Restaurant in Mumbai, India
Mumbai's most serious dim sum, book lunch.

Yauatcha Mumbai is the most credentialled dim sum option in the city, holding La Liste recognition and a 4.5 rating across 10,600+ reviews. Lunch is the sharper value proposition for food-focused diners; dinner works better for groups and occasions. Easy to book, located in BKC, and consistent enough to recommend without hesitation.
Yes, it's worth booking. Yauatcha Mumbai is one of the few dim sum-led restaurants in the city that operates at a genuinely high level of execution, and its La Liste recognition — 82.5 points in 2025, 77 points in 2026 , confirms it holds a position in the upper tier of Mumbai's dining options. The La Liste score shift is worth noting: a drop of 5.5 points across two years suggests the venue is facing more competition or evolving inconsistently, which makes the lunch-versus-dinner question more relevant than ever when deciding how to spend your money here.
Yauatcha Mumbai occupies a slick, design-forward room inside Raheja Tower in Bandra Kurla Complex. The space reads corporate-adjacent in the leading possible way: structured, well-lit for the dim sum format, and spacious enough to absorb a full dining room without feeling chaotic. BKC is Mumbai's financial district, so the room skews business lunch during the week and celebratory groups on weekends. The layout supports both modes , tables are arranged to allow conversation without the intimacy gap you'd find at a counter-style restaurant. For food-focused travellers visiting from outside the city, BKC is accessible by metro (BKC station on Line 2), which removes the worst of Mumbai's traffic calculus from the equation.
This is the real decision point. Lunch at Yauatcha Mumbai tends to be the sharper proposition for explorers who want the full dim sum range without the premium that dinner pricing and atmosphere add to the bill. During the day, the room functions as a serious dim sum house: the format rewards methodical ordering, the pace is more relaxed, and you're less likely to be competing with the ambient noise of a full-room dinner service. If your interest is in the food itself , the craft of the dim sum, the range of the menu , book lunch.
Dinner shifts the register. The room fills with a more social crowd, the energy rises, and the occasion-dining dimension becomes more pronounced. If you're visiting with a group celebrating something, or if the atmosphere matters as much as the food, dinner works well. But the value equation is less clear-cut at dinner: you're paying a higher cost-per-dish for an experience that is partly about the room and the crowd rather than the food alone. For a solo food traveller or a couple prioritising quality over occasion, lunch is the better call.
Booking is easy by Mumbai standards. Reservations are available online and walk-in availability is generally realistic for lunch on weekdays. Weekend dinner is busier and worth booking ahead, but this is not a restaurant where you need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for Masque or Avatara.
La Liste's methodology aggregates global press and local critic reviews, so a 77-point score in 2026 places Yauatcha Mumbai in credible but not elite territory internationally. Within Mumbai, the La Liste presence gives it a meaningful edge over most Indian Chinese options in the city. For context, globally recognised venues like Le Bernardin in New York City or Atomix in New York City operate in the 90-plus point range , Yauatcha Mumbai is not competing at that level, but it is the most credentialled dim sum option available in the city. Its 4.5 rating across more than 10,600 Google reviews adds a second trust signal: this is a venue with consistent performance at scale, not a one-visit reputation.
Book Yauatcha Mumbai if dim sum is your format and you want the most technically serious version of it available in Mumbai. It works for business lunches, food-focused couples, and small groups of four or fewer who can order across the menu without logistical complexity. If you're a food or travel enthusiast working through Mumbai's dining options, it belongs on the list alongside The Table and The Bombay Canteen , but it occupies a different lane, focused on one cuisine format done with precision rather than broad menu range. Travellers exploring India's wider restaurant scene can cross-reference it against similarly positioned venues like Baan Thai in Kolkata or Bomras in Anjuna for a sense of how Indian cities handle pan-Asian cuisine at the upper end. For Mumbai-specific context, see our full Mumbai restaurants guide.
Yauatcha Mumbai is located at Raheja Tower, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East , accessible via the BKC metro station. Booking is easy and can be done online. Weekday lunches rarely require advance reservations; weekend dinners benefit from booking a day or two ahead. Group visits of six or more should call ahead to confirm table configuration. No dress code data is available in our records, but the BKC corporate setting means smart casual is the safe default. For hotels near the venue, see our Mumbai hotels guide. For bars to pair with an evening visit, see our Mumbai bars guide.
Yauatcha Mumbai is a reliable, well-credentialled choice for dim sum in a city where the format is underserved at this level. Go at lunch if the food is the point. Go at dinner if you want the full occasion experience. Either way, it's easy to book and consistent enough to recommend without heavy qualification.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yauatcha Mumbai | Indian Chinese | La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 77pts; La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 82.5pts | Easy | — | |
| O Pedro | Goan | Unknown | — | ||
| Ziya | Indian | Unknown | — | ||
| The Bombay Canteen | Indian | World's 50 Best | Unknown | — | |
| Masque | Contemporary Indian | World's 50 Best | Unknown | — | |
| Indigo | Indian | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Yes, and it's one of the stronger group options in BKC for a shared-format meal. Dim sum is built for the table, so groups of four or more will get more value from the format than pairs. Book in advance and specify group size — the corporate-adjacent setting at Raheja Tower means the space is used to handling business group bookings.
It works, but it's not the optimal format. Dim sum is designed for sharing across multiple dishes, so solo diners will cover less of the menu and get less value per head. That said, a counter or bar seat, if available, makes a solo lunch visit reasonable — go at lunch when the pace is lighter and the full dim sum range is in play.
For Indian cuisine at a comparable level of ambition, Masque and Ziya are the credible comparisons — Masque for ingredient-driven tasting menus, Ziya for refined classical cooking. The Bombay Canteen and Indigo serve different formats entirely. None of them replicate the dim sum focus, which is what makes Yauatcha Mumbai's La Liste recognition (77pts in 2026) meaningful in this city.
Yauatcha globally is known for integrating bar seating into its format, and the Mumbai location follows a similar design approach. Bar seating, where available, can be a practical option for solo diners or walk-in attempts, though booking a table remains the more reliable route given the venue's consistent demand in BKC.
Yes, with some caveats. The setting at Raheja Tower is design-forward and polished enough for a celebration, and La Liste recognition two years running (82.5pts in 2025, 77pts in 2026) gives it the credibility the occasion warrants. It works better as a special lunch than a grand dinner event — the dim sum format rewards relaxed, exploratory eating rather than a single showpiece dish.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.