Another IT path with its own campus style. Match it to your goal — not only a cousin’s opinion.
Who this usually fits
Students drawn to an IT bachelor brand and a specific campus culture. Useful when the curriculum and environment match your learning style — not only when “BIT sounds modern.”
How you get in
Admission rules depend on the offering university/college. Check entrance (if any), +2 subject requirements, fees, and scholarship rules for the exact campus — don’t generalize from Facebook comments.
What the years often look like
IT systems, software, and applied computing topics shaped by that institution’s syllabus. Like CSIT and BCA, your edge still comes from projects, English, and networks — not the three letters alone.
Watch out for
- Choosing BIT because it sounds more “international” than CSIT/BCA without comparing syllabi.
- Skipping fee and scholarship clarity until after you’re emotionally locked in.
- Ignoring whether the campus has active seniors and clubs you can join.
Ask this before you pick
- How does this BIT syllabus differ from CSIT/BCA on the same career goal?
- Total four-year cost including transport and “extra” semester fees?
- Who will I learn with — and do they care about shipping work?
Still comparing?
Open the other after-+2 doors students in Nepal weigh beside BIT.
CE
Computer Engineering
IOE and KU both offer Computer Engineering. Decide which entrance to sit — and keep a Plan B.
CSIT
BScCSIT
Not only TU — RJU also has BScCSIT. Good software path if you add skills beside the degree.
BCA
BCA
Science or management students often come here. Ask about labs and real job help before you join.
BTech
BTech
Often sold as “AI / future” tech. Read the real syllabus and labs — not only the poster.
FA
Foreign university (Nepal)
UK/Australia/other names, taught in Nepal. Compare total fees and recognition — not only the logo.