girls—mess included, plus a ₹5,000 security deposit.
Scholarships are a genuine strength. The PRAYAS Merit Scholarship can wipe out up to 100% of tuition based on Class 12 marks or AKTU performance. JEE Main rank-holders get fee benefits. Female engineering students with a family income below ₹3.6 Lakhs and 60% marks get a 10% tuition waiver—and the college sometimes offers up to a full waiver for girls in B.Tech. Children of defence personnel and martyrs can get 50–100% scholarships. Siblings and relatives get small cuts, and sports quotas reward district to national-level players with 10–30% off (higher for B.Tech). Lateral-entry B.Tech students with 70%+ in diploma or B.Sc pay a reduced ₹40,000 tuition. The fine print: most scholarships are first-come, first-served, and you can only claim one—whichever gives the maximum benefit.
If you’re eyeing the B.Tech programme, you’ll need a valid JEE Main score and go through UPTAC counselling, managed by AKTU. The 2026 counselling schedule slots Round 1 registration from May 27 to July 15, with choice filling and locking from July 24 to July 28. The application fee is ₹1,000. Cutoffs aren’t towering: the last available cutoff for B.Tech Computer Science and Technology stood at rank 1,167,066 in UPTAC. That’s a fairly open door by engineering college standards. MBA aspirants need CMAT, M.Tech uses GATE, and diploma programmes come through JEECUP. No management quota details are publicly available, suggesting seats fill via counselling.
Spread over 80 acres, the campus is undeniably spacious—if a little isolated. Located on Gwalior Road in the outer Ambabai area, it’s a 16 km trip from Jhansi proper. Students grumble about the lack of nearby shops and the travel hassle, though the college does run a shuttle service. The academic block is modern, with smart classes and projectors in every room. An auditorium hosts events.
Hostel life splits along gender lines. Boys get four hostel buildings on campus with budget, superior 2-seater, and superior 3-seater options. Reviews call the rooms clean and well-furnished—individual beds, study tables, racks, almirahs. The girls’ hostel sits in the city, separate from the campus, which bothers some students worried about safety and commuting. Mess food draws wildly mixed reviews: some say it’s “good and affordable,” others label it “average,” while a canteen critic calls it “bad as the prices for each item is high and food quality is also not good.” There are two canteens, but unanimous praise is elusive.
Academic infrastructure has its highs and lows. Computer labs house 600+ HCL-branded machines, and a few students call the IT lab “top-notch.” But other reviews bemoan labs that are “only for seeing and not for gaining information,” with power fluctuations disrupting work. The library stocks 30,000+ books and e-journals—though one student bluntly contradicts the e-journal claim. Sports facilities are decent: cricket and football grounds, courts for badminton, basketball, lawn tennis, table tennis, and even a swimming pool. Fests like Panache and Srijan draw energy, and the GDSC club gets thumbs up for technical development.
After combing through dozens of reviews, a clear pattern emerges—one that’s equal parts encouraging and cautionary.
The positives are real. Faculty members get repeated shout-outs for being knowledgeable, helpful, and practical. The campus grounds and hostel rooms are seen as well-kept, and having specialisations like AI/ML and Cyber Security at this fee point is genuinely appealing. Annual fests and the Google Developer Student Club give students a place to tinker beyond the curriculum. No one reports ragging, which is a plus.
But the drawbacks sting. The placement gap is the loudest complaint. Too many students feel the official narrative is miles from their lived experience. “The training and placement cell asked money for placements which were scams,” one review claims. The outer location breeds frustration—when you want a quick snack or errand, there’s simply nothing nearby. Infrastructure quirks pop up: labs that don’t function for skill-building, Wi-Fi that’s “average” or non-existent, and a library that may not actually have journals. Some students feel management doesn’t listen. “No one really listens to your problems,” says one, while another adds that club activities outside the major fests get little support.
The overall sentiment? A college with decent bones but a placement engine that sputters for anyone outside the top slice of CS students.
SR College of Science and Engineering makes sense for a very specific kind of student: a B.Tech aspirant who wants a modern computer science specialisation, can keep tuition low, and is willing to hustle for placements on their own. The PRAYAS and JEE Main scholarships sweeten the deal further. If you land a full tuition waiver, the financial risk is minimal. The faculty, by most accounts, will teach you well.
But if you’re hoping for a campus that will carry you into a job offer, or if you’re eyeing core engineering, look elsewhere. The placement record is too patchy to trust, and the location is a real drag on daily life. Tread carefully, and do your own reference checks with recent graduates before committing your four years.
3 streams · Fees from ₹52.0K to ₹80.1K
MKU Pvt. Ltd.
Sobha Developers Ltd.
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Gym
Hostel
Medical
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryOfficial claims hover around 85%+ (88% in 2022), but student reviews tell a much wider story—some say 80–90% for CS students, others report as low as 30–40%. The real on-campus placement rate likely sits between 50–70% for IT branches, with core engineering seeing far fewer offers. Many graduates end up searching off-campus.
Annual tuition for B.Tech ranges from ₹61,200 to ₹66,000, making the total programme fee ₹2.29–2.45 Lakhs. Additional costs include an SDP fee of ₹6,000–15,000 per year, a ₹1,000 form fee, and a one-time ₹2,000 blazer charge—taking the 4-year total (without hostel) to roughly ₹3.08 Lakhs. Hostel and mess add ₹64,000–80,000 annually.
It’s a reasonable pick if you want an affordable B.Tech in a modern specialisation (AI, Data Science, IoT) and don’t mind grinding for placements on your own. Faculty quality and infrastructure earn praise, but the college’s placement support is inconsistent, and the campus is far from the city. Core engineering students should vet opportunities carefully.
B.Tech admission requires a valid JEE Main score and participation in UPTAC counselling. MBA aspirants need CMAT, M.Tech uses GATE, and diploma (polytechnic) entry is through JEECUP. Application and counselling are managed via AKTU’s UPTAC portal, with a ₹1,000 application fee.
The college is situated at 16 Km, Gwalior Road, Jhansi, Uttar Pradesh, in the outer Ambabai area. The campus spans 80 acres. Public transport is limited, but the college operates a shuttle service. The girls’ hostel is located separately in the city.
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