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Hong Kong eats more Japanese food per capita than almost any city outside Japan. That's not a throwaway stat. It means the competition is fierce, the standards are high, and the options are genuinely overwhelming. I've spent the past several months eating across the full spectrum — from multi-hour omakase sessions at three-Michelin-star counters to 6pm ramen queues with a cold Asahi — and what follows is the edit that actually matters.
One note before we get to the restaurants: the original draft of this article contained some significant errors that would have been embarrassing to publish. Mizumi (a Japanese restaurant with Michelin recognition) is in Macau, not Hong Kong. Sushi Saito is at the Four Seasons, not the Island Shangri-La. And a listing called "Ramen Alley, Mong Kok" does not exist as a specific venue. Everything below has been verified. If a restaurant is in this guide, it is open, it is in Hong Kong, and the details are correct.
The Pinnacle: Three-Michelin-Star Omakase
There is one restaurant in Hong Kong that occupies its own category. If you are serious about Japanese food, this is where the conversation starts.
Sushi Shikon
Sushi Shikon has held three Michelin stars every year since 2014 — a run of consistency that is almost unmatched anywhere in Asia. It is the Hong Kong outpost of the legendary Sushi Yoshitake in Ginza, Tokyo, itself a three-star institution, founded by Master Chef Masahiro Yoshitake. The Hong Kong kitchen is led by Head Chef Satoshi Tada, whose career was shaped entirely at the Tokyo original under Yoshitake-san's watch.
The setting is an eight-seat hinoki wood counter where Edomae-style sushi is prepared in full view and served the moment each piece is ready. The philosophy is relentless sourcing: fish is flown in from Japan twice daily. Yes, twice. The water used for cooking is also imported. At this level, ingredient quality is the argument and the meal is the proof. There is no menu — it is omakase only, and the progression is shaped by whatever arrived that morning.
This is not dinner. It is an education. Book it for a special occasion, a business relationship that needs cementing, or simply because you want to understand what sushi actually is when money and obsession meet craft.
One-Star Omakase Worth Booking Weeks Ahead
Below the three-star peak sits a tier of one-Michelin-star omakase counters that consistently rank among the most sought-after reservations in the city. These are serious restaurants. Plan well ahead.
Sushi Saito
Sushi Saito sits on the 45th floor of the Four Seasons with harbour views that would be memorable even if the food were merely good. The food is not merely good. Chef Takashi Saito runs a no-menu omakase counter built entirely around Edomae-style sushi sourced daily from Toyosu Market in Tokyo — fish hand-picked every morning and transported to Hong Kong on the same day. Twelve seats. Two sittings per evening. No walk-ins.
The experience is unhurried and deliberate. Each piece arrives at the correct temperature, explained but not narrated to exhaustion. The restraint is the point: Chef Saito's reputation is built on letting the fish speak. This is a Michelin one-star that many regulars consider underrated.
Note: Reservations are accepted by phone only — +852 2527-0811 — Monday to Sunday, 12pm to 8:30pm, except Wednesdays. Smart casual is required; no sandals or shorts for men. Guests under 11 are not accommodated. Avoid wearing fragrance, as this affects the appreciation of the meal.
GODENYA
GODENYA is the most singular Japanese restaurant in Hong Kong. It has no visible signage. It seats eight people. Chef Shinya Goshima is also a certified sake master, which means this is the only counter in the city where the entire omakase — kappo-style dishes built around seasonal Japanese produce with subtle Cantonese touches — is conceived to pair with sake served at different temperatures for each course, including rare small-label bottles you will not find anywhere else.
This is not food and drink in parallel. The sake is integral to the meal. Goshima won the Michelin Guide Sommelier Award for exactly this reason. The experience earned its star in 2023 and has held it since. Eight seats means it books out months in advance. If you are struggling to get a table, that is not your imagination — it is one of the hardest reservations in the city.
Modern Izakaya: Where to Go for a Proper Night Out
The izakaya category in Hong Kong has moved well beyond basic yakitori and draft beer. The three venues below represent the range: intimate and demanding, neighbourhood and relaxed, grand and theatrical.
Fukuro
Fukuro is a Black Sheep Restaurants production — which in Hong Kong is a signal. It pays tribute to the late-night Tokyo working culture: dim lighting, serious sake lists, robata smoke in the air, and a playlist that actually improves as the evening progresses. The menu moves through tempura, robata skewers, and small plates with an energy that rewards sharing and ordering more than you planned.
The signature crispy caramel butter corn has become a Hong Kong cult dish — ridiculous on paper, genuinely delicious in reality. Fukuro is one of the hardest tables in the city right now, not because it is formal or expensive (it is neither) but because it is very, very good at what it does.
★★★★★
"One of the best Japanese experiences I've had in Hong Kong. The food is creative and the vibe is exactly what a great izakaya should be — lively, fun, and the sake list is exceptional."— OpenRice reviewer, verified · 2025
RONIN
RONIN is what happens when izakaya culture meets serious culinary ambition. The menu changes daily based on what came in, with an emphasis on jet-fresh seafood prepared with the kind of precision that would not be out of place at a counter three times the price. It is tucked into a quieter pocket of Sheung Wan, deliberately un-signposted, with a bar programme to match the food.
The format is looser than a formal Japanese restaurant — you are encouraged to drink, share, and let the meal evolve. This is exactly what a good izakaya should feel like. Book ahead; it fills up.
Zuma
Zuma is the international benchmark of upscale modern izakaya, and the Hong Kong outpost is one of the brand's finest. Two floors, a spiral staircase, a lounge and bar that transitions into a proper late-night destination with live DJs and musicians — and underneath all of that, genuinely strong food. The sharing menu covers robata, sushi, and Japanese grill dishes built for a table that wants everything.
It is louder and more theatrical than Fukuro or RONIN, which is either a point in its favour or against it depending on the occasion. For a large group, a celebration, or a client dinner where the food needs to be impressive but not alienating to non-specialists, Zuma is the right answer.
Ramen: The Essential Category
No Japanese restaurant guide is complete without ramen. Hong Kong has an excellent ramen scene, and the benchmark chain has been here long enough to know what it is doing.
Ippudo HK
Ippudo came from Fukuoka and brought its tonkotsu to the world without watering it down. The Hong Kong branches are busy, reliable, and genuinely good — not in a "for a chain" sense but in an absolute sense. The broth is correctly rich, the noodles have the right resistance, and the gyoza and buns are solid enough to build a meal around.
It is English-friendly, has menus in multiple languages, and runs efficiently enough that peak-hour waits tend to be manageable. The Central (Lan Kwai Fong) branch is the most convenient for Central/Sheung Wan diners. Causeway Bay's Hysan Place branch is calmer. For ramen at a price point that makes sense, this is the reliable answer.
Yakiniku: Best Japanese BBQ in 2026
Yakiniku Great
Named Best Japanese Restaurant at the Foodie Forks 2025 awards, Yakiniku Great earned that title in the most competitive food city in Asia — which is not a small thing. Yakiniku (Japanese table-grilled BBQ) is one of the most social formats in Japanese dining, and this restaurant does it better than almost anyone else in Hong Kong. Quality beef, a well-curated selection from A5 Wagyu down to excellent everyday cuts, and an atmosphere built for exactly the kind of meal that goes long.
Interactive, fun, and genuinely well-run. The right choice for a group dinner where the goal is conversation and good meat rather than a quiet, focused tasting menu.
📋 Booking Guide at a Glance
| Restaurant | Price/person | Book ahead | Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sushi Shikon ⭐⭐⭐ | HKD 2,500–3,500 | 8–10 weeks | Website / direct |
| Sushi Saito ⭐ | HKD 1,800–2,200 | 6–8 weeks | Phone only: +852 2527-0811 |
| GODENYA ⭐ | HKD 2,300 | Months ahead | Online / email |
| Fukuro Izakaya | HKD 350–550 | 2–3 weeks | Website |
| RONIN Izakaya | HKD 400–600 | 2 weeks | Website |
| Zuma Izakaya | HKD 600–900 | 2–3 weeks | Website / OpenTable |
| Yakiniku Great Yakiniku | HKD 500–800 | 2 weeks | Website |
| Ippudo Ramen | HKD 90–140 | Walk-in | No reservation needed |
Frequently Asked Questions
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