Best Cheap Eats Japanese Restaurants in Downtown LA
9 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Hama Sushi
Decades-old Little Tokyo sushi counter where the chef dictates the meal from whatever is freshest that day
Notable Picks
#1
Hama Sushi
8.1
A decades-old Little Tokyo sushi counter where the chef runs an omakase-style program built around whatever is freshest that day — you sit, you trust, you eat what's put in front of you. The format rewards solo diners and regulars who prefer a chef-led cadence over menu browsing, and the price point lands well below what the omakase label typically commands. Expect a no-frills counter setup with zero pretense and fish that reflects the morning market, not a preset rotation.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chef's Choice Omakase, Eel, Scallop
What Makes it Special: Decades-old Little Tokyo sushi counter where the chef dictates the meal from whatever is freshest that day
#2
Mr. Ramen
8
A curry-ramen-forward counter shop that has held its corner of Little Tokyo since 1993, with walls papered in three decades of customer napkin art the owner refuses to take down. It runs as a late-night refuel stop where the portion-to-price math stays honest and the crowd skews young and local. Expect a tight room, no frills, and a bowl of curry ramen that has outlasted most of the block.
Must-Try Dishes:
Curry Ramen, Fried Chicken Ramen, Bento Box
What Makes it Special: Little Tokyo legacy since 1993, with walls covered in three decades of customer napkin art the owner has preserved.
Worthy Picks
7.9
Vibes:
Quick Bites Champions
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Hidden Gems Heaven
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
A single-focus gyoza bar in Little Tokyo run by a native of Utsunomiya—the city that treats gyoza as civic identity—using paper-thin wrappers that crisp and blister in a style uncommon in LA. The tight menu and counter format make it a strong solo lunch stop where you order fast, eat well, and walk away for under fifteen dollars. Expect a line on weekends and a space built for efficiency, not lingering.
Must-Try Dishes:
Yaki Pork Gyoza, Gyoza Bento Box, Age Pork Gyoza
What Makes it Special: Utsunomiya-style gyoza specialist using paper-thin wrappers, opened by a native of Japan's gyoza capital city
#4
Daikokuya
7.9
Little Tokyo's ramen anchor since 2002—the tonkotsu broth simmers nearly 24 hours, and the kotteri option adds back-fat richness for those who want it heavier. Five locations now exist but the original retains pilgrimage status. Wait times persist; service moves fast once seated. The shredded pork rice bowl quietly competes with the ramen for best order. Cash-only policy remains.
Must-Try Dishes:
Daikoku Ramen, Daikoku Ramen with Kotteri, Spicy Miso Ramen
What Makes it Special: Little Tokyo ramen institution with tonkotsu broth simmered nearly 24 hours
#5
Rice & Nori
7.8
A handcrafted onigiri counter inside Little Tokyo's Weller Court, turning out oversized rice balls with fillings that range from classic tuna mayo to lobster and yuzu miso. The format is grab-and-go portable comfort food at cheap-eats pricing, which makes it a reliable quick lunch stop for the Downtown LA crowd. Expect a line during peak hours in the tight space, but validated parking in the building garage softens the logistics.
Must-Try Dishes:
Lobster Onigiri, Spicy Tuna Onigiri, Tuna Mayo Onigiri
What Makes it Special: Handcrafted onigiri shop in Little Tokyo turning out oversized rice balls with creative fillings like lobster and yuzu miso
7.8
A Hakata-style tonkotsu specialist where you dial in noodle firmness and broth richness to your specifications—the customization is part of the ritual. The boisterous call-and-response service matches traditional Japanese ramen house energy, making it a better fit for hungry groups than quiet dinners. Late hours and Little Tokyo proximity make it a reliable post-event landing spot.
Must-Try Dishes:
Takoyaki, Spam Musubi, Curry Rice
What Makes it Special: Authentic Hakata-style tonkotsu ramen with customizable noodle firmness and rich pork broth
Vibes:
Late Night Legends
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Comfort Food Classics
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
A cash-only Little Tokyo late-night anchor built around its signature Robot ankake—a thick, starchy comfort hit that rewards the post-midnight crowd willing to queue for it. The format is no-frills counter service with tight seating, priced to let you eat well under $15, making it a natural solo-dining default when everything else on 2nd Street has closed.
Must-Try Dishes:
Robot, Chahan, Tonkotsu Ramen
What Makes it Special: Cash-only Little Tokyo late-night institution where the signature "Robot" ankake has drawn post-midnight crowds for decades.
#8
Ramen Maruya
7.7
Vibes:
Hidden Gems Heaven
Quick Bites Champions
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Family Friendly Favorites
A Japanese Village Plaza counter operation that runs a wide lane—ramen, bento boxes, tempura, takoyaki, eel—with the speed and price point tuned for a Little Tokyo lunch crowd. The draw is covering multiple Japanese comfort formats in one stop without waiting or overspending, which makes it a practical default for anyone already walking the plaza. Expect mall-adjacent energy and tight seating, not a lingering experience.
Must-Try Dishes:
Bento Box, Tempura, Takoyaki
What Makes it Special: Japanese Village Plaza counter spot covering ramen, bento, and izakaya snacks under one roof with fast turnover
#9
Bento Ya
7.6
A Grand Central Market staple serving straightforward Japanese bento and comfort plates in a fast, market-crawl format. Flavors skew familiar and filling—teriyaki, katsu, curry—built for value and speed. Best as a dependable grab-and-go Japanese reset between stalls.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chicken katsu bento, Beef teriyaki plate, Japanese curry
What Makes it Special: Market-friendly Japanese bento comfort at true budget pace.