Route Briefing: Mumbai to Amalfi Coast
There are few journeys that reward the effort quite like flying from Mumbai to the Amalfi Coast. Yes, you're looking at around ten and a half hours in the air with a connection through a European hub, but the moment you round a coastal bend and see pastel villages tumbling down limestone cliffs toward impossibly blue water, every hour of travel dissolves instantly. This is one of those routes where the destination genuinely justifies the journey.
From Mumbai, Lufthansa, Air India, and Emirates are your most reliable options, with connections typically routing through Frankfurt, Dubai, or Rome. Fares under $700 roundtrip represent a genuinely good deal on this route — standard pricing sits closer to $1,000 to $1,400 or more — so if you spot something in that lower range, move quickly. Booking four to six months ahead of a summer trip is not just advice, it's almost a necessity. June through September is peak season here, and the entire world seems to have the same idea at once.
Your arrival point is Naples International Airport, which serves as the gateway to the coast. From Naples, the Amalfi Coast is accessible by road, ferry, or a combination of both. The coastal road itself is famously narrow and winding, so many travellers find that arriving by ferry into towns like Positano or Amalfi directly is both more scenic and far less stressful than navigating the hairpin bends by car.
The coast itself is a string of distinct villages, each with its own personality. Positano is glamorous and photogenic, Ravello sits high above the sea with extraordinary gardens and views, and the town of Amalfi carries centuries of maritime history in its cathedral and narrow streets. The food throughout is exceptional in the way that simple, regional Italian cooking always is — fresh seafood, locally grown lemons used in everything from pasta to the famous limoncello, and handmade pasta that needs no embellishment.
The single best tip for this route is to consider travelling in late May or early September rather than the height of summer. The weather remains warm and beautiful, the ferries and footpaths are noticeably less crowded, and accommodation prices tend to soften meaningfully at the edges of peak season. The light in early September is particularly golden, and the sea is still warm from months of summer sun. For a journey this long and this worthwhile, arriving when the coast is at its most breathable makes the whole experience feel like it was made just for you.






