Mumbai Cab Service Car Rental
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Overview
Mumbai, India's financial capital and the city of dreams, is a pulsating metropolis of 20 million people spread across seven islands fused together over centuries of land reclamation. The city generates nearly 6.16% of India's GDP and handles one-third of the country's income-tax revenues, yet its soul belongs to the fishermen of Koli, the textile mill workers of Parel, and the millions of migrants from every corner of India who arrive here daily in search of opportunity. Mumbai's coastline stretches from the mangrove forests of Thane Creek to the rocky outcrops of Colaba Point, framing a cityscape of Art Deco apartment buildings, Victorian Gothic railway stations, gleaming glass towers, and cramped chawl lanes all living side by side. The Gateway of India — a 26-metre basalt arch built to commemorate King George V's 1911 visit — stands sentinel at the waterfront and remains the first image most visitors hold of Mumbai. From heritage walk tours in Colaba and Kala Ghoda to Bollywood studio visits in Goregaon, from the early morning fish auction at Sassoon Dock to the electric atmosphere of a cricket match at Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai offers a depth of experience that rewards both first-time visitors and long-term residents alike. Miles Tours & Travels provides reliable, air-conditioned cab service for all Mumbai sightseeing tours, airport transfers, and outstation trips originating from the city.
Western Express Highway · Eastern Express Highway · Mumbai Coastal Road MumbaiHistory & Significance
Mumbai's written history begins with the Koli fishing communities who inhabited the islands for millennia and worshipped the goddess Mumba Devi — from whose name the city ultimately derives its title. The Portuguese captured the seven islands in 1534, renamed them Bom Bahia (Beautiful Bay), and held them until 1661 when they were handed to England as part of the dowry of Princess Catherine of Braganza upon her marriage to King Charles II. The British East India Company leased the islands from the Crown for £10 a year and developed Mumbai into the premier deep-water port on India's western coast. The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 transformed Bombay Harbour into a critical node on the Europe-Asia trade route, spurring the construction of the iconic Gothic buildings around Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus, the High Court, and the university that still define the southern skyline. The collapse of the cotton trade during the American Civil War pushed Bombay's economy into textiles, and by the early 20th century over 130 cotton mills in central Bombay employed hundreds of thousands of workers, creating the working-class neighbourhoods that define localities like Lalbaug, Parel, and Dadar. After Independence, Bombay became the capital of Bombay State and in 1960, following the Samyukta Maharashtra Movement, the state was bifurcated and the city became the capital of newly formed Maharashtra. Renamed Mumbai in 1995, the city continues to reinvent itself — from mill land redevelopment in Lower Parel to the new coastal road and trans-harbour link bridge that are reshaping its geography for a new century.
Distance & Travel Time
Cab Fare — Mumbai to Mumbai
| Car Type | Seats | One-Way (15% off) | Round Trip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Swift Dzire | 4 | ₹3,850 Flat 15% OFF | ₹4,500 |
| Ertiga | 6 | ₹4,350 Flat 15% OFF | ₹5,100 |
| Innova | 7 | ₹4,350 Flat 15% OFF | ₹5,100 |
| Innova Crysta | 6 | ₹5,100 Flat 15% OFF | ₹6,000 |
| Innova Hycross | 7 | ₹7,150 Flat 15% OFF | ₹8,400 |
Estimated for 0 km. Toll, parking & driver allowance extra. Call for exact quote.
Route Highlights
- Gateway of India — the iconic 1924 basalt arch overlooking the Arabian Sea, the undisputed symbol of Mumbai
- Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus — UNESCO World Heritage Victorian Gothic railway station, still India's busiest
- Marine Drive (Queen's Necklace) — the 3.6 km Art Deco promenade along the Arabian Sea, magical at sunset and night
- Dharavi — one of Asia's largest urban settlements; guided tours reveal a thriving ecosystem of micro-industries from pottery to leather
- Elephanta Caves — a 1.5-hour ferry ride to UNESCO-listed rock-cut temples dedicated to Shiva, carved between the 5th and 8th centuries
- Sanjay Gandhi National Park — a 104 sq km forest inside the city limits with leopards, Kanheri Caves, and nature trails
- Haji Ali Dargah — a 15th-century mosque-tomb set on a tidal islet, connected to the mainland by a narrow causeway, a landmark of Mumbai's composite culture
- Colaba Causeway & Kala Ghoda — Mumbai's art district with galleries, craft markets, the Jehangir Art Gallery, and the best street shopping in the city
- Juhu Beach & Versova — the northern beaches beloved for evening walks, bhel puri, and celebrity spotting along Bollywood's preferred coastline
- Film City, Goregaon — spread over 520 acres, this is where Bollywood's biggest productions come to life; guided studio tours available
Places to Visit in Mumbai
Gateway of India
Completed in 1924, this 26-metre Indo-Saracenic arch was built to commemorate King George V's visit and served as the formal disembarkation point for British viceroys. Today it is Mumbai's most photographed landmark and the launching point for ferries to Elephanta Caves and Alibaug. The Taj Mahal Palace Hotel directly behind it has welcomed heads of state and celebrities since 1903, surviving both a fire and the 2008 terror attacks to remain one of India's greatest hotels.
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus
Designed by Frederick William Stevens and completed in 1888, this extraordinary Victorian Gothic building blends European architectural vocabulary with Indian decorative motifs in a style the British called 'Bombay Gothic'. It was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2004 and serves as the headquarters of Central Railway, handling over 3 million passengers daily — more than any other station in India. The building's gargoyles, pointed arches, and the central dome surmounted by a figure of Progress make it one of the finest examples of 19th-century Gothic architecture anywhere in Asia.
Elephanta Caves
A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1987, the Elephanta Caves occupy a forested island in Mumbai Harbour accessible by a one-hour ferry from the Gateway of India. The main cave, dedicated to Shiva, contains the magnificent Trimurti sculpture — a 6-metre three-headed bust of Shiva as Creator, Preserver, and Destroyer — considered one of the supreme achievements of Indian art. The caves were carved between the 5th and 8th centuries CE and the island's forested paths, sea views, and resident macaque monkeys make the journey as memorable as the destination.
Marine Drive & Nariman Point
The 3.6-kilometre Queen's Necklace is Mumbai's most beloved urban space — a six-lane boulevard curving along the Back Bay from Nariman Point to Chowpatty Beach, lined on the inland side by a continuous row of Art Deco apartment buildings that form one of the largest surviving concentrations of Art Deco architecture in the world. At night, the streetlights reflected in the bay create the necklace effect that gives the road its nickname. The western tip at Nariman Point marks the nerve centre of India's financial services industry.
Sanjay Gandhi National Park & Kanheri Caves
Remarkably, this 104-square-kilometre protected forest lies entirely within the city limits of Greater Mumbai, making it one of the few urban national parks in the world with a population of leopards (estimated at 35-50 individuals). Within the park, the Kanheri Caves complex comprises 109 Buddhist cave monuments carved into a basalt hillside between the 1st and 9th centuries CE, including several impressive chaitya (prayer) halls with intact carved pillars and enormous Buddha reliefs. The park serves as Mumbai's lungs, supplying fresh water to Powai and Vihar lakes.
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