Mumbai's Finest Tables
The Mumbai Dining Guide
Mumbai does not do quiet. From the moment the city wakes to the harbour smell of salt and ambition, it moves at a frequency that has no off switch — and its restaurants reflect this exactly. No other Indian city eats with this diversity of intention: a Michelin-aspirant tasting menu in a converted textile mill, a four-decade Mughlai institution on M.G. Road, a Japanese ramen shop in Bandra that had people queuing in the rain. All of them are essential. All of them are Mumbai.
The dining landscape divides, roughly, into four territories. South Mumbai — Colaba, Fort, Nariman Point — carries the weight of history. This is where the Taj Mahal Palace sits, where Trishna has been serving butter garlic crab since before most of the city's restaurateurs were born, where The Table changed what farm-to-table dining could mean in India. Come here for white-glove service, heritage rooms, and the sense that you are eating in a city that understood luxury long before the rest of the world arrived. The Lower Parel-Worli corridor is where new Mumbai announces itself — glass towers, corporate expense accounts, and the restaurants that have emerged to feed them: INKA, The Bombay Canteen, KOKO, By The Mekong atop the St. Regis at 37 floors. Bandra is where the media industry, the film industry, and the food media converge, producing an unusually reliable clutch of neighbourhood restaurants — Bastian, Gaijin, Pomodoro, Olive Bar — where the food is excellent and the crowd-watching almost as good. And Bandra Kurla Complex, the financial district that Mumbai built from reclaimed land, now houses Yauatcha and Hakkasan: international names that chose this city for a reason, and that deliver accordingly.
Masque remains the city's and perhaps the country's most important restaurant. Chef Varun Totlani's 10-course seasonal tasting menus, built from hyper-local Indian ingredients, have earned a place at #15 on Asia's 50 Best — and the recognition is deserved. Booking three to four weeks in advance is the minimum. For comparable ambition but a different register, Ziya inside The Oberoi offers Michelin-starred chef Vineet Bhatia's interpretation of modern Indian through a multi-course lens, with Marine Drive in the window as backdrop.
The practical notes: dress codes are enforced at most five-star hotel restaurants — smart casual at minimum, business attire preferred at Wasabi, Le Cirque, and Ziya. Tipping is customary at 10%, though service charges are increasingly included. Alcohol licensing in Maharashtra means that most standalone restaurants carry beer and wine — serious cocktail programmes tend to be concentrated in hotel bars and members' clubs. Reservations at Masque, The Table, and Pomodoro should be made two to three weeks in advance; the luxury hotel restaurants tend to be more accessible with a week's notice. Uber and Ola are reliable across all neighbourhoods; Mumbai traffic means allowing 45 minutes to travel between Colaba and Bandra during evening hours.
The historic dining district. Wasabi by Morimoto, The Table, Trishna, Khyber — all within a 15-minute walk. The oldest and most storied restaurant territory in India.
Lower Parel & Worli
New Mumbai's dining engine. The Bombay Canteen, KOKO, INKA, and By The Mekong have made this corridor the city's most dynamic food neighbourhood.
Bandra West & Khar
The suburb where film meets food. Bastian, Gaijin, Pomodoro, Olive Bar — a neighbourhood restaurant scene that would hold its own in any global city.
India's most important tasting menu table does not keep itself. Book directly via the restaurant website or call +91 22 4973 7431.
Traffic Allowance
Mumbai's Western Express Highway and the Colaba-Bandra corridor can add 45 minutes to a journey during evening rush. Allow extra time — no reservation wants to start with an apology.
Dress Codes Matter
Five-star hotel restaurants — Wasabi, Ziya, Le Cirque, By The Mekong — enforce smart-casual as a minimum. Shorts and sandals will be diplomatically redirected.
Best for Proposals in Mumbai
Mumbai offers several spectacular proposal settings — but none more loaded with weight and romance than the right choice. Wasabi by Morimoto at the Taj Mahal Palace delivers the Gateway of India outside the window and the full grandeur of the city's most historic hotel. Ziya at The Oberoi gives you Marine Drive at night through floor-to-ceiling glass. Aer at the Four Seasons Worli offers 360-degree panorama from 34 floors. By The Mekong places you on the 37th floor of the St. Regis with the Arabian Sea beneath you. Each is correct. Choose the one whose view matches the story you want to tell.
Best for Impressing Clients in Mumbai
For client entertainment, the calculus in Mumbai is straightforward: location signals intent. The Taj Mahal Palace properties — Wasabi — carry undeniable weight. For culinary credibility, Masque signals taste and genuine knowledge of the city's food scene. Hakkasan in Bandra is the reliable choice for clients who know restaurants — a globally recognised name delivered with Mumbai's own confidence. Le Cirque Signature at The Leela is the white-tablecloth option for those who need European formality with airport proximity.