Mumbai is India's busiest aviation market, and that scale shows up as choice: a €28 domestic hop to Ahmedabad, Southeast Asian beaches in the low hundreds, and a genuinely cheap wall of African long-haul that you simply can't get from Europe.
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International (BOM) finally has a fast, clean way into town. The new Metro Line 3 (Aqua Line) serves Terminal 2 directly, runs roughly 5:55am–11:25pm, and fares cap at about ₹50 — so you can reach CSMT in the south in 35–40 minutes for well under a euro, dodging the traffic that makes a taxi unpredictable. If you’d rather a cab, use the official MIAL prepaid taxi counters inside arrivals: you pay a fixed fare up front (roughly ₹350–450 to Bandra, ₹600–900 to South Mumbai) and get a slip with the driver and vehicle — the honest way to avoid the meter games.
From there, Mumbai’s value is two-sided. Domestically and into nearby Asia it’s cheap in the way only a high-volume market can be; and as a long-haul launchpad to Africa, it’s quietly one of the best-priced in the world.
Cheap and close: domestic and Southeast Asia
Start with the obvious steal: Ahmedabad at €28 with a bag is barely-there money for a domestic hop into Gujarat — IndiGo and friends run it relentlessly. Then look east. Bangkok (€170) and Phuket (€174) are the cheapest international routes and a classic Mumbai-to-Thailand beach run, while Ho Chi Minh City (€231 with a bag) opens Vietnam. These are the impulse fares — short enough and cheap enough to bolt onto any trip.
The Africa play — Mumbai's secret weapon
This is where Mumbai is genuinely special. India’s deep historical and trade links with Africa mean BOM has direct and one-stop reach across the continent at prices Europe can’t touch. Harare (€527), Kinshasa (€591), Lagos (€659), Lusaka (€669) and Addis Ababa (€743) — all including bags — cover southern, central, west and east Africa from a single hub. If an African leg is on your itinerary, routing through Mumbai instead of a European hub can save you hundreds.
East Asia and the Australian outlier
For North Asia, Seoul (€308) and Hong Kong (€334) are the value picks, with Tokyo at €571 with a bag as the full-service Japan option. The wildcard is Darwin (€860 with a bag) — an unusual but legitimate gateway into Australia’s Top End, far cheaper than the Sydney/Melbourne routings most people default to, and a clever way in if the Northern Territory is your target.
Baggage: domestic-cheap, long-haul-included
The split here is logical. The deep long-haul fares (Ahmedabad, Ho Chi Minh, Harare, Kinshasa, Lagos, Lusaka, Addis Ababa, Tokyo, Darwin) mostly include a checked bag — these are full-service carriers and the bag comes standard. The cheaper Asian hops (Bangkok, Phuket, Seoul, Hong Kong) are typically cabin-only. Indian domestic and LCC fares are notorious for upselling bags late, so if you’re carrying more than a backpack, lock in the allowance when you book.
Cheapest destinations from Bombay right now
Good-price round-trip targets from aifly’s own tracked fares — “good price” means book at or below this; nothing here is invented or scraped from third parties. The live deal page for each route shows the current fare.
| Destination | Good price | Why go |
|---|---|---|
| Ahmedabad | €28 incl. bag | €28 with a bag — a near-free domestic hop into Gujarat's biggest city. |
| Bangkok | €170 | €170 — the cheapest international fare and the classic Mumbai-to-Thailand run. |
| Phuket | €174 | €174 straight to Thailand's biggest beach island. |
| Ho Chi Minh City | €231 incl. bag | €231 with a bag into Vietnam's energetic southern capital. |
| Seoul | €308 | €308 to South Korea's capital — the value North Asia pick. |
| Hong Kong | €334 | €334 to the Pearl River megacity and onward into China. |
| Harare | €527 incl. bag | €527 with a bag into Zimbabwe — Europe can't match this Africa pricing. |
| Tokyo | €571 incl. bag | €571 with a bag — full-service Japan, bag included. |
| Kinshasa | €591 incl. bag | €591 with a bag into central Africa and the Congo basin. |
| Lagos | €659 incl. bag | €659 with a bag to West Africa's biggest, busiest city. |
| Lusaka | €669 incl. bag | €669 with a bag into Zambia — a southern-Africa safari gateway. |
| Addis Ababa | €743 incl. bag | €743 with a bag to Ethiopia and a major African connecting hub. |
| Darwin | €860 incl. bag | €860 with a bag — the clever, cheaper way into Australia's Top End. |
Frequently asked questions
What's the cheapest flight from Mumbai?
Domestically, Ahmedabad at around €28 including a bag. Internationally, Bangkok at about €170 is the cheapest — a classic Mumbai-to-Thailand route.
How do I get from Mumbai Airport (BOM) into the city?
Metro Line 3 (Aqua Line) serves Terminal 2 directly, caps at about ₹50, and reaches CSMT in 35–40 minutes. Alternatively, use the official MIAL prepaid taxi counters in arrivals for a fixed fare.
Why are flights from Mumbai to Africa so cheap?
India's strong trade and historical links with Africa give BOM direct and one-stop reach across the continent — Harare, Kinshasa, Lagos, Lusaka and Addis Ababa, all with bags, at prices well below European routings.
Do these Mumbai fares include checked baggage?
The long-haul fares (Ahmedabad, Ho Chi Minh, the African routes, Tokyo, Darwin) generally include a bag, while the cheaper Asian hops (Bangkok, Phuket, Seoul, Hong Kong) are typically cabin-only. Add a bag at booking if needed.
Can I fly to Australia from Mumbai cheaply?
Darwin at around €860 with a bag is the standout — an unusual but far cheaper gateway into Australia's Northern Territory than the usual Sydney or Melbourne routings.
How accurate are these Mumbai prices?
They reflect the lowest verified round-trip fares we've tracked recently and vary with season and demand. Use each as a realistic benchmark and book when you see a fare at or below it.
Seasons, carriers and airport details verified June 2026 and can change — confirm current conditions before you book.