54 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.

Sea Lounge

$$$$ | Colaba Fodor's choice

In spite of wincing prices, teatime at Taj Mahal hotel's Sea Lounge is an iconic Mumbai icon meal and a hop, skip, and jump from Colaba Causeway. For your money, you get a blithe gentleman or lady plunking away sprightly, old-fashioned airs on a piano, an unparalleled view of the Gateway of India, five-star service, and a pageant of teatime treats---think demure cucumber sandwiches, scones crowned with jam and clotted cream, along with a retinue of pastry. Or you could choose to go further afield with Sea Lounge's extended high tea, which includes a bacchanal of Indian, Western, and South East Asian dishes. 

Shree Thaker Bhojnalaya

$$ | Fort

The food at Shree Thaker Bhojnalaya (not to be confused with Thackers, another Gujarati restaurant) makes an excellent primer for those venturing into vegetarian Gujarati thalis (a limitless set meal served on a metal plate called a thali). The restaurant is tiny, cheap, rather nondescript, and hidden away amidst the warren of Kalbadevi's lanes, but the extra peregrinating is well worth it—this is as close to homey Gujarati food as you will get in this city.

Dadyseth Agiary La., Mumbai, 400002, India
22-2206--9916
Known For
  • Aamras in summer and undhiyu (a root vegetable medley) in winter
  • Excellent service (they will press food on you till you burst)
  • Long waits on holidays

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Apoorva

$$ | Fort Fodor's choice

If you're searching for an authentic seafood "lunch home"—which implies unpretentious, tasty, and cheap—this old-school Kala Ghoda mainstay is spot on: slightly dingy, full of locals, with a too-cold a/c section that smells faintly of mothballs. Whichever main dish you choose, order an accompaniment of neer dosa—they are a little like rotis, but much lighter and fluffier, and made of rice; most Konkan restaurants have them, but none do them better than Apoorva.

S.A. Brelvi Marg, Mumbai, 400001, India
22-2287--0335
Known For
  • King prawn gassi (spicy gravied prawn dish)
  • Prawn or fish rawa fry, an Apoorva specialty
  • Local kane fish smothered in Mangalorean spices and deep-fried to a crisp

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Recommended Fodor's Video

The Bombay Canteen

$$ | Lower Parel Fodor's choice

Indian food is often perceived to be a monolith of spicy curries and tandoori chicken, but for those looking to shatter these snap judgments, Bombay Canteen is the place to go. In a brilliant effort to champion the sort of ingredients that rarely make it into restaurant dishes, executive chef Hussain Shahzad and its late culinary director Floyd Cardoz (once chef of New York restaurant Bombay Bread Bar) have wended their way around the country, subsuming ingredients like rat tail radish and colocasia roots into a playful menu with a global edge.

Kamala Mills, Lower Parel, Mumbai, 400013, India
8880--802424
Known For
  • Regional cuisines in an oft-changing seasonal menu
  • Canteen cocktails infused with local ingredients
  • "small plates" that are fun riffs on snacks from across India
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Indian Accent

$$$$ | Bandra Fodor's choice

This is the Mumbai outpost of Delhi’s award-winning Indian Accent, known for its contemporary twists to canonical Indian food. Chef Manish Malhotra refreshes the menu every season, offering vegan, vegetarian, gluten-free, and meat-based tasting menus, as well as a special brunch menu and one for "family feasts." The food is as theatrical and fun as ever.

Kala Ghoda Café

$$ | Fort Fodor's choice

Among the most beloved lunch spots for South Mumbai's workaday crowd, this quaint little café is the ideal spot to grab a soy latte and a quick bite while resting your feet. The fresh juices and salads are cheap but clean and safe for foreigners, the Wi-Fi is free, and the interior, while a bit cramped, is bright and pleasant---and best of all, the sandwiches, like the KGC Special (arugula, vegetarian mayo, and Padano cheese on grilled flat bread), are light but extremely tasty when snuggled up to a hot (or more preferably iced) cup of joe. It's in a popular neighborhood, just a stone's throw from Jehangir Art Gallery and Knesset Eliyahoo Synagogue.

KMC

$$ | Fort Fodor's choice

Step in for a moment of quietude at this stylish coffee shop (named for its location in the century-old building, Kitab Mahal) that doubles as a co-working space. Don’t miss the community nights here---they include anything from wine tastings to movie screenings.

Ling's Pavilion

$$ | Colaba Fodor's choice

Veering off from Colaba's arterial thoroughfare, Colaba Causeway, is Ling's Pavilion, a venerable Cantonese-style restaurant and Mumbai icon run by Baba Ling and Nini Ling, its third-generation owners. The décor is a sort of gracious 1970s time warp---pagoda-style roof and a likeness of a Chinese terra-cotta warrior at the entrance.

Mahakavi Bhushan Marg, Mumbai, 400001, India
22-2285--0023
Known For
  • Soup dumplings, a riff on traditional xiao long baos
  • Seafood chimney soup
  • Its secret menu for Chinese diners (ask for it, as it is offered only when requested)

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Neel- Tote on the Turf

$$ | Central Mumbai Fodor's choice

Hands down the best upscale North Indian food in town for meat eaters, this restaurant in a beautifully designed building at the track makes the journey to the city center utterly worthwhile. Portions are big—as are the prices—and the food is heavy but sophisticated.

Mumbai, 400023, India
22-6157--7777
Known For
  • Seekh kebab (minced chicken or mutton kebabs)
  • Mutton shorba (bone marrow soup)
  • Z
  • Raan (tenderised mutton leg roasted in a tandoor)

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O'Pedro

$$ | Bandra East Fodor's choice

Serving a whimsical, excellently executed menu of dishes inspired by the Catholic-dominated state of Goa, O'Pedro simultaneously pays homage to its Portuguese antecedents. Go at dinnertime to avoid the clatter of the patrons who descend upon the restaurant for their lunch break from the nearby offices and to enjoy seeing the wood-fired oven lit up.

Jet Airways, Godrej BKC, Mumbai, 400051, India
7506--525554
Known For
  • Excellent Goan breads such as poee eaten with choriz-studded butter
  • Pastel de Nata and serradura
  • Décor that is bright with traditional and modern Goan elements

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Pali Bhavan

$$ | Bandra West Fodor's choice

This Bandra West restaurant offers an intriguing tryst with regional pan-Indian flavors, the kind that rarely feature on restaurant menus in the city. Nurse a drink at the bar downstairs and then make your way upstairs to the romantic mezzanine floor; it sits chockablock with vintage photographs, wooden furniture, and candelabras on each table.

Pali Naka, Mumbai, 400050, India
22-2651--9400
Known For
  • North Indian cooking
  • Vintage aesthetics
  • Great value for money

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Soam

$ | Marine Drive Fodor's choice

This extremely popular vegetarian restaurant is always likely to be packed with chattering families and friends, but the service is brisk and you'll soon get a seat amid the pale yellow walls, wooden benches, and loud aunties. Although most of the menu here is traditional Gujarati and Kathiawadi food, some dishes offer a modern take on the classics---the spinach and cheese samosas are especially delicious.

Mumbai, 400006, India
9819--990400
Known For
  • Sabudana (sago) dishes eaten during Hindu fasting days
  • Kathiawadi homestyle cooking which is hard to find in Mumbai
  • Soam at Home, its store next door, that sells sweets and snacks

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Swati Snacks

$ | Nariman Point Fodor's choice

A kilometer or two from Colaba Causeway lies Swati Snacks, a Mumbai stalwart and a great place to try the city's street food in clean, air-conditioned, somewhat canteen-style environs. Most popular are its chaat dishes (a smorgasbord of crunchy, creamy, spicy, sweet dishes), but you can venture further afield by ordering homely Gujarati fare from under the traditional specialities section of the menu.

If you find the time, try the original Swati Snacks in Tardeo.

Free Press Journal Marg, Mumbai, 400021, India
22-4939--4999
Known For
  • Pao bhaji (spiced mashed vegetables with a dollop of butter, eaten with loaves of soft white bread)
  • Panki (paper-thin pancakes folded into banana leaves and steamed)
  • Bhelpuri/sev puri/dahi batata puri (all delicious variations of chaat)

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The Table

$$ | Colaba Fodor's choice

Launched by a pair of Indian restaurateurs and a young American chef from San Francisco, The Table offers American fare inflected with flavors from around the world. The lofted upper floor is perfect for romantic dinners; below is a more lively and sociable setting, with a large, eponymous, communal table extending from the bar. The delicious breads are made at The Table's sister space in central Mumbai, Mag Street Kitchen, and it also uses ingredients from its own organic farm.

Taj Mahal Teahouse

$$ | Bandra West Fodor's choice

Ideal for long, lazy, tea-inspired meals, the Teahouse has a boggling variety of teas for the connoisseur. Go for the languorous lunches and stay for the charming, old-fashioned décor. Coffee drinkers aren't ignored either, and have the arduous task of choosing between a South Indian-style filter coffee or a French press coffee. A few doors down, Sancha Tea Boutique sells pretty tea-related things that make excellent gifts.

Woodside Inn

$$ | Colaba Fodor's choice

The only real bar in town (in the American sense, at least) is modeled on an English pub, plays decent music (though sometimes too loud), has great snack food, and free Wi-Fi (that can sometimes be spotty), and some of the best-priced alcohol in town. Try the tenderloin burgers, the pizzas—the four cheese is excellent, and the margarita’s no slouch—or an old-fashioned plate of beer-battered fish-and-chips.

Araku

$$ | Colaba

Araku's food is fashionably cuisine-agnostic and made from organic and regenerative local farms, but we'd recommend stopping by for its excellent coffee. Its sleek coffee bar sits at the head of the restaurant and offers everything from cortado and espresso, to cool, fizzy caffeine brews served with lots of ice.

Mandlik Rd., Mumbai, 400001, India
7337--205222
Known For
  • Excellent location in Colaba Causeway
  • Airy, minimalist space
  • Fair-trade coffee sourced from indigenous farmers

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Avatara

$$$$ | Vile Parle

At this Mumbai outpost of Dubai’s Michelin-starred fine-dining restaurant, a mind-boggling variety of vegetables get a global interpretation while staying undergirded by Indian flavors. The restaurant channels vegetables such as avocado and baby corn, as well as more unassuming ingredients such as drumstick, sea buckthorn, and parsnip, into a 14-course degustation menu.

Juhu Tara Rd., Mumbai, 400054, India
9152--600123
Known For
  • Menu free of egg, garlic, onion, mushroom, and cottage cheese
  • Long meal that takes about two hours
  • Unique beverage list
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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The Bagel Shop

$$ | Bandra

Bandra's beautiful people—Bollywood stars, expats, creative types—flock to this hip, casual café on tony Pali Hill. The laid-back style, plentiful outdoor seating, and excellent quality food more than make up for the fact that the bagels are just round bread, not the standard boiled-then-baked variety. Order a whole-wheat bagel with Goan-style chicken sausage and cream cheese, and one of the wonderful seasonal fruit smoothies, as you lounge on one of the rattan couches.

13 Pali Mala Rd., Mumbai, 400050, India
22-2605–0178
Known For
  • Easy, homey atmosphere that encourages lounging
  • WiFi for anyone looking to work from here
  • Lots of pets

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Bawri

$$ | Bandra

Folding in an ensemble cast of underrated Indian dishes like Manipuri black rice and kharonda fruit into its menu, Bawri prides itself on wood and charcoal cooking that fumes the food with dark, sweet, earthen flavors. Among their most popular dishes are the stuffed gucchi mushrooms, the smoked mutton chops, and the jackfruit biryani.

G Block BKC, Bandra Kurla Complex, Mumbai, 400051, India
9205--100992
Known For
  • Interesting cocktail menu
  • Spacious interiors
  • Open kitchen where you can watch the chef work the tandoor
Restaurant Details
Reservations recommended

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Britannia & Co.

$ | Andheri

The charming former owner of this old, dingy, and terribly atmospheric Irani restaurant had an obsession with the British royal family and thus pictures of royalty grace the restaurant's peeling walls. Unfortunately, the old gentleman has since passed away, but the restaurant has retained its charm as well as its fantastic chicken or mutton berry pulao, with rice, gravy, and dried fruit.

Strott Rd., Mumbai, 400001, India
22-2261–5264
Known For
  • Chicken and mutton berry pulao
  • Local bombil fish fried the Parsi way
  • The old-fashioned interiors in the colonial-era Ballard Estate area
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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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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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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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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