Mumbai, India

The Kin Hotel

Price per night from$158.80

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (INR14,160.00), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Ciao bello, Bombay

Setting

The floral quarter

Milan meets Mumbai at The Kin Hotel, where sibling dream-team Imrun and Guneet Singh have poured their energy into its 15 rooms, inspired by the retro glamour of mid-century design, the vibrant colours of Dadar’s famous flower market and the easygoing ethos of Italian hospitality. Best of all, it’s a place to catch your breath in this big and bustling city. So cue up a record, sink into your terrazzo tub and have the barman send up a martini — Mumbai’s manifold experiences can wait…

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Facilities

Photos The Kin Hotel facilities

Need to know

Rooms

15, including seven suites.

Check–Out

Noon and check-in is from 2pm. Both are flexible, on request and subject to availability.

More details

Rates include a Western-style breakfast served in the hotel restaurant, Terttulia.The options include poached eggs on sourdough, waffles, smoothie bowls and overnight oats.

Also

Unfortunately, The Kin Hotel isn’t suitable if you have reduced mobility.

At the hotel

Design boutique, gym with calisthenics equipment, a rooftop Crossfit station and free WiFi throughout. In rooms: smart TV, Marshall Bluetooth speaker, minibar, free bottled water, tea- and coffee-making kit, bathrobes, slippers and bespoke bath products.

Our favourite rooms

All 15 rooms share a certain design language — warm-toned woods, mid-century silhouettes, bold lighting — but no two are exactly alike, with different colour palettes, floors and artwork in each. We’re big fans of the Sea Luxe suites, with their high ceilings and large, slanted windows with views of the Arabian Sea.

Spa

There’s no spa, but staff can prepare an epsom salt soak in your bath tub (if you have one) and can arrange deep tissue and hot stone massages in the privacy of your room.

Packing tips

Leave space for some loot from the hotel’s boutique, stocked with ceramics, coffee table books, cushions, art prints and Kin’s bespoke bath products.

Also

The Kin Hotel moonlights as a concept store, meaning almost all of the artworks, furnishings and tableware can be bought. If something catches your eye, swing by reception for the details.

Children

All ages are welcome, but the hotel isn’t specifically geared towards little Smiths. Children under eight can share their parents’ bed for free; one child over eight can stay on an extra bed for INR1,500 a night in some rooms.

Food and Drink

Photos The Kin Hotel food and drink

Top Table

If it’s just the two of you, go for one of the tables beneath the skylight. If you’re three or more, aim for the corner banquettes.

Dress Code

Take inspiration from the nearby flower market, going big and bold with patterns and colour.

Hotel restaurant

The hotel’s Italian-inspired restaurant, Terttulia, channels the informal, come-as-you-are attitude of a neighbourhood brasserie. It’s a light-flooded space with brick and terrazzo walls, marble-topped tables and corner banquettes clad in dark-green green velvet. Italian classics are front and centre on the menu — asparagus risotto, truffle tagliareni, thin-base pizzas — but there’s a broader mod-European lean too, with grilled chicken bowls, braised Atlantic salmon and tenderloin steaks also on the menu. Sunday brunch has proven a hit with locals, with a spread of sweet and savoury options, including fluffy waffles, pulled pork eggs Benedict and shrimp tacos.

Hotel bar

The bar is at the heart of Terttulia, fashioned from fluted white marble. There’s a full complement of spirits, including aged Còdigo tequilas, 18-year-old single malts and broody cognacs. Beers and wines are drawn from across Europe, India and Australasia, and the cocktails are equally well-travelled — try the gin and turmeric tonic or the Japanese pear and ginger martini. Imrun’s background as a musician and DJ ensures the soundtrack is as transporting as the drinks — one minute it might be Tom Petty or Aerosmith, the next a breakthrough electronic artist from downtown Mumbai.

Last orders

Breakfast is served from 8am. The all-day menu is served from noon to 1.30am.

Room service

A reduced menu from Terttulia is available to order to your door from 8am to 1.30am daily.

Location

Photos The Kin Hotel location
Address
The Kin Hotel
Sea Face off Old Cadel Road Dadar West Shivaji Park
Mumbai
400036
India

The Kin Hotel is a two-minute walk from the beach in Dadar, a bustling residential neighbourhood in central Mumbai.

Planes

You can fly direct from most major cities in the UK, Continental Europe and the US. The airport is around half an hour’s drive from the hotel; taxis are abundant and hotel staff can arrange transfers for INR2,500 each way.

Trains

Dadar railway station is around a kilometre from the hotel. Be aware that Mumbai’s rail network is notoriously busy during peak hours, so if you do want to take the train, time it for the middle of the day when commuters are at work.

Automobiles

Most guests explore the city by taxi, Uber or tuk tuk. Unless you’ve driven in Indian cities before, it’s best to leave it to those who grew up navigating these frenetic streets. If you do decide to drive, the hotel offers free valet parking in public spaces nearby.

Worth getting out of bed for

The Kin Hotel is primely placed for a morning raid on Dadar Flower Market, which gets going before sunrise every day. Vendors travel in from all over the city to buy and sell fresh blooms, lending a delightful perfume to the proceedings, which are noisy, chaotic but as authentic they come. Watching this many-layered process unfold, you’ll soon realise there are stories to be uncovered on almost every street corner in the city. One of the best ways to lift the lid is a walking tour, and few can draw on quite the same caliber of storytelling as the Bombay Poetry Crawl, a journey through the city told through the eyes of some of its most important poets. Founder Saranya Subramanian is a self-styled ‘city archivist’, dedicated to connecting Mumbai’s places, people and literary prowess. You’ll find equally homegrown talent at the G5A Foundation for Contemporary Culture, an arts centre that has taken up residence in a former textile mill, the likes of which once dominated the skyline of central Mumbai. There’s an ever-changing line-up of theatre performances, live music, art workshops and independent film screenings.

 

Local restaurants

Hop in a cab and head north to the Bandra Kurla Complex (known locally as BKC), home to Goan hotspot O Pedro. Styled like one of Goa’s old colonial villas, with teak furniture, tiled floors and vaulted ceilings, O Pedro taps into the southern state’s unique culinary heritage, serving Portuguese-Indian fusion dishes. The Bombay Canteen, in Lower Parel, brings together flavours from all over India. The chefs here take national staples, add a little culinary wizardry and serve them as either small plates (chhotas) or heartier mains (badas), making it easy to sample a whole swathe of the country’s cuisine in one sitting. For some of Mumbai’s most accomplished cooking, book ahead at Masque, a sleek, industrial-styled restaurant to the south of Dadar. Head Chef Varun Totlani has netted a string of awards for his 10-course tasting menus, underpinned by seasonal ingredients sourced from local farmers, producers and foraging trips.

 

Local bars

With its velvet banquettes, gold table lamps and bar top fashioned from black marble, Slink & Bardot evokes the sultry ambience of Paris after dark. The cocktails here are lovingly fashioned by proper mixologists who like to push the boundaries of their craft. Restaurant and cocktail bar Koko has also won a loyal following with its pan-Asian approach, borrowing from the best of Japanese, Cantonese and Thai cuisine. Their drinks menu is no different, featuring cocktails like their Tom Yum Cup, a vodka-based reimagining of the classic Thai soup.

Reviews

Photos The Kin Hotel reviews
Urvashi Roe

Anonymous review

By Urvashi Roe, Taste tester

I landed on a drizzly, monsoon morning, fully expecting to spend at least an hour in Mumbai’s infamous traffic. But to my ecstatic surprise, the journey to The Kin Hotel barely took 20 minutes, thanks to the city's new roads. In fact, the hotel’s greatest trick is perhaps its location. It is quite possibly the most perfectly positioned boutique hotel in Mumbai now that these infrastructure upgrades are finally taking shape. Wedged between north and south Mumbai, it really is the perfect launchpad — close enough to dive headfirst into the city’s noise and colour, but far enough to retreat when it all becomes a little too much. Which it easily can.

An added bonus is the charming kaali peeli lined up right opposite the front door — these affectionately named, battered black and yellow taxis will zip you around town and are a must-do over the more modern taxi apps. No data roaming needed. Just a madman of a taxi driver squeezing between booming buses and bicycle rickshaws.

The hotel has been created by a brother and sister duo, Imrun and Guneet Singh, who have revived an old guesthouse in Dadar, once owned by their grandfather. A cage lift took me to my corner suite on the third floor, which was modern and retro in equal measure. Shades of grey, teak wall panels, orb-like lamps, paintings that are for sale in the 24-hour lobby shop, a rotary phone and a bath. A bath! I had been travelling for nearly a month in the countryside of India with bucket washes becoming my daily norm, so I almost burst into tears at the sight of it. I rushed to turn the taps on and as if by magic, housekeeping arrived with a bowl of eucalyptus and spearmint Epsom salts. The timing was flawless.

After an embarrassingly long soak, I was starving. The house restaurant Terttulia is in Imrun’s wheelhouse. He has filled the menu with feel-good classics and there is definitely something for everyone here, but it was pasta that I was craving. After weeks of delicious dishes filled with South-East Asian spices, I was ready for a European carb coma. The truffle tagliarini with a side of garlicky, lemony broccoli and a very reasonably priced Indian Fratelli hit the spot. The following day, I went back for more but this time I remembered to ask for the Korean pull-apart bread to scarpetta the delicious sauce.

Evenings at the hotel have a very relaxed vibe and one that isn’t loud enough to invade solo Kindle time. I judge a bar by its ability to deliver my margarita order perfectly. It takes some explanation, you see. I am not one for gimmicky glasses — rather, I prefer a classic rock glass with a half-salted rim. The boy did good. So good in fact that I had a couple, which lulled me into the right amount of sleepy that I almost didn’t notice how soft the sheets were. Almost.

Breakfasts are an all-day affair, with chai and poha alongside flat whites and avo toast or tofu scramble. Not very authentic one might say, but there is plenty of time to taste Dadar’s food offerings. Just a 15-minute walk away is Ashok Vada Pav. Don’t be put off by the queue. It moves fast and within no time, a mere 30 rupees will get you the legendary fried potato ball in a soft, chilli-sauce-basted bun. Or perhaps a bun maska at the historic Parsi café Light of Bharat, or piping hot idli and vada at Mani’s Café…

As a former florist, I can’t not mention the fresh flowers every day. It’s a treat to see casual, understated vases instead of gargantuan displays. Dadar's famed flower market is just around the corner and makes for a wonderful amble if you’re up early. And if not, simply admire the blooms that fill the nooks and crannies here, arranged by Guneet’s own hands.

I arrived at The Kin Hotel tired, fraught and in need of winding down. And while even on this leafy cul de sac, you can still hear Mumbai’s 24-hour symphony of 'Horn OK Please', winding down is exactly what I was able to do — in a cocoon of comfort and class.

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Price per night from $158.80