Best Date Night Sushi Restaurants in Downtown LA
16 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Sushi Zo - Downtown Los Angeles
High-end omakase with elite sourcing and exacting technique.
Essential Picks
A destination omakase counter where technique and fish sourcing are the whole story. Each course is tightly calibrated, with subtle seasoning and temperature control that rewards attention. Expect a long, immersive meal aimed at serious sushi seekers.
Must-Try Dishes:
Seasonal nigiri omakase, Hokkaido uni, A5 wagyu bite (when offered)
What Makes it Special: High-end omakase with elite sourcing and exacting technique.
#2
715 Sushi
9
A Michelin-starred Arts District omakase room where chef Seigo Tamura’s Osaka-trained sensibility shows in knife work and restrained seasoning. The progression is thoughtful, mixing pristine nigiri with a few composed bites that highlight seasonality. It’s intimate and serious without feeling stiff.
Must-Try Dishes:
Nigiri omakase progression, Otoro with house soy, Seasonal uni course
What Makes it Special: Michelin-level omakase with Osaka-rooted precision.
Notable Picks
#3
SUGARFISH
8.8
SUGARFISH Downtown LA serves set-menu omakase-style sushi built around Chef Nozawa’s Trust Me combinations, focusing on pristine fish and warm, loosely packed rice. Downtown office workers and sushi obsessives rely on it for consistent nigiri and hand rolls that feel polished without tipping into white-tablecloth formality.
Must-Try Dishes:
Trust Me set (omakase-style combo), Tuna & Chutoro Sashimi, Blue & Dungeness Crab Hand Roll
What Makes it Special: Streamlined Trust Me menus deliver high-quality sushi with minimal decision fatigue.
8.7
Chef Yoshi-san's 20-course Edomae omakase operates from a hidden 10-seat basement counter accessed through a Little Tokyo parking garage and hotel lobby. His training at two-Michelin-starred Sushi Ginza Onodera shows in the precise technique, with repeat customers comprising more than half of each evening's seating. Reservations release monthly and disappear within minutes—at $300, it draws sushi purists who compare it favorably to top Tokyo counters.
Must-Try Dishes:
Hairy Hokkaido Crab Chawanmushi, Nodoguro (Blackthroat Perch), Ankimo (Monkfish Liver)
What Makes it Special: Chef Yoshi-san, trained at two-Michelin-starred Sushi Ginza Onodera, serves 20-course Edomae omakase at a hidden 10-seat counter in a Little Tokyo basement.
8.6
Katsuya L.A. Live is a design-forward sushi destination pairing Chef Katsuya Uechi’s signature rolls and sashimi with cocktails steps from Crypto.com Arena. It’s the polished, high-energy choice for big nights out, with standout dishes like crispy rice with spicy tuna and miso-marinated black cod.
Must-Try Dishes:
Crispy Rice with Spicy Tuna, Yellowtail Sashimi with Jalapeño, Miso-Marinated Black Cod
What Makes it Special: A high-profile sushi room with signature rolls, polished service, and arena-adjacent energy.
8.4
Sakana Sushi Lounge DTLA brings late-night hours and a sleek lounge feel to South Park with creative rolls, sashimi, and a strong cocktail program. Hand-selected fish, uni-forward specials, and a lively bar scene make it a go-to for nights out that run past midnight.
Must-Try Dishes:
Sashimi Combination, Uni Burrata, Spicy Tuna Crispy Rice
What Makes it Special: Upscale, late-night sushi with a full bar and lounge atmosphere that stays buzzing until 2am.
8.4
A rooftop Japanese room with skyline views and a staff that’s used to navigating gluten-free requests. Sushi, sashimi, and robata plates are the safe lane, and servers will steer you away from soy-based pitfalls and suggest swaps. The vibe is date-night sleek, with food that stays solid even under heavy traffic.
Must-Try Dishes:
Sashimi assortment with GF soy, Robata salmon or black cod, Crispy rice with spicy tuna (GF sauce request)
What Makes it Special: High-rise sushi and robata with staff trained to accommodate gluten-free diners.
8.3
A polished Arts District handroll bar from chef Lester Lai that leans into tight technique and a cocktail-forward izakaya mood. The rolls are clean, properly warm-rice-to-cold-fish balanced, and paced for lingering rather than rushing. Best experienced as a curated handroll set with drinks rather than à la carte grazing.
Must-Try Dishes:
Toro hand roll, Lobster hand roll, Uni hand roll
What Makes it Special: Chef-driven handrolls with a full cocktail-bar experience.
#9
Bar Sawa
8.3
An 18-course edomae-style omakase at $185 in a basement speakeasy setting—the cocktail program rivals the sushi as a reason to book. Fish sourced from Japan with Mexican and Spanish bluefin; pieces arrive with nikiri brushwork and minimal fussing. Reservation instructions include a video for navigating the building; the secrecy is part of the draw. Soy sauce cheesecake closes the meal.
Must-Try Dishes:
Seared Bluefin Toro, Sous Vide Monkfish Liver, Smoked Soy-Marinated Chutoro
What Makes it Special: Intimate 18-course omakase from a Michelin-starred chef in Little Tokyo
#10
Yunomi Handroll
8.2
A modern handroll specialist in the Arts District that keeps things crisp, clean, and well-paced. The fish-to-rice ratios are tight, nori is properly crackly, and sets land with a satisfying progression. The room is casual-buzzy, making it easy for repeat lunches or low-key dinners.
Must-Try Dishes:
Blue crab hand roll, Scallop hand roll, Spicy tuna hand roll
What Makes it Special: Handroll sets with crisp nori and precise fish-rice balance.
#11
Temaki Society
8.1
A handroll-leaning counter tucked inside a nightlife-style room, blending sushi precision with a downtown bar buzz. Fish quality is clean and well-seasoned, and the menu pushes beyond basics into richer, saucier temaki builds. Come for an elevated handroll session that feels like part of the night.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy tuna temaki, Blue crab temaki, Uni & caviar temaki
What Makes it Special: Handrolls in a bar-driven, after-dark Downtown setting.
#12
Eigikutei
8.1
A 60-year Little Tokyo kaiseki house built around multi-course seasonal progression, sourcing A5 Wagyu from Miyazaki and Yonezawa prefectures and offering what it bills as North America's first plant-based vegan kaiseki course. The minimalist, quiet dining room leans into the formality of the format — this is where you go when you want the meal to set the pace, not the crowd. With 82% of Google reviewers at five stars across 132 ratings, the kitchen holds a tight line, though the small review pool means the track record is still developing.
Must-Try Dishes:
A5 Wagyu Shabu-Shabu Kaiseki, Omakase Sushi Kaiseki, Plant-Based Vegan Kaiseki
What Makes it Special: A 60-year Little Tokyo family legacy serving multi-course kaiseki with A5 Wagyu from Miyazaki and Yonezawa prefectures, plus North America's first plant-based vegan kaiseki course.
#13
YESS Restaurant
8.1
Progressive Japanese izakaya in a 1920s Arts District bank building where binchotan charcoal and wood-fired cooking anchor the approach. The whole lobster katsu burger and Monk's chirashi carry the menu; the cooking runs minimalist and somewhat monastic—reviewers call it polarizing for those expecting conventional izakaya energy. NYT 50 best US restaurants and LA Times 101 recognition validate the concept.
Must-Try Dishes:
Monk's Chirashi, Whole Lobster Katsu Burger, Junya's Daily Sashimi
What Makes it Special: Arts District izakaya with binchotan charcoal grilling and NYT top-50 recognition
#14
Sushi Takeda
8
A 10-seat Little Tokyo counter focused on traditional Edomae technique, where the pace is deliberately unhurried and the room stays quiet enough to hear the kitchen work. The format rewards diners who want to watch their meal built piece by piece rather than rush through courses.
Must-Try Dishes:
Omakase, Nigiri, Sardine
What Makes it Special: Intimate Little Tokyo counter serving traditional Edomae-style omakase in a 10-seat setting
8
A dependable neighborhood sushi bar with a broad menu, clean nigiri, and a popular happy-hour draw. Rolls skew traditional with a few modern touches, and quality holds steady across busy nights. It’s a reliable choice when you want variety without omakase prices.
Must-Try Dishes:
Albacore with yuzu ponzu, Toro hand roll, Assorted sashimi platter
What Makes it Special: Well-rounded sushi menu with strong weekday value.
Worthy Picks
#16
kodo
7.8
A binchotan-grilled izakaya set inside a converted 1920s firehouse in the Arts District, where Kyoto-native Chef Yoya Takahashi runs a raw bar and nama sake program that leans harder into Japanese craft than most LA Japanese spots. The room is deliberately serene—natural materials, minimal design—though weekend crowds bring enough scene energy that it plays better as a date night than a quiet dinner. Wagyu and uni anchor a premium menu priced accordingly, so come calibrated for a splurge rather than a casual weeknight.
Must-Try Dishes:
Wagyu Ribeye, Uni Pasta, Kodo Basque Cheesecake
What Makes it Special: A converted 1920s firehouse turned minimalist izakaya where Kyoto-native Chef Yoya Takahashi pairs binchotan-grilled signatures and a raw bar with an uncommon nama sake program.