IIM Calcutta reported an average monthly stipend at Rs 1.85 lakh, while the median stipend stood at Rs 2 lakh a month for the summer placement season.

IIM Calcutta has achieved 100 per cent placement for summer internships in 2026 for its 62nd MBA batch. A total of more than 520 offers were received for 465 students by 154 firms within seven days of placement activities.

The institute said the entire placement process was completed in hybrid mode. In all, 183 recruiters participated in the placement drive, including many first-time participants alongside regular recruitment partners. The structured cluster-cohort model, along with policies such as the ‘dream offer’, ensured an optimal fit between students and recruiters”, making it, as the institute described, “a win-win for both sides.”

Average monthly stipend of Rs 1.85 lakh

IIM-Calcutta reported that the average monthly stipend during summer placement season stood at Rs 1.85 lakh, while the median stipend was Rs 2 lakh per month. This year, the highest domestic stipend was Rs 4.5 lakh a month, while the highest international stipend reached Rs 6 lakh a month.

That the top 5% of students at IIM Calcutta received an average of Rs 3.4 lakh per month reflects strong market demand for its MBA talent. Sectoral trends IIM Calcutta said the summer placement season at the institute saw offers from sectors like consulting, finance, FMCG, manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, software, and technology. Besides the legacy recruiters tapping into the pool of students at the institute, multiple new domestic and international firms participated in the process for the first time. The institute said that a large and strong network of alumni helped in making the recruiters' interaction much stronger for the smooth placements of all. The sustained relationship between the alumni, faculty and corporate partners further added momentum to the process of achieving a single objective of 100% placement across all cohorts. Commenting on the feat, Professor Ritu Mehta, Chairperson of Placement Activities at IIM Calcutta said, "The performance of the 62nd batch MBA students resulted in yet another year of excellent summer placements. We are grateful to the recruiters for continuing to believe in our students and trust our academic processes." Previous session also recorded 100 per cent placement In the previous session, for the 61st MBA batch, IIM Calcutta had achieved full summer internship placements, wherein all 475 students got placed with a total of 564 offers from 175 companies across sectors. According to the institute, the median stipend stood at Rs 2 lakh per month, while the average stipend was Rs 1.89 lakh per month, both record highs for IIM Calcutta then. The highest domestic stipend reached Rs 3.67 lakh per month, whereas international recruiters offered stipends as high as Rs 6.75 lakh per month.

The waitlist movement of IIM continues to be one of the most eagerly awaited stages for MBA hopefuls following the Common Admission Process (CAP) and final results of admissions. Thousands of applicants every year eagerly wait as the Indian Institutes of Management publish waitlist movement reports, typically extending between May to July.

Waitlist movement takes place when the initially shortlisted candidates reject admission invitations, and this drives IIMs to invite the next available candidates from the waitlist. This movement is quite different across different IIMs, categories, and years of admissions.

Upper IIMs (A, B, C, L, K, I) tend to observe minimum movement due to greater acceptance by higher-ranked candidates. For the year 2025 admissions, candidates should look forward to several rounds of waitlist movements in May-July 2025.

Younger IIMs and baby IIMs, however, tend to have substantial waitlist movement as plenty of aspirants upgrade to older IIMs or more prestigious non-IIM institutes.

Category-wise variations are observed — SC, ST, and OBC categories, being more heterogeneous in nature, witness greater waitlist movements owing to different patterns of acceptances and seats available.

Factors that Impact Waitlist Movement

There are various factors that determine the extent of movement at the waitlist at every IIM:

Acceptance Rate – When a majority of high-calibre candidates accept offers at top IIMs, movement is reduced.

Seat Intake – B-schools with bigger batch sizes (such as IIM Rohtak or IIM Indore) exhibit wider movement.

Alternative Offers – Offers to ISB, XLRI, FMS, SPJIMR, or abroad international B-schools tend to create openings at IIMs.

Reservation Policies – Category-wise allotments may lead to disproportionate movement across General, EWS, OBC, SC, and ST lists.

As competition becomes fiercer year on year, knowing the IIM waitlist movement 2025 trend can assist applicants in estimating their prospects better and making effective backup plans.

The government has stepped into actions in response to inquiries about fee hikes in top institutions like Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs), and central universities as part of a Parliament inquiry. Even as they assured that some of the colleges have revised their fee structure, the government asserted there are different schemes of waivers and grants of financial aid provided to students from marginalized communities. According to official figures, fees for undergraduate courses in IITs were doubled in 2016 from ₹90,000 to ₹2 lakh a year, while fees for MBA courses at top IIMs have crossed more than ₹20 lakh.

For IIMs, the schemes of financial assistance vary in institutions. Most of the IIMs offer need-based tuition fee scholarship to students of the lower-income group and extra scholarships to meritorious students by the Ministry of Education and external funding agencies. Central universities offer meric-cum-means scholarships, SC/ST scholarships, and fee waivers to meritorious students. 

IIT Fee Hike Details

The Parliament response did admit that a few IITs have raised their fees in the last few years. The course fee of the undergraduate course was raised in 2016 from ₹90,000 to ₹2 lakh per year for general category students. SC, ST, and PwD students remain exempt from full fee concessions, while partial concessions are given to EWS students. Even M.Tech and PhD courses have witnessed time-to-time fee hikes amongst IITs.

In the same vein, IIMs have innovatively restructured their fees from time to time, and fees for flagship MBA programs in leading IIMs are now touching ₹20 lakh. Yet economically weaker sections of society get considerable financial assistance so that deserving students are not deprived of opportunities because of fiscal limitations.

Govt's Stand on Accessibility

The Ministry of Education reaffirmed that affordability and accessibility are issues of prime importance. It claimed that the top institutions are still providing different types of scholarships, interest-free loan facilities, and need-based finance to ensure that students from all socio-economic backgrounds can access quality higher education with no economic burden. The response of government is to balance fiscal sustainability of institutions with inclusivity to ensure that meritorious students can still get access to education in India's best institutions irrespective of occasional fee adjustments.

IIM Waitlist Movement 2025 is the most anticipated news for CAT-shortlisted candidates eagerly waiting to hear their final offers of admission to an MBA course. Waitlist movement breaks or makes the dreams of thousands of applicants annually who just missed the first cutoff by a hair. Since majority of the waitlisted students reject their alternative offer from other b-schools, the IIMs do waiting lists to fill empty seats — a process that is rather varied from campus to campus and category to category.

When Does the IIM Waitlist Movement Happen?

Waitlist movement would begin in May and continue on up to July 2025, in several rounds. Direct notification of candidates is carried out by their own IIMs, and how often movement occurs typically also has something to do with whether accepted candidates choose to hold or give up seats at the last minute.

Trends Observed Over Recent Years

The past few years have witnessed trends based on analysis identifying an unmistakable trend:

Top IIMs (A, B, C, L, K, I): Barely any waitlist movement owing to increased acceptance rates. The largest majority of the top-ranked candidates get their admission here.

New and Baby IIMs: Increased waitlist movement owing to a high number of candidates preferring to join higher-ranked colleges or choose top private B-schools in the latter half of the admission season.

Category Movement: SC/ST and OBC categories see greater movement because reserved seats are not filled in the first round necessarily.

Most Important Factors Influencing Waitlist Movement

Acceptance Rate: As more top performers join premier IIMs, waitlist movement in such colleges is still limited.

High-ranked IIMs will have their lists fill very shortly, while new IIMs (like IIM Nagpur, IIM Ranchi, and IIM Amritsar) may experience revolutionary changes with candidates taking spots elsewhere. Candidates need to keep searching for updates more frequently and move quickly on offers since most IIMs operate on a tight timeline.

Conclusion

IIM waitlist movement 2025 offers a second chance to quite a huge number of meritorious applicants. Trends knowledge and alertness across admission rounds is the secret. Though flagship IIMs have lesser fluctuations, newer ones prefer to allow good things to happen to the aspiring hearts — hence patience and perseverance are the mantras for all MBA aspirants

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