Current Time in Mumbai
NTP-synced live clock · IST … — no daylight saving time · Weather, world clock comparison & complete city guide
The current time in Mumbai is displayed live above, synchronised with international NTP servers.
Mumbai operates permanently on IST (India Standard Time, …)
— India is one of the few large countries in the world that never observes daylight saving time.
…
The IANA time zone identifier is Asia/Kolkata, used for all of India.
IST has a distinctive characteristic: its 30-minute offset from the full hour (UTC+5:30 rather than UTC+5 or UTC+6),
making it one of the most unusual time zone configurations in the world.
Mumbai Time vs. World Cities – Live Comparison
| City | Current Time | Time Zone | vs. Mumbai |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇮🇳 Mumbai | … | … | ±0 |
| 🇬🇧 London | … | … | … |
| 🇺🇸 New York | … | … | … |
| 🇺🇸 Los Angeles | … | … | … |
| 🇩🇪 Berlin | … | … | … |
| 🇦🇪 Dubai | … | … | … |
| 🇸🇬 Singapore | … | … | … |
| 🇨🇳 Shanghai | … | … | … |
| 🇯🇵 Tokyo | … | … | … |
| 🇦🇺 Sydney | … | … | … |
| 🇺🇸 Chicago | … | … | … |
India Standard Time (IST, UTC+5:30) – India's Unique Stable Time Zone with No DST
Stable 365 days a year
IANA time zone:
Asia/Kolkata💡 Why does India use UTC+5:30 and not observe DST? India spans approximately 30° of longitude (from ~68°E to ~97°E), which would theoretically correspond to two distinct time zones. At independence in 1947, the decision was made to maintain a single national time zone — UTC+5:30 — as a geographic compromise and symbol of national unity. The 30-minute offset from the full hour dates back to 1906 under British administration (introduced by the East India Company). DST was used briefly in 1942 and during the 1962 and 1965 wars, but was permanently abandoned. The current time difference from London: … — GMT winter: +5h 30min; BST summer: +4h 30min.
Mumbai Time Zone Converter – Compare with World Cities
Mumbai – Geography & Location Facts
Population & Administrative Data
| City population | ~20.7 million (2024) |
| Metropolitan population | ~21.3 million |
| Population density | ~32,000 people/km² |
| Main languages | Marathi (official), Hindi, English, Gujarati |
| Federal state | Maharashtra |
| International dialing code | +91 (India) · +91-22 (Mumbai) |
| Internet domain | .in |
| Currency | Indian Rupee (INR, ₹) |
| Drives on the | Left 🚗 |
| ISO country code | IN (India) |
A Brief History of Mumbai
- pre-1534The territory of modern Mumbai consisted of seven islands inhabited by the Koli fishing community and local tribes, under successive rule by the Silhara dynasty, the Devagiri Kingdom and the Sultanate of Gujarat. The main island was known as Mumbadevi — named after the goddess Mumba, patron of the Koli fisherfolk — or Bombaim in Portuguese, both names ultimately giving rise to modern Mumbai. The area was of limited economic importance, serving mainly as a fishing port and stopover on Indian Ocean coastal trade routes.
- 1534–1661The Portuguese captured the islands in 1534, building forts, churches and establishing the first systematic trade routes to the East. They named the area Bom Baim (Good Bay), gradually turning it into a regionally important commercial centre. The Portuguese presence left architectural traces still visible today in Bandra's old cathedral. The islands were ceded to the British Crown in 1661 as part of Catherine of Braganza's dowry upon her marriage to King Charles II of England.
- 1668–1857The British Crown leased the islands to the East India Company for a nominal rent of £10 per year. The Company rapidly transformed Mumbai into a major trading port, building the fort, docks and attracting Gujarati, Parsi and other merchant communities. The population exploded from a few thousand to over 800,000 by 1850. The opening of Asia's first railway (Bombay–Thane, 1853) accelerated economic development and made Mumbai the new industrial heart of the subcontinent. The Sepoy Mutiny of 1857 marked the transition from Company rule to direct British Crown administration.
- 1869–1947The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 transformed Mumbai into the most important commercial gateway between Europe and Asia. The cotton textile industry generated enormous wealth; the grand Victorian and neo-Gothic buildings that define the historic city centre — Victoria Terminus (now CST), Mumbai University, the High Court — were built during this period. India's independence movement found a major centre in Mumbai: Mahatma Gandhi and B.R. Ambedkar organised key campaigns from the city. At independence in 1947, Bombay became capital of Maharashtra state, retaining its position as free India's economic leader.
- 1995–presentIn 1995 the city was officially renamed Mumbai (from the goddess Mumbadevi), dropping the colonial name Bombay. Mumbai is home to the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) — Asia's oldest, founded in 1875 — and the National Stock Exchange (NSE), along with the headquarters of India's largest banks, corporations and investment funds. The Bollywood film industry, producing over 1,000 films annually, makes Mumbai the world's largest film production centre by volume. With a metropolitan GDP of over USD 300 billion, Mumbai contributes approximately 6% of India's total GDP and generates one third of national tax revenues.
Top Tourist Attractions in Mumbai
✈️ Airports Serving Mumbai
| Airport | IATA | Distance | Transfer | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport | BOM | ~28 km north of CBD | ~45–75 min (taxi/Ola/Uber); ~45 min (Metro Line 1 + taxi); suburban train ~35 min | ✈️ Main international hub; non-stop flights to London, Dubai, Singapore, Frankfurt, New York, Tokyo, Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok; Air India, IndiGo and Vistara hub |
| Pune Airport | PNQ | ~150 km south-east | ~3 hours (bus / Ola intercity) | 🛫️ Alternative for domestic flights and some international routes; popular city-break combo with Mumbai |
Mumbai Cuisine & Local Food Specialities
Practical Information for Travellers Visiting Mumbai
| 🚫 Visa | Most Western nationalities (UK, USA, EU, Australia, Canada) can obtain an India e-Visa online at indianvisaonline.gov.in (~USD 25, 2–4 days processing), allowing stays of up to 90 days. Always verify the latest requirements before travelling as regulations may change. |
| ✈️ Flights | Mumbai Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport (BOM) has non-stop connections to London Heathrow (~9h), Dubai (~3h), Singapore (~5h), Frankfurt (~9h), New York JFK (~16h), Tokyo (~8h), Kuala Lumpur (~4h) and Bangkok (~3.5h). Singapore Airlines, Emirates and Air India consistently rank among the best carriers on these routes. |
| 💰 Currency & Payments | Indian Rupee (INR, ₹). 1 USD ≈ 83–86 INR (check live rate). Cards are accepted in mid-to-upscale restaurants and hotels. Cash is essential for street food, rickshaws and markets. ATMs are plentiful; expect ~3% withdrawal fees. |
| 🔌 Electricity | 230V, 50Hz; Type D sockets (three round pins in a triangle) and Type C (two round pins). UK travellers need an adapter for Type D; US travellers need a voltage converter as well. Universal adapters are inexpensive at airports and hotels. |
| 📱 SIM Cards | Local SIMs (Airtel, Jio, Vi) are available at airports and shops on presentation of your passport and a photo. 4G data is extremely affordable (~USD 5–10 for 30 days unlimited). Activation can take 24–48 hours for foreign nationals due to verification requirements. |
| 🚇 Getting Around | Mumbai has a complex transport system: Suburban Railway (Western/Central/Harbour lines) — the city's backbone, 7.5 million passengers per day, the world's most crowded urban rail; Metro (expanding network); BEST buses; Auto-rickshaws (suburbs only); Black-and-yellow taxis (iconic, metered). Ola and Uber apps are reliable and generally cheaper than metered taxis. |
| 🌡️ Best Time to Visit | November–February: best season — 25–30°C, low humidity, clear skies. March–May: warm and dry, 30–38°C, fewer tourists. June–September: the Monsoon — torrential rain, extreme humidity, localised flooding; culturally fascinating (festivals) but logistically challenging for a first visit. |
| ⚠️ Health | Drink only bottled or filtered water. Avoid ice from unknown sources and unwashed raw salads. Recommended vaccinations: Hepatitis A, typhoid. Malaria is not a significant risk in central Mumbai, but prophylaxis is advised for rural areas. Comprehensive travel insurance is essential — private healthcare is high quality but expensive. |
Frequently Asked Questions about Mumbai Time
Asia/Kolkata, used for the whole of India (there is no separate Asia/Mumbai). India does not observe daylight saving time (DST) — the time zone is fixed 365 days a year. The 30-minute offset from the full hour is one of IST's defining characteristics and reflects a geographic compromise adopted at Indian independence in 1947.