69 Best Restaurants in Mumbai, India

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We've compiled the best of the best in Mumbai - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Buddi Galli

$

You'll have to drive a bit to reach Buddi Galli (a lane selling a bunch of local, meat-forward street food), but once you reach it, your taste buds will thank you. Try the naankhaliya, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar's slow-cooked beef or mutton curry, fried tikki kebabs, and if you come during Ramzan, the harees (a hearty meat and lentil stew). If you can, go after sunset, when the lane truly comes alive.

Buddi Galli, Naralibag, 431001, India
Known For
  • Meaty Muslim cooking
  • Cantukky chicken (a take on KFC)
  • Indian desserts like apricots with cream

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Burma Burma

$$ | Kala Ghoda

A trip to India can represent an opportunity for travelers to test the ropes at living vegetarian for a while (veg options constitute literally half of every menu here), but few major restaurants in the city have mastered all the possibilities of vegetarian like the charming Burma Burma. Ankit Gupta, the owner, is half Burmese, and demands authenticity, so short of a separate flight to Myanmar itself, you're not likely to find dishes as skillful as these in many other places; the restaurant also serves excellent teas (but no alcohol).

Kothari House, Mumbai, India
22-4003–6600
Known For
  • Nanji kaukswe (delicious noodles served in dry coconut powder)
  • Nanpeebya (Burmese bread served with creamy white peas)
  • Shway aye, chilled coconut milk served in a glass with sweet bread

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Café Churchill

$$ | Colaba

Dingy—but not dirty—Churchill specializes in British-style comfort food (e.g., starchy and simple roast beef and gravy with steamed veggies and mashed potatoes), and its red-and-white vinyl interior fits the food. The desserts are some of the best Mumbai has to offer—at any given time you'll find five kinds of chocolate cake (brownie, truffle, you name it), and five kinds of cheesecake in the dessert case.

103-B Colaba Causeway, Mumbai, 400005, India
22-2204–2604
Known For
  • Great location on Colaba Causeway
  • Small space that is often quite crowded
  • Was once the haunt of M. F. Husain, one of India's best-known artists

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Café Mondegar

$ | Colaba

Always packed, Mondy is a great place to grab an ice-cold Kingfisher draft and watch the crowds roll in—though unlike nearby Leo's, Mondy's doesn't have a full liquor license. Avoid the characterless air-conditioned room and instead post up at one of the cramped tables in the main space, where the jukebox plays at full blast and the walls are covered with cartoon murals of Mumbai life.

Colaba Causeway, Mumbai, 400005, India
22-2202–0591
Known For
  • Greasy, spicy Chinese food that pairs excellently with icy beer
  • An iconic Mumbai restaurant
  • Great location in the heart of touristy Colaba

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Café Zoe

$$ | Lower Parel

One of the city's most popular dining and drinking spots, the roomy, open, yet strangely utilitarian Café Zoe serves European and continental breakfasts, brunches, lunches, dinners, and drinks. Depending on what time you arrive at this converted industrial compound, the crowd may include young parents feeding their one-year-old daughter sweet bites of Belgian waffles, local journalists shoveling down hot minestrone soup while using the free Wi-Fi, dating couples sharing a romantic dinner of seafood and pasta, or young partygoers drinking cocktails in a dim but sensuous atmosphere after midnight.

Circle Sixty Nine

$$ | Worli

Once the exclusive domain of a members-only club, Kathiwada City House has opened a tiny corner of its space to the gawking public. Circle Sixty Nine, a small eatery by restaurateur Aditi Dugar (who also opened Masque), serves European-inspired fare to a view of the tiny terraced courtyard.

Sir Pochkhanwala Rd., Mumbai, 400030, India
8169--894240
Known For
  • Perfect for a romantic meal
  • Interesting selection of small sharing plates
  • Gorgeous murals and artwork
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Cream Centre

$$ | Marine Drive

This very popular vegetarian restaurant, begun in 1958 and now part of a chain, is a convenient address in the city for delicious chana bhatura: the piping-hot, football-size puris made from white flour and yeast are served with spicy chickpeas and raw onions and lemons. The cheesy nachos and deep-fried corn cheese balls are good snack options, especially when washed down with their popular ice cream soda. It's so popular on weekends that the staff have initiated curbside pickup for the hungry hordes left waiting on the road for a seat in the restaurant.

25-B Chowpatty Seaface, Mumbai, 400007, India
7977--795688
Known For
  • (Vegetarian) Tex Mex options
  • Empty lunchtimes, brimming dinnertimes
  • Chowpatty Beach views

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Delhi Darbar

$ | Colaba

Classic no-frills North Indian food draws many Middle Eastern vacationers to this eatery; it also has outlets throughout the United Arab Emirates, though this one's the flagship. It's loud and bustling—not the place for a romantic dinner—but the real reason to come is the top-quality chicken and mutton.

Colaba Causeway, Mumbai, 400005, India
22-2202–5656
Known For
  • Biryanis
  • Butter chicken (or the paneer version for vegetarians)
  • Excellent location for Colaba shoppers

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Elco Restaurant

$ | Bandra

For decades the food stalls in front of Elco Market have been serving some of the best—and cleanest—vegetarian street food Mumbai has to offer, and they were doing so well that the owners were able to open this two-floor restaurant inside the market, offering essentially the same food. One of Mumbai's most iconic experiences is standing by the pani puri vendor, as he stuffs boiled potato, sprouts, mint-fresh water, and sweet chutney into an eggshell-thin sphere of fried flour and hands it to you in a plate woven together with leaves.

46 Hill Rd., Mumbai, 400050, India
22-2645--7677
Known For
  • The chaat, including the pani puri
  • All the fun of street food without any of the tummy upsets
  • Ragda pattice (shallow-fried potato patties blanketed with a spicy curry of white peas)

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Ellora Restaurant

$

A convenient place to stop for a cold drink and a hot samosa. The outdoor patio has fruit trees (home to many monkeys) and pink bougainvillea flowers. The restaurant closes before the caves do.

India
24-372–4441

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Gajalee

$$

Suburbanites love this seafood joint near Juhu Beach, which compares favorably with the coastal restaurants in Fort. The Phoenix Mall branch is sleek and modern, while the original Vile Parle location is a bit tacky and dated but better regarded (as most originals are).

There are other branches across Mumbai, but they are all in the northern suburbs.

VL Mehta Marg, JVPD Scheme, Juhu, 400049, India
22-2610--7040
Known For
  • The fried surmai fish (a type of mackerel)
  • The big, fresh grilled tiger prawns
  • The "baby shark" masala (actually mori fish)

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Gallops

$$ | Worli

Set in the middle of the city’s racecourse, Gallops has a classic, consistent, North Indian and 1970s-style "continental" European menu. To book the alfresco section---a rarity in Mumbai---you'll have to call in advance; it's usually kept closed, and opened for special parties or receptions.

Mahalaxmi Race Course, Mumbai, 400034, India
22-6960--0111
Known For
  • Extraordinary view of the green sweep of the racecourse
  • Alfresco garden seating
  • Chilli cheese toast, a Mumbai icon

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Gaylord

$$ | Churchgate

A genteel throwback to the continental dishes of the 1950s, '60s, and '70s, Gaylord opened in the 1950s and has consistently fed the city's sense of nostalgia by eschewing faddish culinary crazes and sticking to old-fashioned Indian and European dishes like lobster thermidore; it also has a bakery that sells bread, pastries, and other dainties. There is an opulent air-conditioned section, but you want to sit outside on its pretty patio, fringed with a white-latticed boundary.

Veer Nariman Rd., Mumbai, 400020, India
22-2282--1259
Known For
  • Chicken à la Kiev
  • North Indian dishes (very popular with Mumbaikars)
  • One of the few restaurants with an alfresco section

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Hakkasan

$$ | Bandra

A Mumbai outpost of the Michelin-starred London original, this Bandra haunt is worth a visit for those who absolutely must have a fancy Chinese dinner. Even then, it's likely only worth dining here if you're in Bandra already.

206 Waterfield Rd., Mumbai, 400050, India
8355--877777
Known For
  • Delicious dim sum
  • Chic interiors
  • The odd celebrity spotting

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Hotel Deluxe

$ | Fort

Inexpensive, shabby, and frankly a bit of a hole-in-the-wall, Hotel Deluxe (neither a hotel nor deluxe) has long been the default choice of eatery for homesick Keralites. The menu is vast, but tunnel your vision towards the special section; anything on there is bound to be excellent.

Pitha St., Mumbai, 400001, India
22-2204--2351
Known For
  • Flaky Malbari parottas
  • Tiny karimeen fish, fried to a crisp
  • Vegetarian thali (platter) served on a banana leaf

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India Jones

$$$$ | Nariman Point

Though the name implies something quite different, this restaurant actually serves Pan-Asian food and attracts a mix of couples and families out for a special occasion. A bubbling pond with wooden statues greets customers to an interior decked out with understated Asian accoutrements—bamboos and various Asian scripts on the walls.

Mumbai, 400021, India
22-6632–6330
Known For
  • Malaysian beef tenderloin satay
  • Teppenyaki grill
  • All-you-can-eat dim sum lunch menu

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Kailas

$

Walk straight out of Kailasa Cave (number 16), past the umpteen souvenir stalls on your right, and you'll see the Hotel Kailas with its attached restaurant, Kailas: it's a simple cafeteria-style restaurant serving basic vegetarian Indian food until 9:30 pm. The food isn't great, but it's a hygienic spot, and a bit nicer than the Ellora Restaurant.

India

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Konkan Café

$$$ | Colaba

Styled as an haute version of a typical Mangalorean home—all red clay and bright green—Konkan is in the Vivanta by Taj hotel (still "Taj President" to taxi drivers). It does all the chow your average home might serve, but it's more refined, with cleaner flavors and elegant presentation (food is served on copper thali plates lined with banana leaves), plus it has the added advantage of being one of the few coastal restaurants to offer a great, if expensive, bottle of wine.

Ladu Samrat

$ | Parel

Once bustling Lalbaug was the beating heart of Mumbai's mill lands and center of its radical leftist political culture. The mills have since folded, but the area is still home to a clot of eateries serving excellent Maharashtrian cooking, and among the best is Ladu Samrat, an unfussy, eminently affordable, but rather threadbare restaurant serving homey vegetarian Maharashtrian snacks.

Lalbaug, Dr. Ambedkar Rd., Parel, Mumbai, 400012, India
8686--002016
Known For
  • Sabudana vada (crisp-fried tapioca cakes)
  • Vada pao (fried potato cakes served with a slick of chutney, sandwiched within a soft white bread roll)
  • Pannha (a sweet-tangy drink made from green mango), excellent to mollify the spice of accompanying dishes

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Leopold Café & Bar

$$ | Colaba

When it defiantly reopened just four days after the first shots of the 2008 terrorist attacks were fired and 10 people were killed, the crowds were so big the police had to shut the place down all over again (the ownership has preserved bullet holes from the attack on its upstairs windows for people to see). Order a bottle of ice-cold Kingfisher beer to wash down the hearty, typical bar food—chicken tikka, french fries, that kind of thing, or go with the Chinese food that is actually the better bet.

Colaba Causeway, Mumbai, 400005, India
22-2282–8185
Known For
  • Chilli chicken
  • Chicken fried rice
  • Exceedingly lively atmosphere

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Lovefools

$$ | Bandra West

You’ll have to navigate Bandra’s warren of lanes on foot to reach The Lovefools---the perfect way to prime your appetite for Chef Sarita Pereira’s experimental cooking (her influences swing from Scandinavian to Japanese to Indian). The bonus is that you can sit in air-conditioned comfort in an old-fashioned heritage bungalow in Bandra or eat alfresco in its charming little courtyard, a rare pleasure in Mumbai.

C-14, 525, Ranwar, Mumbai, 400050, India
9820--203360
Known For
  • LoveCrummbs bakery that shares space with the restaurant
  • Cozy space and interiors
  • Heavily customizable menu that changes frequently
Restaurant Details
Reservations recommended

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Madhuban

$$

Located at ITC's Rama International, this restaurant has plenty of North Indian as well as local Maharashtrian dishes on offer. Get the chef to make you the local special, the meaty naan khaliya, a throwback to the Mughal era. The decor is elegant but unremarkable.

R-3 Chikalthana, 431210, India
240-265–3095
Known For
  • Buffet meals (but check before going
  • It isn't always available)
  • North Indian specialties
  • Obliging staff

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Mag St. Cafe

$$ | Colaba

At this airy cafe full of sunlight, you can find comforting breads and French baked goods, as well as an assortment of savory breakfast items. There are branches in Lower Parel and Bandra.

Mahesh Lunch Home

$$ | Fort

This well-known seafood restaurant attracts the office-lunch crowd as well as packing them in during the evenings. Some of the character was stripped out of the place after it decided to go upscale, and the floor-to-ceiling marble might be a bit much, but the traditional Mangalorean seafood dishes are reliably good.

8-B Cawasji Patel St., Mumbai, 400001, India
22-2202--3965
Known For
  • Clam and squid sukha (dry masala)
  • Fish gassi, made with local fish of your choice
  • Neer dosa (paper-fine flatbreads)

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Natural

$ | Churchgate

Serving the best fruit-flavored ice-cream in town, Natural—milky, creamy—seems to be everywhere. All of the ice cream is made with fresh fruit or nuts, and contains no preservatives; highly recommended are the tender coconut, roasted almond, or seasonal Indian fruit flavors like cinnamon-tinged chikoo (a caramel-flavored fruit also known as sapodilla), custard apple, or mango.

137 Marine Dr., Mumbai, 400001, India
8169--789745
Known For
  • Being open until midnight
  • Fruit-flavored ice creams
  • Chocolate chip ice cream

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The Nutcracker

$$ | Kala Ghoda

A short walk from the blue Knesset Eliyahoo synagogue is The Nutcracker, a tiny, pretty vegetarian restaurant with pink and white bougainvillea tumbling down its wooden windows, and mosaic tiled floors. Go for breakfast (or lunch, or dinner), and order any of the delicious egg concoctions.

VB Gandhi Marg, Mumbai, 400023, India
22-2284--2430
Known For
  • Emmenthal and truffle-oil scrambled eggs
  • Salli eggs (deep-fried potato matchsticks blanketed by eggs
  • A quintessential Parsi dish)
  • Black-bean quesadilla

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Oh! Calcutta

$$ | Tardeo

Rarely packed even on Saturday night, Oh! Calcutta serves the city's best (mustard-heavy) Bengali food in upscale surroundings of dark wood set off by simple black-and-white archival photos from the British Raj. The seafood is exquisite, and if it's all too unfamiliar, defer to the waiters—some of the best in the city—to choose something, based on your specifications.

Tulsi Wadi La., Mumbai, 400034, India
8356--905158
Known For
  • Smoked hilsa fish
  • Daab chingri (prawns cooked in rich tender coconut served in a coconut shell)
  • Tel koi (whole perch cooked in a bath of mustard oil)

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Pali Village Café

$$$ | Bandra

Quality European bistro food—and the possibility of seeing a Bollywood star or two—draws suburbanites as well as townies on date night to this converted one-story restaurant in Bandra, but it's the romantic, old-school charm of its interior that keeps them coming back for more. While the rest of Mumbai runs headlong into the future, this place harks back to Bombay's bungalow roots with simple wooden tables, wrought-iron railings, and exposed brick.

Pali Naka, Mumbai, 400050, India
22-2605–0401
Known For
  • Rustic-chic decor
  • Wonderful wine selection
  • Eclectic pizzas (apple, caramelized onions, and blue cheese is particularly playful)
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Pancham Puriwala

$ | CST

This no-frills eating establishment used to sit across a tank (Gibbet’s Pond) which was once the stage for the city’s grisliest public hangings. The fifth-generation owners believe it to be one of Mumbai’s earliest eating establishments, but whether it is or isn’t, their trademark dish---puri bhaji (spiced vegetables scooped up with fried bread)---has certainly stayed consistently tasty over the decades. Its clientele includes everyone from Uber drivers to powerful city politicians.

10 Perin Nariman St., Borabazar Precinct, Mumbai, 400001, India
8104–827851
Known For
  • Close to VT/CST station
  • New air-conditioned section
  • Pancham thali with various vegetable dishes and five types of puris

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The Pantry

$ | Fort

Under the same ownership as Woodside Inn, this restaurant dispenses with the pubby atmosphere to focus on simple, rustic cuisine using local ingredients. The food is excellent and reasonably priced considering how refined it is, and although it'd be nice if it had a wine license—the white interiors, open kitchen, and general atmosphere all scream "wine bar"—the excellent baked goods and mains more than make up for the lack of booze.

Military Sq. La., Mumbai, 400001, India
22-2270–0082
Known For
  • Healthy breakfast options
  • Delightful baked goods
  • Fairly accommodating of gluten-free diners
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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