3 Best Places to Shop in Mumbai, India

Background Illustration for Shopping

Mumbai is a shopper's town: in the same day, you can sift through alleys full of antiques in Chor Bazaar, haggle for trinkets on the Colaba Causeway, and stop in at the Brioni showroom at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel for marked-up luxury goods (though we'd recommend you get your Chanel and Armani back home to avoid the huge import taxes).

The Causeway, Kemps Corner, and Breach Candy are all trendy shopping areas in South Mumbai; the latter two are chic and pricey. A walk down Colaba Causeway will probably take you past most of the things you want to buy in India—shoes, clothes, cheap knickknacks, cheap cotton clothing, jewelry, and wraps—displayed at stalls lining the road; more expensive items are found in the air-conditioned shops and boutiques behind the stalls on this same road.

The arcades in top hotels offer a little bit of everything for a lot more money than anywhere else, but the merchandise is beautiful and the pace unhurried (and it's climate-controlled). If you're looking for the kind of stuff you can't get anywhere else in the world, and a more vibrant experience, throw yourself into the middle of one of Mumbai's famous bazaars. After all, odds are you didn't come to India to visit the Louis Vuitton boutique.

The city's department stores are good for one-stop shopping, and Fabindia and the Bombay Store both have a large number of branches in the city.

Throughout Mumbai many smaller shops are closed on Sunday (some of the suburbs are closed a different day: in Worli, up to Bandra, they're closed Monday; and in Bandra, up to the suburbs, they're closed Thursday, although many areas are also in the process of switching to Sunday). Malls, however, are open every day. They are especially crowded on the weekend (mall-gazing—that is, large-scale window shopping—has become a new Mumbai leisure activity).

Once you've exhausted Mumbai proper, you can venture out to the suburbs, where prices tend to be lower and the malls more numerous. Linking Road in Bandra is a trendy place to shop, and Juhu's main strip, Juhu Tara Road, is lined with cutting-edge new boutiques, shops, art galleries, and restaurants.

Some good and cheap Mumbai buys: silver jewelry, handicrafts, handloom cotton and silk clothing and household items, eyeglasses, DVDs, CDs, and books.

Chor Bazaar

CST

This narrow thoroughfare is lined with dozens of stores crammed with antiques and general bric-a-brac: clocks, old phonographs, brassware, glassware, and statues—some of it quite cheap. Over the years the value and breadth of much of this stock has dwindled, but there's still a chance that you'll find an unusual, memorable piece. In the same lane a number of shops are engaged in the profitable business of constructing new furniture that looks old; many will openly tell you as much. Some shops do stock genuine antique furniture from old homes. Keep an eye on your purse or wallet and come relaxed—it can be chaotic.

Mutton St., Mumbai, 400001, India

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Fashion Street

Fort

This is a trove of cotton bargains in a long row of open-air stalls, with mounds of colorful, cheap, mainly Western clothing for all ages. The name is completely incongruous—there is nothing fashionable about this street, but the knockoffs are cheap and it is thronged by students of nearby St Xavier's College. Come around 11 am, when the crowds are thinner and the sun has not yet peaked.

M.G. Rd., Mumbai, 400001, India

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Muhammad Ali Road

CST

Crowded, congested Muhammad Ali Road has some of the best eating in the city, especially if you go during Ramzan. For those strong of stomach, go to Haji Tikka (ask a resident, he's well known) for kheeri tikka, marinated cow udders grilled right in front of you. Or if it's late at night, to Valibhai Paayawala, where the meat is cooked through the day on coal fires, dum style, until it is soft, luscious, unresisting enough to fall off the bone at the slightest nudge and dissolve into the gravy. Order the paya (trotters), the pichota (oxtail), the nalli (thigh or shanks) or the topa (neck)---it doesn't matter which, but make sure to scoop it up with the fluffy, charred tandoori rotis. Finish the meal with hand-churned sancha ice-cream at Taj Ice Cream (they use a 120-year-old ice-cream making recipe)---the guava is a firm crowd favorite.

There's a whole row of food stalls all the way down—just follow your nose or go for the one with the longest line. If you're adventurous and relish food from regions far and wide, you won't be disappointed.

Mohammad Ali Rd., Mumbai, 400003, India

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