Overview
Colonial & Art Deco Architecture
Street Food & Culinary Capital
Bollywood & Entertainment
Waterfront & Island Escapes
Urban Culture & Living City
Markets & Shopping
Mumbai is India's city of money and dreams — a narrow peninsula crammed with 20 million people where Bollywood film sets, Art Deco apartment blocks, Victorian Gothic railway stations, and some of Asia's largest slums coexist in a density that would overwhelm any other city but somehow works here. The Gateway of India frames the harbor where cruise ships and fishing boats share water. The dabbawalas deliver 200,000 home-cooked lunches daily with a logistics accuracy that Harvard Business School studied. Local trains carry 7.5 million commuters daily in carriages so packed that regular riders develop a specific boarding technique. And through all of this, Mumbai feeds itself with street food that's arguably India's best — vada pav from a corner stall costs ₹20 and rivals anything in a restaurant. The city divides roughly into South Mumbai (colonial architecture, business district, tourist sights), the Western Suburbs (Bandra's cafes and nightlife, Juhu Beach, Bollywood studios in Goregaon), and the sprawling northern reaches. Unlike Delhi's monuments or Jaipur's palaces, Mumbai's attraction is the experience of the city itself: the way it moves, eats, hustles, creates, and never quite sleeps. Come for the Gateway and Elephanta Caves, stay for the pav bhaji at Juhu Beach at midnight and the realization that this impossible, magnificent city actually runs.
Discover Mumbai
3 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.