Tripnivo

I Tracked Mumbai to London Flight Prices for 30 Days – Here’s What I Learned

Flight prices feel unpredictable.

One day it’s ₹48,000.
The next day it’s ₹61,000.
Then suddenly it drops again.

So instead of guessing, I decided to run a simple experiment:

👉 I tracked Mumbai to London return flight prices every day for 30 days using Skyscanner.

Here’s exactly what happened — and what you should learn before booking your UK trip.


Experiment Setup

Route: Mumbai (BOM) → London (LHR)
Travel Month: September
Trip Duration: 10 days
Tracking Period: 30 consecutive days
Platform Used: Skyscanner
Filters Used: Economy, 1 adult, under 1 stop, layover under 3.5 hours

Every day, I checked the lowest available return fare at the same time (8 PM IST).


What I Observed After 30 Days

📉 Lowest Price Observed:

₹46,850

📈 Highest Price Observed:

₹63,400

💰 Price Difference:

₹16,550

Yes — the exact same trip fluctuated by over ₹16K within one month.


Week-by-Week Breakdown

Week 1: High & Volatile

Prices ranged between ₹58K–₹63K.
Most flights were direct or 1-stop via Middle East hubs.

Week 2: Sudden Drop

Prices dropped to ₹49K–₹52K range.
This was the first major dip.

Week 3: Stable Zone

Flights hovered between ₹48K–₹51K.
This turned out to be the best booking window.

Week 4: Price Spike Again

Prices jumped back above ₹60K as travel dates got closer.


Key Pattern I Noticed

1️⃣ Prices dropped around 9–11 weeks before departure.
2️⃣ Prices spiked sharply inside 6 weeks.
3️⃣ Weekend searches showed slightly higher fares.
4️⃣ Tuesday–Thursday departures were consistently cheaper.


Direct vs 1-Stop Price Difference

Direct Flights:
₹60K–₹63K average

1-Stop Flights (Short Layover):
₹47K–₹52K average

Average savings by accepting a short layover:
👉 ₹10,000–₹13,000

Layovers under 2.5 hours did not significantly increase total travel fatigue.


The Best Booking Window (Based on This Test)

For Mumbai → London (September travel):

👉 8–11 weeks before departure gave the lowest prices.

Booking too early (4–5 months out) did NOT give the best fare.
Booking too late (under 6 weeks) was the most expensive.


The Most Surprising Insight

The biggest price drop happened mid-week.

When I checked on:

  • Tuesday and Wednesday evenings

Prices were consistently lower compared to:

  • Friday and Sunday checks

This doesn’t mean Tuesday is magically cheaper —
but mid-week searches seemed to show more fare inventory.


What This Means for You

If you’re flying from Mumbai to London:

✔ Start tracking 3 months before travel
✔ Set price alerts immediately
✔ Don’t panic book too early
✔ Avoid booking inside 6 weeks
✔ Consider short layovers

The difference can literally pay for:

  • Your UK visa
  • 2–3 hotel nights
  • Travel insurance

When This Strategy May Not Work

This pattern may differ if:

  • You’re traveling in peak summer (June–August)
  • You’re booking around Christmas or New Year
  • There’s a major UK event
  • Fuel prices spike globally

Flight pricing is dynamic — but patterns repeat.


Final Verdict From This 30-Day Test

Flight prices are not random.

They move based on:

  • Demand curves
  • Inventory release windows
  • Booking behavior
  • Route competition

Tracking for 30 days showed me one thing clearly:

The cheapest fare rarely appears on the first search.

Patience saved up to ₹16,550.