Singapore Tour Packages from Mumbai (2026): Flights, Cost & Itineraries
Mumbai doesn't really switch off. Neither does Singapore. Maybe that's why the two cities click so well. Half the people I book a Singapore tour package from Mumbai for aren't pure holidaymakers at all, they're professionals tacking a few days of beaches and Sentosa onto the back of a work trip, or finally cashing in the leave they've been hoarding since Diwali. Mumbai is India's busiest international gateway, and Singapore is the one destination that works equally well whether you land for a board meeting or a honeymoon. That overlap is exactly why this route is so heavily flown.
So this guide leans into what actually matters for a Mumbai traveller: the longest of the metro flight routes (yes, longest, more on that in a second), real fares in rupees, what the packages bundle, when to go, the visa, and how our team folds the messy bits into one booking. Right, let's dig in.
Flights: the longest metro hop, but still a single non-stop
Here's a quirk most people don't clock. Of all the big Indian metros, Mumbai actually sits furthest from Singapore. The route stretches roughly 3,900 km, noticeably longer than Chennai or Kolkata's hop. In flight terms that's about 5 hours 25 minutes to 5 hours 40 minutes non-stop. Not a deal-breaker, though, because it's still one clean flight with no transit drama.
And BOM serves this corridor harder than almost any other in western India. You've got Singapore Airlines, Scoot, IndiGo, Air India and Vistara all flying it directly. More carriers means more departure slots and, crucially, more price competition working in your favour.
Return economy fares typically sit between ₹18,000 and ₹38,000 per person. Where you land in that band comes down to timing. A few things I tell every Mumbai client before they book:
- Lock fares 6 to 8 weeks out. On a route this busy, last-minute seats get punishing fast.
- Match the airline to the trip, not your loyalty. Scoot and IndiGo keep the bleisure crowd's costs lean; Singapore Airlines and Vistara reward you with comfort and generous baggage when it's a proper family holiday.
- Early-morning departures from T2 get you into Changi by mid-afternoon, so day one isn't wasted.
- Read the baggage fine print on low-cost carriers, since add-on bag fees can quietly erase the saving.
One genuinely Mumbai-specific perk: because BOM has such frequency, business travellers can shift a return by a day or two without paying a fortune. That flexibility is half the reason the bleisure crowd loves this route.
What a Singapore package from Mumbai actually bundles
Flights are just the skeleton. The body of any good Singapore tour package from Mumbai is everything that stops you improvising at 11pm in a foreign city: the hotel, the airport transfers, the attraction tickets, and a day-by-day flow that respects your energy levels. We slot all of it into a single booking.
Most trips settle into one of three shapes:
- 3 nights / 4 days — tight and efficient. Perfect for the work-trip extender or a long-weekend reset. Marina Bay, Gardens by the Bay, a Sentosa day, done.
- 4 nights / 5 days — the popular middle ground. Room to add Universal Studios plus the Zoo without the schedule feeling like a sprint.
- 5 nights / 6 days — unhurried. Build in a slow morning, a day trip, maybe a Marina Bay Sands splurge. Honeymooners gravitate here.
Then we flex by who's travelling. A couple gets a rooftop-pool stay and a night cruise; a family gets the S.E.A. Aquarium and Night Safari; a solo professional often wants a smart central hotel and zero hand-holding. The packages below show the current spread, and our team reshapes any of them. Start by browsing our Singapore tour packages, then we tailor.
How much does a Singapore trip from Mumbai cost?
A mid-range 4 nights / 5 days Singapore tour package from Mumbai lands around ₹72,000 to ₹1,15,000 per person, all in. That splits into return flights (₹18,000–₹38,000), the land package with hotel, transfers and key attractions (roughly ₹35,000–₹58,000 on twin-sharing), and personal spending of ₹15,000–₹25,000.
That's the honest headline number. A couple of things worth knowing before you budget. Travelling as a family of four or a small group drops the per-head figure, because transfers and several attraction costs get shared across the group. Food, meanwhile, is where Singapore is kinder than its reputation suggests; a hawker-centre plate of chicken rice costs a fraction of a hotel restaurant, so eat like a local and your spending money stretches far.
For a deeper number-crunch across seasons and trip styles, our breakdown of the total Singapore trip cost from India goes well beyond the headline.
Mumbai-specific tip: skip the hotel pinned to Orchard Road. Changi-to-city via the MRT is brilliant, so a clean mid-range hotel one or two stops out saves serious rupees and costs you maybe ten minutes a day.
Best time to fly out of Mumbai
Singapore sits on the equator, so it's warm and humid all year and there's no real weather off-season. The smart question isn't "when's it nice" but "when's it cheap and uncrowded." For Mumbai flyers, that's clearest in February–March and again in July–August. Fares ease, crowds thin, and the tropical showers tend to arrive in short sharp bursts that clear before they wreck your afternoon.
The window to avoid, budget-wise, is December–January, when year-end holidays push both fares and footfall to a peak. That said, if you genuinely want the Orchard Road festive lights, they're worth the premium. June is another wildcard: the Great Singapore Sale turns the whole island into a shopping floor, so plan a retail-heavy trip around it. Frankly, for a business traveller extending a trip, a quiet March mid-week beats a packed December every time.
Visa: quick and fully online
Indian passport holders need a visa for Singapore, but it's electronic and refreshingly low-effort. No embassy queue, no interview. It's filed online through an authorised agent and usually clears in a few working days. When the visa is part of your package, our team handles the paperwork well before departure, so it's never the thing keeping you up at night.
For the current document checklist, validity and fees, read our dedicated Singapore visa for Indians 2026 guide before you fly.
Why Mumbai travellers book with TripCabinet
Could you assemble this trip yourself across a dozen browser tabs? Sure. But the Mumbai crowd we work with is mostly time-poor, and that's the whole point. We plan the trip end to end: flights, hotel, transfers, pre-booked Universal Studios and Sentosa tickets, the visa, and a clean daily plan. If a meeting overruns and you need to push your return, you message one team and it's sorted, not five different help desks.
We're a Bangalore-based travel agency working with Indian travellers nationwide, and Singapore is a route we run constantly. Planning your first Southeast Asia holiday? Our broader Singapore tour package planning guide pairs nicely with this page. Otherwise the packages below are the quickest way to begin.
For attraction timings and seasonal events, the official Singapore Tourism Board site is worth a glance before you lock plans.
Practical info at a glance
- Route: Mumbai (BOM) → Singapore (SIN), ~3,900 km, the longest metro hop, multiple daily non-stops.
- Direct flight time: ~5h 25m to 5h 40m, no layover.
- Airlines (direct): Singapore Airlines, Scoot, IndiGo, Air India, Vistara.
- Return economy fares: ~₹18,000–₹38,000 by season.
- Best months: February–March and July–August for value.
- Currency: Singapore Dollar (SGD); cards work everywhere, but carry cash for hawker stalls.
- Visa: e-visa for Indians, online, a few working days.
So there's the full picture. Mumbai's reputation as the country's restless gateway actually works in your favour here: more flights, more flexibility, fewer compromises. I had a Powai-based consultant message me last winter, half-laughing, from a Clarke Quay rooftop the night after his conference wrapped, saying he couldn't believe he'd turned three dead days into a proper holiday. That's the bleisure magic of this route. Pick your dates, and let us carry the logistics.