Best Date Night Japanese Restaurants in Chicago
45 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Mako
A chef-driven omakase with a serious cooked-course bench.
Essential Picks
#1
Mako
9.1
A 22-seat, reservation-driven omakase built around pristine fish, tightly paced courses, and cooked interludes that keep the meal from becoming a pure nigiri parade. This is destination sushi for when you want chef-led progression, quiet focus, and a night that feels deliberately composed from first bite to dessert.
Must-Try Dishes:
Omakase tasting, Chawanmushi (seasonal savory custard), Braised abalone (cooked course)
What Makes it Special: A chef-driven omakase with a serious cooked-course bench.
An intimate 10-seat counter in River North where Chef Shinichiro Kanemaru serves a tightly paced, 16-course omakase built around premium fish flown in from Japan. The room leans serene and minimalist, making the focus the progression of nigiri, sake pairings, and quiet interaction with the chef.
Must-Try Dishes:
Kanemaru's 16-course omakase, Fatty tuna nigiri, Hokkaido uni
What Makes it Special: Serious, chef-led omakase with meticulous seasonal fish and pacing.
Notable Picks
#3
Itoko
8.8
Opened in 2023, Itoko is a Michelin-recognized Southport Corridor Japanese restaurant from chef Gene Kato where a focused Tantan Ramen lives alongside sushi, robata, and seasonal small plates. The room is sleek and buzzy rather than hushed, so ramen here reads as part of a polished Japanese dinner instead of a quick noodle stop.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tantan Ramen, Salmon robata, Whole Branzino
What Makes it Special: Michelin-recognized Southport Japanese restaurant where refined ramen shares space with sushi and robata.
#4
Kyōten
8.8
Kyōten is Chef Otto Phan’s ultra-small omakase counter, serving meticulously sourced, largely wild Japanese fish in a tightly choreographed tasting that runs well past two hours. The experience leans more like a high-end performance than a casual sushi night, with precise nigiri, thoughtful sake pairings, and pricing that firmly marks it as a special-occasion destination.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chef’s Omakase Nigiri, Wagyu Nigiri, Lobster Tempura
What Makes it Special: An eight-seat omakase counter where world-class fish is treated with obsessive, Edomae-level care.
#5
Momotaro
8.8
Momotaro is a multi-level West Loop Japanese restaurant where precise sushi, robata, and composed plates anchor a high-energy dining room. Locals treat it as a go-to for special-occasion sushi and cocktails, backed by years of strong reviews and Michelin recognition.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spaghetti (beef curry pasta), Momomaki roll, Chahan beef fried rice
What Makes it Special: Large-format West Loop Japanese restaurant blending serious sushi with a multi-level, design-forward space and Michelin-level recognition.
#6
Raisu Sushi
8.8
Raisu is an intimate Japanese restaurant in Irving Park/Albany Park where omakase and precise nigiri flights anchor a focused sushi menu. Fish is flown in regularly from Japan, and the room balances special-occasion polish with a relaxed neighborhood feel.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chef’s Omakase Nigiri Flight, Raisu House Special Maki Roll, Spicy Tuna Maki Roll
What Makes it Special: Omakase-driven sushi with carefully sourced fish in a polished, intimate space.
8.8
Vibes:
Luxury Dining Elite
Date Night Magic
Business Lunch Power Players
Birthday & Celebration Central
A modern Japanese steakhouse and sushi spot centered on a dramatic robata grill, Roka Akor pairs A5 wagyu and grilled seafood with composed sushi in a sleek River North room. High review volume over many years indicates it functions as a reliable destination for business dinners and date nights alike.
Must-Try Dishes:
Wagyu beef and kimchi dumplings, Robata grilled pork belly, Robata grilled Chilean sea bass
What Makes it Special: Japanese-inspired steakhouse marrying robata-grilled meats with polished sushi.
8.7
Akahoshi Ramen is a reservation-driven noodle bar where Mike Satinover focuses on a short list of broths like Akahoshi miso and Midwest shoyu that feel engineered for balance and depth. The room is compact and minimalist, putting nearly all the attention on the bowls in front of you rather than on small plates or cocktails.
Must-Try Dishes:
Akahoshi Miso, Midwest Shoyu, Soupless Tantanmen
What Makes it Special: A tightly focused ramen shop where a handful of bowls receive near-laboratory precision.
#9
KAI ZAN
8.7
Kai Zan is a small West Town Japanese restaurant known for its omakase-style tasting menus, creative sushi, and intimate counter that has earned long-running local acclaim plus a Michelin Bib Gourmand nod. Couples and small groups book it when they want polished, technique-driven Japanese plates without the stiffness of fine-dining temples.
Must-Try Dishes:
10-course omakase tasting, Escolar Pearl, Polenta Bites
What Makes it Special: Intimate West Town counter where omakase and creative sushi lead.
#10
Miru
8.7
A St. Regis rooftop Japanese dining room that leans into polished nigiri, shareable hot plates, and a view-forward, celebration-ready pace. It works best as a structured progression: a few signature nigiri pieces, one crispy rice or raw plate, then a single warm centerpiece to finish.
Must-Try Dishes:
A5 Wagyu Nigiri, Chutoro Gunkan, Wild Mushroom Sizzling Rice
What Makes it Special: Signature nigiri and shareable plates in a skyline-view rooftop setting.
#11
Omakase Yume
8.7
An intimate omakase counter that leans into precision, calm pacing, and thoughtful cooked accents alongside dressed nigiri. Best approached as a full chef-led progression—arrive hungry, stay present, and let the sequence build rather than trying to “optimize” with add-ons.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chef’s omakase, Dressed nigiri progression (seasonal), Miso-marinated black cod (cooked course)
What Makes it Special: A small, reservation-first omakase built for focused, chef-led dining.
#12
Sai Cafe
8.7
Sai Cafe is a nearly four-decade-old Lincoln Park sushi institution where Chef James Bee focuses on precise nigiri, creative maki, and pristine seafood. Locals rely on it for consistent, high-quality sushi in a relaxed, quietly polished dining room that works for both dates and family dinners.
Must-Try Dishes:
Hamachi Jalapeño Sashimi, Salmon Gone Wild Roll, Miso-Glazed Black Cod
What Makes it Special: A long-running neighborhood sushi house where careful fish sourcing and classic rolls meet a warm, unfussy room.
#13
AJI
8.6
A small, reservation-driven sushi counter that leans into a paced omakase experience with clean, fish-forward bites rather than big, sauced rolls. Come here to let the chef drive—this is the kind of meal that rewards a focused sit-down and a slow, structured progression.
Must-Try Dishes:
Omakase (chef’s choice tasting), Sashimi dinner, Shrimp shumai
What Makes it Special: A tight, chef-led omakase flow in a small Lakeview room.
#14
Coast Sushi Bar
8.6
Coast Sushi Bar is a long-standing Bucktown BYOB spot known for generous maki, polished nigiri, and a menu that balances Chicago-style specialty rolls with cleaner, fish-forward plates. Crowds use it for birthday dinners and BYOB dates, and its sustained volume over many years makes it one of the most relied-on sushi options in the area.
Must-Try Dishes:
White Dragon Maki, Po Boy Maki, Hamachi Carpaccio
What Makes it Special: A high-volume, BYOB sushi institution where big maki plates and steady execution keep locals returning.
#15
Gretel
8.6
Opened in 2020 by the team behind Little Bad Wolf, Gretel is a dark, whiskey-forward Logan Square gastropub where a heavily praised griddle burger shares space with pork belly nachos, oysters, and late-night snacks. The burger itself appears on multiple citywide best-of lists, and the room’s moody design makes it as viable for date night as for lingering bar dinners.
Must-Try Dishes:
Gretel Burger, Pork Belly Nachos, Oysters Rockefeller
What Makes it Special: A cocktail-and-whiskey-focused gastropub where one of the city’s most talked-about burgers lives in a cozy, late-night room.
#16
High Five Ramen
8.6
High Five is a basement-level ramen bar known for intense tonkotsu broths, slushy cocktails, and a tightly packed room that leans loud and lively. Long lines and limited seating keep it a destination for serious ramen fans and late-night industry crowds.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu Bowl, Maitake Bowl, Shoyu Bowl
What Makes it Special: Subterranean ramen bar with big, porky broths and strong drinks.
#17
Rudy’s Ramen
8.6
A focused ramen shop that wins on broth clarity and balance—rich enough to satisfy, but clean enough to finish without fatigue. Go classic tonkotsu (or the lighter version) and add one fried side; the kitchen’s best work is in that tight ramen-plus-bite rhythm.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy tonkotsu ramen, Tonkotsu lite ramen, Chicken karaage
What Makes it Special: Broth-driven ramen that stays balanced and finishable bowl after bowl.
8.6
A BYOB Andersonville sushi counter where chef-driven rolls and omakase-style pacing are the main draw, not a big dining-room production. Come with a plan—sit at the bar, let the chef guide the sequence, and treat the signature starter bites as part of the experience, not filler.
Must-Try Dishes:
Sushi Mike’s “Fish & Chips” (spicy tuna salsa chip), Chef’s choice omakase / tasting progression, Tuna truffle-style specials (ask what’s on)
What Makes it Special: BYOB sushi-bar energy with chef-led pacing and signature starter bites.
#19
Kizami Sushi
8.5
Kizami Sushi is an intimate Lincoln Park spot where a small team focuses on composed nigiri, maki, and sashimi with touches like wagyu, uni, and omakase-style sets. The room is warm and softly lit, making it a favorite for date nights and slower, sake-driven sushi dinners.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chef’s Omakase Selection, Wagyu Nigiri or Sashimi, Uni-Forward Specialty Roll
What Makes it Special: A cozy, reservation-friendly sushi bar that leans into premium cuts, thoughtful plating, and a calm, date-ready atmosphere.
#20
Nomonomo Sushi
8.5
Nomonomo Sushi is an intimate sushi bar off Milwaukee where a compact menu leans heavily on chef-driven nigiri, composed bites, and a more indulgent take on omakase. It reads as a quieter alternative to the city’s splashiest sushi counters while still bringing richer cuts, foie accents, and tightly plated rolls to the table.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chef’s Nigiri Omakase, Foie Gras Tuna Sushi, Kani Hotate Roll
What Makes it Special: A chef-run sushi room where omakase-style nigiri and richer cuts stay central.
#21
Omakase Shoji
8.5
Omakase Shoji is an intimate omakase counter in Ukrainian Village where a small number of seats gather around the chef for a focused, seasonal progression of nigiri and composed bites. It’s a special-occasion destination for diners who want a slower, more deliberate sushi experience than neighborhood AYCE and roll-heavy spots.
Must-Try Dishes:
Seasonal Omakase Nigiri Flight, Toro and Uni Course, Chef’s Daily Appetizer Trio
What Makes it Special: Tiny omakase counter focused on seasonal fish and a tightly choreographed tasting menu.
8.5
Yuzu Sushi & Robata Grill is a high-energy West Town spot known for jumbo specialty rolls, robata skewers, and elaborate sauce art that turns every plate into a mural. The combination of fresh fish, BYOB policy, and hip-hop soundtrack makes it one of the neighborhood’s most talked-about sushi destinations.
Must-Try Dishes:
Motown Effect Roll, Born to Chill Jumbo Roll, Love Potion No. 9 Roll
What Makes it Special: Oversized specialty rolls and robata plates presented with bold, graphic sauce art.
8.4
A compact, full-service neighborhood room that’s strongest on well-built signature rolls and a steady Thai-and-sushi dinner rhythm. It works best as a sit-down spot where you can split one premium roll, one simpler roll, and a hot appetizer to keep flavors distinct.
Must-Try Dishes:
Black Eagle Roll, Bear Roll, Godzilla (Jumbo Roll)
What Makes it Special: A small, lively sit-down option built around signature rolls plus Thai comfort staples.
#24
Casa Madai
8.4
A Pilsen omakase room built around Japanese technique with Mexican flavor cues—bright acids, chiles, and occasional tostada-style structure. It’s strongest when you commit to the chef’s pacing: fewer distractions, more focused nigiri sequences, and a BYOB-friendly night that feels special without being stuffy.
Must-Try Dishes:
Omakase nigiri progression, Tostada-style sushi bites, Seasonal chef’s specials
What Makes it Special: Mexican-Japanese omakase with bold, acidic flavor framing on nigiri.
8.4
Neighborhood sushi with a polished-but-relaxed room, strong nigiri-and-sashimi execution, and a menu that leans into fun cross-cultural touches. It’s at its best when you keep the order tight—clean fish, one hot plate, and a margarita or sake pairing—so everything lands at peak temperature and texture.
Must-Try Dishes:
Hamachi kama, Nigiri sampler, Matcha mochi
What Makes it Special: Sushi-forward menu with a lively, margarita-friendly twist in a neighborhood setting.
#26
Umai
8.4
A Printer’s Row Japanese all-rounder that’s strongest when you mix one ramen with a tight set of nigiri or rolls. The room is modern and lively without feeling chaotic, and the kitchen’s appeal is dependable comfort—katsu, curry, noodles—paired with sushi that keeps regulars coming back.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy Roasted Garlic Pork Ramen, Katsu Kare, White Tuna Jalapeño
What Makes it Special: A rare South Loop spot that balances ramen-and-katsu comfort with sushi orderability in one kitchen.
#27
Bada Sushi
8.3
A Korean-owned sushi bar that leans into a “set-course” rhythm and sashimi-forward plates more than trendy roll gimmicks. The best experience comes from ordering with intent—chef’s-choice sashimi and a few structured hits—while keeping the rest of the menu tight.
Must-Try Dishes:
Assorted sashimi, Shrimp tempura, Hirame (flounder) sashimi
What Makes it Special: Korean-style set-course pacing with sashimi and hand-roll energy.
#28
Gari Sushi
8.3
Gari Sushi is a tiny, mostly BYOB sushi bar on Fullerton where the chef turns out carefully made maki and nigiri to a small number of tables. Service skews personal, and the focus is on fresh fish and creative rolls rather than décor or a long drink list.
Must-Try Dishes:
King Kong Roll, Godzilla Roll, Sexy Chic Roll
What Makes it Special: A tiny neighborhood sushi bar where the chef and staff keep things intimate and fish-focused.
#29
Loon
8.3
A tiny, reservation-driven tasting experience with an 8-course format and a seafood-forward menu that nods to Japanese technique alongside Nordic influence. This is for diners who want pacing, precision, and a quiet, high-attention night rather than a casual sushi run.
Must-Try Dishes:
8-course tasting menu, Seasonal seafood course, Beverage pairing
What Makes it Special: Small-room tasting menu with seafood-forward courses and Japanese technique influence.
#30
Oiistar
8.3
Oiistar is a Wicker Park ramen bar where housemade thin noodles, tonkotsu-style broths, and Korean-leaning flavors anchor a tight menu of bowls and buns. Locals use it for richly flavored, unconventional ramen like masala- and pozole-inspired bowls when they want a louder, date-night-friendly room instead of a quiet counter shop.
Must-Try Dishes:
Oiimen classic tonkotsu ramen, Paitan Shio with Fukuoka roasted garlic, Pork belly buns
What Makes it Special: Creative Korean-influenced ramen bowls with housemade noodles in Wicker Park.
#31
Omakase On Me
8.3
A high-energy, coursed omakase that treats the night like a show—fast beats, playful bites, and a party-leaning room. It’s strongest when you embrace the format and let the chef’s sequence do the work rather than trying to steer it toward a quiet, traditional sushi bar.
Must-Try Dishes:
Ama ebi nigiri, Red curry with wagyu bite, Uni or caviar-topped course
What Makes it Special: A speakeasy-style omakase built as much for fun as for fish.
#32
Ruk Sushi & Thai
8.2
A neighborhood BYOB sushi-and-Thai spot that wins when you keep the order focused: a couple of maki rolls plus one hot appetizer and you’re set. It’s a practical local dinner choice—consistent enough for repeats, with just enough variety to work for mixed cravings.
Must-Try Dishes:
Shrimp Shu Mai, Ruk Veggies roll, Spicy coconut chicken curry
What Makes it Special: BYOB sushi-and-Thai menu that rewards a tight, roll-plus-app order.
#33
Takibi
8.2
A Rogers Park sushi-and-ramen spot that leans intimate and chef-driven, with a menu built around signature rolls, straightforward nigiri, and comforting bowls. Best ordered with discipline: one standout roll, a few nigiri, then ramen if you want the meal to finish warm and filling.
Must-Try Dishes:
Lion King Roll, Pork belly ramen, Assorted nigiri
What Makes it Special: A neighborhood-scale Japanese menu that balances sushi focus with real ramen comfort.
#34
Toro Sushi
8.2
Toro Sushi is a compact, BYOB sushi bar where generous specialty rolls and friendly chef interactions anchor a lively Clark Street experience. The space is tight and straightforward, but the value-to-quality ratio keeps neighborhood regulars returning for casual evenings over well-made maki and nigiri.
Must-Try Dishes:
Oh My God Roll, Pig in the Sea Roll, Spicy Tuna Crunch Roll
What Makes it Special: A cozy BYOB sushi counter known for playful signature rolls and personable chefs.
#35
Yokocho
8.2
Yokocho Handroll & Omakase Bar runs a split personality between a la carte handrolls and higher-end omakase menus in a compact West Loop space. Guests mix chef’s-choice tastings with sandos and sake for nights that feel more intimate than the big Randolph Street rooms.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chef's Tasting Omakase, Spicy Deviled Eggs Sando, Strawberry Matcha Sando
What Makes it Special: Handroll bar and omakase counter offering focused sushi experiences and playful sandos.
8.1
Ikigai runs a modern sushi and izakaya format with a small omakase counter and a dining room geared toward happy hour and shared plates. Guests lean on its sashimi, composed rolls, and grilled skewers before or after nights out along Chicago Avenue.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chef’s omakase nigiri set, Yakitori skewers, Salmon sashimi
What Makes it Special: Contemporary izakaya where sushi, yakitori, and omakase share the stage.
#37
Menya Goku
8.1
Menya Goku is a compact North Center ramen shop from the Ramen Wasabi team, pairing rich bowls like Goku Tan Tan Men and tonkotsu with Japanese beers and highballs. The sleek room, bar seating, and tightly edited menu make it a go-to for serious ramen cravings rather than sprawling dinners.
Must-Try Dishes:
Goku Tan Tan Men Ramen, Pork Goku Tonkotsu Ramen, Nagoya Pirikara Wings
What Makes it Special: Ramen-first Japanese shop with focused bowls and izakaya plates.
#38
Sushi Mura
8.1
A Southport Corridor standby that wins on a broad roll lineup and a comfortable dine-in rhythm, with enough specialty options to keep repeat visits interesting. Order in a focused lane—one or two signature rolls plus a warm bowl—so everything lands at peak temperature and texture.
Must-Try Dishes:
Lake Shore Dr Roll, JBD Roll, Udon noodle soup
What Makes it Special: A deep specialty-roll bench with a cozy Southport setting.
#39
Fin Sushi Bar
8
A Ravenswood BYOB neighborhood room that’s best when you treat it like a steady sushi-and-kitchen-plates spot rather than chasing novelty. Go for a balanced order—one salad or starter, a couple of rolls, and one warm dish—then let the value do the work.
Must-Try Dishes:
Kani salad, Chef-style specialty rolls (choose 1–2, not five), Sashimi/nigiri sampler
What Makes it Special: BYOB neighborhood sushi with strong value when you order thoughtfully.
Worthy Picks
#40
Roll Up By Oui
7.8
A small, counter-forward hand roll spot that leans into freshly assembled rolls, crudo-style bites, and a menu designed for pacing. It’s most rewarding when you sit at the counter, eat the hand rolls immediately, and treat it like a focused sushi experience rather than a big, mixed order.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy Tuna Maki, Crispy Rice Tartare, Tiramisu
What Makes it Special: Hand-roll-first sushi built for counter dining and immediate, crisp-seaweed bites.
#41
TenGoku Aburiya
7.8
An izakaya-style room with a legitimate sushi-bar lane, best used for shareable plates plus a couple of rolls or nigiri rather than a full omakase-style marathon. Keep it curated—one chilled starter, one crispy bite, then a tight sushi order—and it lands as a versatile weeknight option.
Must-Try Dishes:
Crispy rice with spicy tuna, Salmon carpaccio, Nigiri + maki mix (choose 1–2 rolls)
What Makes it Special: Izakaya plates plus a high-caliber sushi bar in one room.
#42
Birdman Ramen
7.7
Birdman’s new Lakeview location turns the former Furious Spoon corner into a bright, poultry-focused ramen bar built on chicken, turkey, and duck broths. Tiered bowl options, skewers, and a splashy social presence make it a destination for experimenting with Szechuan heat and garlic-miso richness rather than strictly traditional tonkotsu.
Must-Try Dishes:
Szechuan Tori Paitan, Hokkaido Garlic Miso, Osaka Cheesecake
What Makes it Special: All-poultry ramen concept with tiered broth packages and a lively Belmont corner room.
#43
Jōtō Sushi
7.7
A sleek distillery-backed sushi bar that leans into dry-aged fish, approachable maki, and snackable starters that pair cleanly with cocktails. It’s strongest as a “tight order” spot—pick one set or roll lane, add one crispy starter, and let the drinks carry the rest of the night.
Must-Try Dishes:
Dry Aged Ora King Setto, 3pc Crispy Tuna Bites, Chili Salmon roll
What Makes it Special: Dry-aged nigiri and setto menus inside a cocktail-forward distillery.
#44
Sushi Loop
7.7
A newer all-you-can-eat spot with a bright, modern room that plays best as a social, high-tempo sushi night. Keep the order tight—start with nigiri and one signature roll, add ramen or a hot appetizer, and don’t let the table spiral into filler.
Must-Try Dishes:
All-you-can-eat sushi set, Thunder roll, Spicy miso ramen
What Makes it Special: Modern AYCE sushi in a lively, date-friendly dining room.
7.7
A Japanese kissaten-inspired listening bar where the vinyl program is the main event and the ramen plays a supporting-but-satisfying role. Treat it like a cocktails-and-bites night: one ramen bowl for the table, one standout appetizer, and settle in early before the late-night energy gets loud.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy red miso ramen, Tokyo shrimp, Collard greens 'soul rolls'
What Makes it Special: A vinyl-first listening bar with Japanese-adjacent ramen and a late-night feel.