Best Fine Dining Japanese Restaurants in Chicago
11 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
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.
#4
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.
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.
#6
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.
#7
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.
#8
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.
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.
#10
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.
#11
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.