


Default balanced weighting across all factors.

Sultan Ul Uloom College of Pharmacy (SUCP) in Hyderabad’s upscale Banjara Hills presents a classic trade-off. You get a prime city-center location, a peaceful green campus, and a solid academic reputation backed by an NAAC A+ grade and NBA accreditation. But you also get a reality check on placements, with NIRF-reported median packages for B.Pharm graduates sitting at ₹2.4 LPA, and a disciplined, almost strict, campus culture. It’s a college that’s highly regarded in Telangana’s private pharmacy circuit, but one where your career trajectory will depend heavily on your own hustle, especially given the competitive on-campus placement scene.
SUCP offers the full pharmacy ladder. The four-year B.Pharm is the flagship, with an intake of 100. For postgraduates, there are five M.Pharm specializations—Pharmaceutics, Pharmacology, Pharmaceutical Analysis, Pharmaceutical Quality Assurance, and Pharmacy Practice—each taking in 15 students. The six-year Pharm.D program is a notable offering for those targeting clinical pharmacy, and the college is also a recognized Ph.D. research center under JNTUH.
The academic rhythm follows the JNTUH semester system. Faculty strength is around 46-50, with about a quarter holding Ph.D.s. Students consistently praise the teaching staff as approachable and industry-aware, with Principal Dr. Anupama Koneru, a long-time Indian Pharmaceutical Association member, setting the tone. The college has structured MoUs for clinical training with hospitals like Star and Prime, and for research with institutes like the Central Research Institute for Unani Medicine (CRIUM). It’s an academically sound environment, though some student reviews hint that the pharmacy block’s infrastructure feels a bit dated compared to newer buildings on the shared 24-acre Mount Pleasant campus.
This is where you need to read between the lines. The college’s placement cell organizes training and brings in a reputable list of core pharma recruiters: Cipla, Dr. Reddy’s, Aurobindo Pharma, Sun Pharma, and Apollo Pharmacy are regulars. However, the official placement percentage claim often meets a skeptical reception in student reviews, where the working estimate is a more competitive 45-55% for on-campus offers.
The numbers tell a clearer story. The NIRF 2024 report provides audited median packages: ₹2.40 LPA for B.Pharm, ₹2.80 LPA for M.Pharm, and ₹3.20 LPA for Pharm.D. You might see unverified claims of a highest package of 9.5 LPA or an average of 4.8 LPA, but the NIRF data is the official benchmark. For Pharm.D students, placements are steady but mostly in hospital pharmacy and clinical research, not in high-flying corporate roles. The takeaway? Good companies visit, but securing an offer requires standing out. Many graduates, as alumni note on forums, find their jobs through off-campus drives or personal networks after building a foundation here.
Fees are regulated by the Telangana Admission and Fee Regulatory Committee (TAFRC). For the 2024-25 session, the annual tuition for B.Pharm is approximately ₹1.01 to ₹1.25 lakhs. Over four years, you’re looking at a total cost of ₹4.5 to ₹5.5 lakhs, plus additional university and exam fees (around ₹10,000-15,000 extra per year). Pharm.D fees range from ₹80,000 to ₹1.1 lakh per year.
Financial aid is available. Eligible students from SC, ST, BC, and EBC categories can apply for the Telangana government’s RTF (Reimbursement of Tuition Fee) scheme. M.Pharm students with a valid GPAT score receive a stipend. As a minority institution, scholarships via the National Scholarship Portal (NSP) are also accessible. Management quota (Category B) seats exist and are predictably more expensive, often costing ₹1.2 to ₹1.5 lakhs per year plus a development fee.
Admissions are entrance-exam driven. For B.Pharm and the 6-year Pharm.D, you need a valid rank in the state-level TS EAMCET (now called TG EAPCET). For M.Pharm and the 3-year Pharm.D (Post Baccalaureate), you need a TS PGECET or GPAT score.
The selection follows a 70:30 split. Seventy percent of seats are filled through the state counseling process (Convenor Quota) based on your entrance rank. The remaining 30% are Management Quota seats. As a Muslim Minority institution, a significant portion of seats is reserved for Muslim candidates across both quotas.
Cutoffs vary widely by category. For B.Pharm in 2024, the closing rank for the general category hovered around the 3,00,000 mark in TS EAMCET, with the opening rank much higher. For Pharm.D, the closing rank was around 68,000. These ranks shift each year based on applicant pool and seat matrix, so they’re a guide, not a guarantee.
The campus is a major selling point and a minor headache. Located in Banjara Hills, it’s incredibly convenient for internships, city life, and access to metro stations like Irrum Manzil (~2.5 km away). The setting is surprisingly green and quiet for central Hyderabad. Infrastructure includes over 18 specialized labs with equipment like HPLC, a library with over 12,800 volumes and e-journal access, and shared amenities like a canteen (famous for its biryani), a gym, and on-campus banking.
But there are caveats. A big one: there is no on-campus hostel. Students rely on private PGs and hostels in Banjara Hills or Masab Tank, which adds to the monthly cost. Parking is perpetually tight. And the culture is disciplined—75% attendance is strictly enforced, and mobile phone use is restricted to designated areas. This isn’t a ‘party college.’ It’s a place for students who prefer a focused, professional atmosphere.
Synthesizing feedback from Shiksha, CollegeDunia, and Reddit threads paints a consistent picture. The faculty gets rave reviews for being supportive and knowledgeable. “The faculty is the backbone of this college; they don’t just teach for exams but for the industry,” as one Shiksha review put it. The location and serene campus are almost universally loved.
The criticisms are just as consistent. The placement gap between expectation and reality is a frequent theme. While top recruiters visit, the number of students placed directly is seen as limited. The strict disciplinary code, including attendance policing, is a pain point for some. And several reviews mention that while labs are well-equipped, the pharmacy building itself shows its age compared to other structures on the integrated campus. As a Quora user noted pragmatically, “Placements for Pharm.D are mostly hospital-based; don’t expect IT-level packages here.”
SUCP is a solid, reputable choice for a specific kind of student. If you value a strong academic foundation in pharmacy, taught by good faculty in a prime Hyderabad location, and you’re self-motivated enough to leverage that location for internships and off-campus opportunities, it’s a good fit. The NAAC A+ grade and NBA accreditation add tangible weight to your degree. It’s particularly strong for Pharm.D aspirants seeking clinical exposure through its hospital tie-ups.
However, if your primary metric is high guaranteed placement packages straight out of graduation, you might be disappointed. The median salary outcomes are modest, and the culture is strict. You also need to budget and arrange for private accommodation. Ultimately, SUCP is best for students who see it as a launchpad—a place to get a respected qualification and then use Hyderabad’s vast pharma network to build a career, rather than a college that will hand you a dream job at convocation.
2 ranking entries · click any row to see year-by-year trend
Year-on-Year Trends
1 stream · Fees from ₹80.0K to ₹1.1 L
1 exam with cutoff data available
| Course | Category | Rank | Year | Rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pharm.D | Minority / male | 68,731 | 2023 | R1 |
| B.Pharm | Minority / male | 91,435 | 2023 | R1 |
| Pharm.D | Minority / male | 68,731 | 2023 | R1 |
| B.Pharm | Minority / male | 91,435 | 2023 | R1 |
Auditorium
Cafeteria
Computer Labs
Science Labs
Sports Complex
Study LibraryNo, Sultan Ul Uloom College of Pharmacy does not provide on-campus hostel facilities. Students typically arrange accommodation in nearby private paying guest (PG) accommodations located in the Banjara Hills area.
Yes, Sultan Ul Uloom College of Pharmacy is a Muslim Minority institution. However, it admits students from all communities through the EAMCET convenor quota as part of its inclusive admission policy.
The management quota (Category B) fees for the B.Pharm program are generally higher than the convenor quota fees. They are often in the range of ₹1.2 lakh to ₹1.5 lakh per annum, plus a required one-time development fee.
Placements for the Pharm.D program are decent, with opportunities primarily in clinical research and hospital pharmacy sectors, including associations with hospitals like Star and Prime Hospitals. The median placement packages are around ₹3.2 lakh per annum (LPA).
The college maintains a strict attendance policy, requiring students to maintain a minimum of 75% attendance to be eligible to appear for the university examinations. The institution is known for its disciplined academic environment.
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