Restaurants(15837)
Chiso Takayama
Chef Takayama’s innovative contemporary kaiseki utilizes premium ingredients from all around Japan. His intimate Minami-Azabu restaurant is known as a sophisticated hangout for epicurean connoisseurs in Tokyo’s beating entertainment heart.
Aomi (Halekulani Okinawa Hotel)
In this Halekulani Okinawa Hotel signature restaurant, some of Japan’s most beloved dishes and preparation styles are served in an upscale, contemporary dining space on the Okinawa coast.
Otemachi Asada
Historically from Kanazawa, Kaga cuisine’s resplendent dining style is characterized by high ingredient quality and showmanship. Ryotei Asada brings it to Tokyo, delighting locals and guests with rich flavors from Japan’s western coast.
Japanese Dining KURA (ANA Crowne Plaza Niigata)
This Niigata restaurant is famed for luxury kaiseki menus — lunch and dinner both — that show off the best of Japan’s four seasons. Seasonal ingredients like chestnuts, sweetfish and wagyu beef take turns to share the spotlight.
IRODORI
Be carried away by the surrounding whirlpool of fresh, colorful ingredients that decorate IRODORI’s dining hall with local delicacies of land and sea.
Kusunoki (Toyama)
An intimate and innovative restaurant with a la carte and omakase courses, Kusunoki serves golden crab, Tajima wagyu beef, and other specialties in a quaint residential area of Toyama City.
Shunbou (Grand Hyatt Tokyo)
Savor authentic Japanese cuisine inside the Grand Hyatt Tokyo in Roppongi. Indulge in expertly crafted dishes with seasonal ingredients through kaiseki meals and other classic Japanese foods.
Kobikicho Ono
Experience a masterful level of depth through the handmade, practiced selection of dishes that make up a rare cha-kaiseki course. Ono provides a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for an experience many Japanese people will never even have themselves.
KOMB
Savor the ingredient in Japanese cuisine known for being the reason behind the discovery of umami: kombu. At KOMB, Chef Annabell Seiko Harada crafts Japanese-style dishes that skilfully integrate the ingredient at the core of Japanese cuisine.
Unagi Komagata Maekawa Asakusa Main Branch
Time travel with your taste buds to Komagata Maekawa, Tokyo’s legendary eel restaurant. Having been present in Asakusa since the Bunsei era, Maekawa serves up unagi perfection, each bite bursting with flavor thanks to a 200-year-old secret sauce.
Teryori Kikuchi
The views and the food at this Shiogama hillside kaiseki restaurant are matched in beauty.
Ichi
Japanese kappo cooking which is designed to help you relax and be at ease — try their signature curry and fish shabu shabu!
Chez Olivier
A French restaurant in Tokyo which uses fresh and organic Japanese ingredients, and a regular on the Michelin Guide.
Maison Paul Bocuse
One of the late greats of French gastronomy is honored in style at the Tokyo branch of his celebrated restaurant group.
Lugdunum Bouchon Lyonnais
One of the Michelin-recognized gems of Tokyo’s “French Town,” where l'esprit Lyonnais fills the air.
Le Bourguignon
This 2021 Michelin-starred chef’s fascination with Burgundy (and mastery of its cuisine) makes for a transportive French dining experience to remember.
Yunke
Fine Korean cuisine with traditional medicinal values, and a menu developed by one of Korea’s finest chefs.
Shibousai Kitagawa
Ise-ebi spiny lobster, Matsusaka wagyu beef, sustainable shark fin; these are just some of the premium ingredients that are used in the easily digestible fare at this critically acclaimed Matsusaka restaurant.

Tenyu
This restaurant strips back to the fundamentals of tempura cuisine while adding the Kyoto twist for a unique change.
Ito
French-influenced Japanese cuisine might just be the future of the craft — see for yourself at this top Kyoto kaiseki restaurant.

Sanrokuen
At Sanrokuen, you can try traditional Robatayaki cuisine and local specialties of Yamanashi such as hoto noodles.
Rakumi (River Retreat Garaku)
This kaiseki restaurant in the luxury hotel River Retreat Garaku uses an abundance of seasonal ingredients from Toyama’s mountains, rivers and sea. Enjoy 50 types of local sake and a complimentary dip in the hotel’s onsen after.
Chukasoba Nishino
Ramen Koike’s new sister restaurant in Hongo serves fish-based broth for their ramen, light yet redolent with umami. It’s a simple, yet perfect bowl of ramen.
Comptoir Missago
Wild game gets the artisan treatment at this French restaurant in Nishiazabu.

Tsuchiya
Try the soba at this renowned buckwheat noodle-specialty shop, kaiseki-style and all.
Tsukumo
In the historic Nara, master chef Nishihara maintains an old-school approach to his cooking and does the ancient capital’s tradition justice.
Menya Jikon
Visit Menya Jikon for their famous ramen noodles, immersed in a savory chicken broth.
Yakumo
The usual soy sauce, pork or chicken ramen is ditched in place of the golden-hued, gentle wonton soups in this ultra-popular ramen-ya in Tokyo that’s flocked by both foodies and the media.
