Best Trendy Japanese Restaurants in West Loop
13 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.
Notable Picks
#2
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.
#3
Gaijin
8.6
Gaijin is Chicago’s first dedicated okonomiyaki restaurant from chef Paul Virant, focusing on Osaka- and Hiroshima-style savory pancakes alongside yakisoba and kakigori. Locals come for the griddled comfort food, cocktails, and a lively room that works for both casual dates and small groups.
Must-Try Dishes:
Beef Osaka Style Okonomiyaki, Traditional Hiroshima Style Okonomiyaki, Pork Belly Yakisoba
What Makes it Special: Specialized okonomiyaki house where Osaka and Hiroshima styles are cooked on a central griddle.
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.
#5
Sushi Dokku
8.4
Sushi Dokku is a longstanding Fulton Market sushi bar known for creative rolls, chef-dressed nigiri, and a lively room that bridges date night and group hangs. High review volumes across platforms point to consistently fresh fish, upbeat service, and a companion cocktail lounge downstairs.
Must-Try Dishes:
Hot Daisy roll, Chef-dressed nigiri bites, Matcha cheesecake
What Makes it Special: High-volume West Loop sushi spot pairing inventive rolls and chef-dressed nigiri with a stylish room and downstairs cocktail bar.
#6
Gyuro Ramen
8.4
Gyuro focuses on gyukotsu, a rich Japanese beef-bone ramen, served with wagyu cuts and house-made noodles in a neon-lit West Loop space. It attracts ramen fans who want deeper, beef-driven broths and are willing to pay steakhouse-adjacent prices for specialty bowls.
Must-Try Dishes:
Signature Gyukotsu Ramen, Kimchi Wagyu Ramen, Prime Signature Gyukotsu
What Makes it Special: Beef-bone gyukotsu ramen with wagyu in a stylized West Loop setting.
#7
Tamu
8.3
Tamu is a West Loop hand roll and omakase bar centered on pristine fish, temaki, and compact nigiri progressions in a sleek, intimate space. It’s become a go-to for focused sushi lunches and low-key evenings where quality and technique take priority over formality.
Must-Try Dishes:
Omakase nigiri set, Chili Ebi signature temaki, Unagi signature temaki
What Makes it Special: A focused West Loop hand roll and omakase counter where high-quality fish and tight, temaki-driven menus keep things dialed and intentional.
#8
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.
#9
Sushi Pink
8.2
Sushi Pink is a long-running neighborhood sushi bar on Washington Boulevard serving classic maki, sashimi, ramen, and poke bowls in a casual West Loop space. Regulars rely on it for approachable prices, friendly service, and dependable takeout as much as dine-in.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy Tuna Roll, Shrimp Tempura Roll, Spider Roll
What Makes it Special: Low-key neighborhood sushi spot with a broad menu and strong value for the area.
8.2
Ramen-San Whisky Bar pairs Sun Noodle-based bowls with a serious whisky and cocktail list in a high-energy Fulton Market room. Diners come as much for the music and bar scene as for 10-hour tonkotsu and kimchi fried-chicken ramen.
Must-Try Dishes:
10 Hour Tonkotsu, Chicken Shio Ramen, Kimchi & Fried Chicken Ramen
What Makes it Special: Lively whisky-focused ramen bar with 10-hour tonkotsu and late hours.
8.1
The Fulton Market outpost of Wasabi brings their pork-based ramen, vegan bowls, and Japanese small plates into a polished, buzzy setting. It works for both casual dates and group dinners when you want classic tonkotsu alongside snacks and drinks.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tonkotsu Ramen, Spicy Miso Ramen, Veggie Ramen
What Makes it Special: Established ramen name serving tonkotsu and vegan bowls in Fulton Market.
Worthy Picks
#12
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.
#13
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.