Restaurant in Mumbai, India
The Bombay Canteen
760ptsSerious Indian cooking, no white-tablecloth pretension.

About The Bombay Canteen
Ranked #91 on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants (2025) and scoring 91 points on La Liste 2026, The Bombay Canteen is one of Mumbai's most decorated dining destinations — and one of the hardest to book. Chef Hussain Shahzad's regional Indian cooking in a relaxed Kamala Mills setting delivers serious food without the formality. Reserve well in advance; weekday lunch is your best entry point.
A 4.5-star rating across nearly 11,000 Google reviews is one of the more reliable signals in Mumbai dining — and The Bombay Canteen has earned it
Ranked #91 on World's 50 Best Asia's Leading Restaurants (2025) and scoring 91 points on La Liste's 2026 global ranking, The Bombay Canteen sits in a tier of Mumbai restaurants where the question is not whether it is worth your time, but whether you have planned carefully enough to actually get in. First-timers should know upfront: this is a near-impossible reservation. Book as far ahead as possible, and treat a walk-in as a long shot rather than a realistic plan.
The restaurant operates out of Kamala Mills in Lower Parel, a repurposed industrial compound that has become one of Mumbai's most concentrated dining corridors. The space itself is a converted mill building — open, airy, and deliberately casual in layout despite the kitchen's ambitions. Seating is spread across a main dining room that feels more like a lively canteen than a hushed fine-dining room, with communal energy and natural light during the day giving way to a warmer, more animated atmosphere at dinner. For a first visit, this spatial contrast is worth understanding before you book: lunch and dinner at The Bombay Canteen are genuinely different experiences, not just the same room at a different hour.
Lunch vs. dinner: which is the better booking?
Lunch is the easier entry point on every dimension. Reservations are less contested, the room is less crowded, and the industrial-chic interior shows well in natural light. If you are visiting Mumbai for a short window and want to experience the kitchen under chef Hussain Shahzad without the full battle of a prime-time dinner slot, a weekday lunch is your most practical move. The pace is also more relaxed, which suits first-timers who want to take their time with a menu rooted in regional Indian cooking , dishes that pull from across the subcontinent with enough originality to reward attention.
Dinner is the higher-energy version of the same restaurant. The Kamala Mills strip gets busy on Friday and Saturday evenings, and The Bombay Canteen absorbs that energy rather than insulating from it. The room gets loud. If you are booking for a conversation-heavy occasion , a business dinner or a first date , a mid-week dinner or a Sunday lunch is a better call than a weekend evening. For groups who want atmosphere and don't mind volume, Friday or Saturday dinner delivers. Pair your visit with a broader evening in the neighbourhood: the Lower Parel dining strip gives you options for pre-dinner drinks at a nearby bar or a post-dinner move without going far. See our full Mumbai bars guide for specifics.
What the awards tell you
The trajectory here is worth noting. The Bombay Canteen moved from OAD's Recommended tier in 2023 to #347 in 2024, then #343 in 2025 , steady, incremental, and consistent rather than a one-year spike. La Liste's jump from 75.5 points in 2025 to 91 in 2026 is a more dramatic upward move, and combined with the Asia's 50 Best placement at #91, it positions this as one of the handful of Mumbai restaurants with credible international standing. For context on how that stacks up across India, see also Farmlore in Bangalore, Dum Pukht in New Delhi, and Adaa at Falaknuma Palace in Hyderabad , each operating in a comparable prestige bracket but with very different formats.
If your interest is in how Indian cooking at this level travels internationally, Trèsind Studio in Dubai and Opheem in Birmingham offer useful reference points for the same cuisine category in different markets.
Who should book
The Bombay Canteen works leading for diners who want serious Indian cooking in a room that does not take itself too seriously. It is not a white-tablecloth experience , the setting is industrial, the vibe is social, and the menu leans into regional Indian flavours with enough contemporary technique to satisfy curious eaters without alienating anyone who simply wants food that tastes good. First-timers to Mumbai's dining scene should put this near the leading of the list; the combination of critical recognition, consistent crowd-sourced ratings, and an accessible (if busy) format makes it one of the more dependable high-quality bookings in the city. Browse our full Mumbai restaurants guide for the broader picture, and see our full Mumbai hotels guide if you are planning the full trip.
Know Before You Go
- Location: Unit-1, Process House, S.B. Road, Kamala Mills, Lower Parel, Mumbai 400013
- Chef: Hussain Shahzad
- Cuisine: Indian (regional, contemporary)
- Awards: World's 50 Best Asia's Leading Restaurants #91 (2025); La Liste 91pts (2026); OAD Leading Restaurants in Asia #343 (2025)
- Google rating: 4.5 from 10,989 reviews
- Booking difficulty: Near impossible , reserve well in advance; walk-ins are a long shot
- Leading time to visit: Weekday lunch for easiest access and a calmer room; mid-week dinner if evenings are your only option; avoid Friday and Saturday dinner if noise is a concern
- Getting there: Lower Parel is well-connected by Mumbai suburban rail (Lower Parel station) and by cab/auto-rickshaw from most central neighbourhoods
- Nearby: The Kamala Mills compound has multiple dining and bar options , useful for extending the evening
Also worth considering in the region
If your India trip extends beyond Mumbai, Naar in Kasauli, Bomras in Anjuna, and Baan Thai in Kolkata cover very different formats and regions. For wineries and experiences during your Mumbai stay, see our Mumbai wineries guide and our Mumbai experiences guide.
Compare The Bombay Canteen
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to The Bombay Canteen?
Dress casually but put-together. The Bombay Canteen is set in a converted industrial space in Kamala Mills — it has a relaxed, informal energy that does not call for formal attire. A #91 ranking on Asia's 50 Best (2025) brings a mixed crowd, so you will see everything from jeans to kurtas. Skip the suit.
Can I eat at the bar at The Bombay Canteen?
Bar seating is generally available at The Bombay Canteen and tends to be easier to secure than a full table reservation, making it a practical option if you want to eat without booking far ahead. It suits solo diners or pairs more than groups. For the full meal experience, a table is worth the effort.
Can The Bombay Canteen accommodate groups?
Groups of four to six are manageable with advance planning, but larger parties should check the venue's official channels well ahead of their visit. The Bombay Canteen's format — an award-ranked restaurant with a consistently busy room at Kamala Mills — means group tables at peak hours are contested. Lunch is the more practical session for groups.
What is The Bombay Canteen known for?
The Bombay Canteen is primarily known for Indian in Mumbai.
Recognized By
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