Clarity before commitment.
A five-step framework to help you evaluate the right college for you — not just the highest-ranked one available.
Evaluate every college on these five factors.
Expand any factor to get the full research guide — what it means, what to ask, and how to rate it.
College Life & Culture
The energy around you shapes who you become.
The social energy on campus shapes you in ways no syllabus does. Clubs, fests, peer ambition, and the general vibe of the student body become your everyday environment. Some campuses have a startup mindset and high peer drive; others are laid-back and comfortable. Neither is wrong — but you need to know which one you're walking into.
- 1.How active are the clubs and technical fests — are they student-driven or just on paper?
- 2.Is there a startup or entrepreneurship culture on campus?
- 3.What do students actually do on a typical Thursday night?
- 4.How are the sports facilities — gym, grounds, courts, swimming pool?
- 5.Do seniors actually engage with juniors, or is everyone in their own bubble?
City & Location
You're not visiting — you're living there for four years.
City tier directly affects your internship options, weekend life, industry exposure, and daily sense of independence. A college in a Tier 1 city gives you proximity to events, companies, and a faster pace. A remote campus can feel isolating after a few months — or it can force focus, depending on who you are. Know what you're choosing.
- 1.How easy is it to get to the city for events or internships?
- 2.Is public transport available, or do you need a vehicle?
- 3.Are there restrictions on leaving campus on weeknights?
- 4.What's the nearest airport and railway station — and how far are they?
- 5.Do students feel connected to the outside world, or isolated?
Hostel & Daily Life
After two months, this becomes your actual world.
Room quality, mess food, Wi-Fi, and curfew rules define your daily experience. These aren't comfort features — they directly affect your sleep, focus, and mental health. A student in a cramped shared room with bad food and patchy internet is dealing with handicaps that have nothing to do with intelligence.
- 1.What are the hostel rooms like — single or shared, AC or non-AC?
- 2.How is the mess food honestly — not the brochure answer?
- 3.What is the curfew policy — can you leave campus at night?
- 4.How is the Wi-Fi speed and reliability across the hostel?
- 5.Are there options to eat outside — canteen, delivery, nearby food spots?
Academic Flexibility
White space in your week is where everything real gets built.
Timetable structure, attendance policy, and grading system directly affect your freedom to explore, intern, and build things outside the syllabus. An 8am–5pm schedule with 75% mandatory attendance leaves almost no room for anything else. The best things many IITians build happen during their free slots — that free time has to exist first.
- 1.Is the timetable 8am–5pm every day, or are there free slots built in?
- 2.What is the attendance policy — is 75% strictly enforced with detentions?
- 3.Is grading relative or absolute — does it get harder if your batch is smart?
- 4.Is it possible to take internships during the semester without attendance issues?
- 5.Does the college allow open electives, minors, or branch change after Year 1?
Placements & Alumni
Know the reality, not the marketing.
Median package and placement consistency matter far more than the highest package ever recorded. One person joining Goldman Sachs doesn't help you. The alumni network quality affects opportunities for years after graduation — active alumni who respond to messages and refer juniors are worth more than a trophy on a college website.
- 1.What is the median package — not the highest, the median — for your branch?
- 2.What percentage of students who want placements actually get placed?
- 3.Which companies actually come regularly — not just once in five years?
- 4.How active are the alumni — do they refer juniors and respond to Instagram DMs?
- 5.Are alumni mostly in large corporates, or are some founding startups and building things?
Three steps. One clear answer.
The template does the work once you do the research.
Add your top 4–5 colleges from the predictor or counselling shortlist.
Use the questions above. Talk to at least one current student per college.
Score each college on each factor. The highest total score is your answer.
You've learned the framework. Now apply it.
Download the evaluation template. Fill it in as you research and talk to seniors. The clearest choice will show itself.
Open Google Sheets TemplateA simple spreadsheet. Rate each college you're considering. No account needed.