Near T2 central retail zone, BIBA carries ready-to-wear Indian outfits.
BIBA in Terminal 2 sits in the main airside shopping area, so you pass it on most international departures out of BOM. It focuses on women’s ethnic and Indo‑western apparel, from stitched salwar suits to kurtas you can throw over jeans before a long-haul flight. You’re not dealing with formal bridalwear here, more everyday and festive pieces that still look put‑together when you step off a 9‑hour sector.
Prices run in the mid-range for Indian high-street: kurtas often sit in the four-figure rupee bracket, with full suit sets climbing higher but still far below designer labels elsewhere in T2. Sizing usually covers a decent run of Indian sizes, though tall travelers may want to check hemlines and sleeve length before committing. Staff handle basic alterations through pinned guidance only if time allows, but don’t bank on same-day tailoring before a tight departure window.
Product turnover at this T2 outpost follows festival seasons in India, so October–November and March often bring fresh prints and brighter color stories. If you’re connecting through late at night, T2 retail typically trades into the small hours, but some apparel stores start winding down after 23:00, so hit BIBA before you sit at the gate. Expect standard mall-style racks rather than runway displays, which makes size hunting faster when your boarding pass shows a sub‑60‑minute boarding call.
Tip: if you’re buying gifts, keep tags and the printed BOM T2 bill; BIBA outlets in Indian city malls sometimes honor exchanges within a set number of days, which helps if the fit is off once you reach home.