Welcome to Mumbai
KubeCon + CloudNativeCon India lands in Mumbai on 18-19 June 2026, at the Jio World Convention Centre in BKC. Thousands of cloud native engineers are flying in, many of you for the first time, and you’re landing in the middle of monsoon season.
Both of us were born and brought up in Mumbai. Yash still lives here. Rohit moved to London and goes back and forth.
The bigger reason we wrote it: in 2022, Rohit started Cloud Native Thane (@cncfthane) to bring the CNCF community to Mumbai’s suburbs. Monthly meetups, then KCD Mumbai 2023 (@KcdMumbai) with Saiyam Pathak and Divya Mohan. Yash joined as co-organizer and now leads Cloud Native Thane while Rohit splits time between cities. KubeCon + CloudNativeCon India is the moment a lot of community work over the last four years comes home. We wanted to make your trip worth it.
Mumbai isn’t a city you visit, it’s a city you experience. This is the guide we wish someone had handed us before our first KubeCon + CloudNativeCon abroad.
TL;DR (read this if you read nothing else)
- Get an Indian eSIM via Airalo before you fly. Or buy a Jio or Airtel SIM at the official airport counter.
- Monsoon is real. June 18-19 is peak rain. Pack quick-dry clothes, real waterproof shoes, a poncho.
- Use Uber, Ola, or Rapido. Never random taxis from airport touts. Pre-book in the app.
- Cash, cards, and UPI all work. Set up UPI One World at the airport for the smoothest payment experience. Don’t change money at the airport. Tip 10% at sit-down restaurants, round up Uber fares, no tip on autos.
- Drink only sealed bottled water. Eat street food at busy stalls. Carry an antacid strip.
- Do one non-conference thing per day. Marine Drive at 6am in the rain. Vada pav at Ashok. A Bandra walk. Pick something and go.
Your first hour in Mumbai
SIM and data. Either an Airalo eSIM set up before you fly, or a Jio /Airtel prepaid SIM at the official telco counter in T2 arrivals (passport + visa printout + one photo). Skip the random kiosks.
UPI is the real payment system in India, and you should set it up. Chai stalls, vada pav vendors, autos, the guy selling coconut water at Marine Drive, all take UPI by QR code, and most don’t carry change for ₹500 notes. Foreigners can use UPI through UPI One World, a prepaid wallet from NPCI. Set it up at the airport (Mumbai BOM has counters in arrivals), at partner hotels, or via apps like Cheq and Mony. Passport + visa for KYC, load with your foreign card, scan QR codes everywhere, unused balance refunds on exit. NRIs from the US, UK, UAE, Canada, Australia, and Singapore can link UPI directly to NRE/NRO accounts via PhonePe, Paytm, or BHIM.
Money. Skip the airport currency exchange. Use any HDFC, ICICI, Axis, or SBI ATM in the city. Carry ₹2,000-3,000 in cash. A Wise or Revolut card avoids foreign transaction fees.
Ride to your hotel. Pre-book Uber or Ola from arrivals, or use the official prepaid taxi counter. Do not take random taxis from people approaching you. Airport to BKC is 15-25 minutes, around ₹400-600.
Power. 230V/50Hz, Type C/D/M plugs. You need a plug adapter, not a voltage converter.
Emergency numbers. 112 (unified), 100 (police), 102 (ambulance), 1091 (women’s helpline). Save your embassy’s Mumbai number too.
The monsoon, honestly
The other guides say “occasional heavy rain.” Let me tell you what June 18-19 actually feels like.
It rains. A lot. Sometimes hard enough that visibility drops to ten meters and streets flood to your shins in twenty minutes. Local trains stop. Flights get delayed. Then the sun comes out for an hour. Then it does it again.
This is also when Mumbai is at its best. The city smells like wet earth, the sea looks alive, and there’s an entire genre of food and Bollywood scenes built around the rain.
What to pack:
- Quick-dry synthetic clothes. Cotton stays wet for hours.
- Real waterproof shoes. Crocs, Tevas, rubberized sandals. Leather will be ruined by day two.
- A compact umbrella and a poncho. Wind turns umbrellas into kites.
- A dry-bag (or heavy-duty ziplock) for your laptop.
- Mosquito repellent.
Hotels do same-day laundry. Use it.
Getting around
Uber, Ola, Rapido. Default for cars; Rapido for bike taxis when traffic is bad. A 30-minute car ride can become a 10-minute bike ride.
Kaali-peeli (black-and-yellow taxis). Mumbai’s iconic metered taxis, reliable and cheap. If a driver says the meter is broken, get out and find another one. Autos run only in the suburbs; South Mumbai is taxi-only.
Mumbai Metro Line 3. New, clean, air-conditioned. Connects airport to South Mumbai. Use it.
Local trains. The lifeline of the city, but also quite intense. Peak hours (8-11am, 6-9pm) are not for first-timers. Off-peak with a local who knows the system: do it. Use the m-Indicator or RailOne apps for schedules.
Walking. Mumbai’s older neighborhoods (Colaba, Kala Ghoda, Fort, Bandra) are walkable. BKC and Lower Parel are not.
Apps to install before you fly
- Uber, Ola, Rapido for rides
- Google Maps, which works well in Mumbai including for trains
- Zomato and Swiggy for food delivery (fast and reliable)
- m-Indicator and RailOne for local trains
- WhatsApp, the default communication channel in India
- Google Translate with Hindi and Marathi offline packs
Food
Mumbai’s street food culture is iconic and deeply connected to the city’s everyday life. You’ll see office-goers grabbing vada pav during rush hour, students gathering around sandwich stalls, and families stopping for pav bhaji or chaat in the evening. Vada pav, pav bhaji, bhel puri, ragda pattice, bombay sandwich, and cutting chai are all classic Mumbai staples worth trying.
And you absolutely cannot leave Mumbai without trying a hot vada pav during the monsoon.
Some well-known places to try:
- Ashok Vada Pav, Dadar: One of Mumbai’s most famous vada pav spots and a local favorite.
- Aaram Vada Pav, near CSMT: A great option if you’re exploring South Mumbai.
- Bachelorr’s, Marine Drive / Chowpatty: Popular for milkshakes, ice creams, juices, and late-evening snacks near the sea.
Old-school Irani and Parsi cafés. Kyani & Co. at Marine Lines is a classic. Britannia & Co. at Ballard Estate is known for the legendary berry pulao (lunch only). Leopold Café in Colaba is touristy, but still historic.

Modern dining. Bastian is the “impress your CEO” choice.The Bombay Canteen for modern Indian.Candies for an all-day Bandra café. Jimis Burger for casual. Walking distance from the venue in BKC: Ishaara, Hakkasan,Bombay Sweet Shop.
India is the easiest country to eat vegetarian. Most menus mark veg (green dot) vs non-veg (red dot). Jain options widely available. Ask before ordering meat if halal matters
Beyond the conference
Heritage. Start at Gateway of India, walk to the Taj, down Colaba Causeway, through Kala Ghoda. Two hours, ends at Leopold. CSMT is a UNESCO site and the city’s main railway station: the building is more impressive than most palaces. Elephanta Caves is a one-hour ferry from the Gateway with 5th-century rock-cut temples (skip if storming).
The sea. Marine Drive is the 3.6km promenade arcing along the Arabian Sea. Sunset is classic; Yash’s actual pick is 6am during a downpour. Bandra Bandstand ends near Shah Rukh Khan’s house (Mannat). Worli Sea Face and the Bandra-Worli Sea Link for the obligatory Instagram shot.

Bollywood and cricket. Catch a movie at PVR or Regal Cinema: even without Hindi, the experience (singing, clapping, intermissions) is unique to India. Film City does half-day tours of actual sets. Check whether Wankhede Stadium has a match during the conference: cricket at Wankhede is one of the great sports experiences.
Dharavi. Book through Reality Tours, a non-profit operator where most of the fee goes back to the community. Don’t do this as a “slum tour” through some sketchy operator.
Weekend day trips. Lonavala (hills + waterfalls, 2hr by train), Alibaug (beach, 1hr ferry from Gateway), Matheran (car-free hill station, 2.5hr).
Shopping. Closest to the venue: Jio World Drive. For street shopping: Hill Road and Linking Road in Bandra, Colaba Causeway for souvenirs (bargaining expected, start at half the asking price), Crawford Market for spices and old Mumbai market culture.
Money, tipping, safety
Tipping. 10% at sit-down restaurants if no service charge on the bill. ₹50-100 for hotel bellhops, ₹100-200 for housekeeping at the end of stay. Round up Uber and taxi fares. Nothing for autos.
Scams to know. The “gem scam” in Colaba (someone wants you to ferry rare stones; don’t). “Broken meter” cab drivers (get out, find another). Fake “official” tour guides at heritage sites. The friendly stranger needed ₹500 for a bus ticket.
General safety. Mumbai is one of India’s safer cities. Pickpocketing happens in crowded markets and trains; phone in front pocket, bags zipped. Avoid Dongri and Dagdi Chawl at night. If something feels off, walk into any decent hotel and ask for help. Staff will help.
Solo female travelers. Generally fine. Use app-based cabs after dark, share live location, avoid empty trains late at night. The 1091 women’s helpline works.
Lost passport. File a police report, then go to your embassy. Keep a digital copy of your passport and visa in your email or cloud storage before you fly.
KubeCon + CloudNativeCon specific stuff
Quiet calls between sessions. Jio World Centre has quiet zones. For a real escape, lobbies of the Sofitel BKC and Trident BKC are spacious, air-conditioned, and have decent wifi. Order a coffee, no one bothers you.
Late-night work. Most BKC cafés close by 11pm. 24-hour cafés are at major hotels (Trident, Sofitel, JW Marriott Sahar near the airport).
Running. The Bandra-Bandstand promenade and Marine Drive’s Queen’s Necklace are the famous runs. Short Uber from BKC. Mornings are coolest.
Co-located events and side parties. Review the official schedule and CNCF Slack. Sponsor afterparties get announced day-of, and the best ones aren’t on the main schedule. The CNCF Ambassadors usually maintain a community list; ping us if you want pointers.
Emergencies. Print speaker decks at your hotel business centre. Need a Type-C charger at 9pm? Croma and Reliance Digital are everywhere and open till 9-10pm.
Mumbai Bingo (print or screenshot)

Mumbaikar slang glossary

Each of us picks one thing
If you can only do one non-conference thing in Mumbai, pick from these.
Yash’s pick. Vada pav at Ashok in Dadar, eaten standing on the street while it pours. ₹20, three minutes, an honest introduction to the city.
Rohit’s pick. Marine Drive at 6 am during a downpour. The promenade is empty, the sea looks like it’s eating the city, and you’ll understand why every Bollywood film ends here.
Pick one and do it. Everything else is a bonus.
See you in Mumbai
Now is your time to register for KubeCon + CloudNativeCon India 2026. Don’t miss out and book your ticket as soon as possible.
We’re both going to be at KubeCon + CloudNativeCon. If you have questions before you fly, want food recs, want to know which session is worth skipping for vada pav, or just want to say hi:
- Yash: @yashpimple on X, Linkedin
- Rohit: @ghumare64 on X, github.com/rohitg00
Find them both on the CNCF community Slack
DM us. The Mumbai cloud native community is wide open.
Welcome to Aamchi Mumbai. 🌧️