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Mumbai Slum Tours: Poverty for Profit?
2 Mar
Summary
- Slum tourism in Mumbai's Dharavi charges up to Rs 15,000 for two hours.
- Local guides now lead tours, a shift from organized groups.
- Tours highlight industry and survival, not just deprivation.

Slum tourism in Mumbai's Dharavi, Asia's largest slum, has evolved into a significant cottage industry. Local guides, like Omkar Dhamale, now offer two-hour tours for foreign visitors at prices as high as Rs 15,000, a substantial increase from previous organized tours.
This trend signifies a shift from organized groups with trained guides to locals capitalizing on their surroundings. While critics label these excursions as voyeurism, proponents argue they offer a complex perspective on Dharavi, encompassing its industrial spirit, migration stories, and resilience.
Some tours, like those curated by Khaki Tours, focus on intellectual discourse about informal housing and recycling economies. They emphasize understanding and industry, not just showcasing deprivation, aiming to provide context and respect for residents' privacy and dignity.
Guides are increasingly responsible for sensitizing visitors to ask permission before photographing and to view the slum not as a spectacle but as a vibrant community. The future of this industry may shift with ongoing redevelopment efforts in Dharavi.




