Best Fine Dining Japanese Restaurants in Downtown LA
6 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Hayato
Two-Michelin-starred kaiseki from Chef Brandon Go, who trained at three-star Ishikawa in Tokyo, served to just seven guests per night
Essential Picks
#1
Hayato
9.1
Seven-seat kaiseki counter where Chef Brandon Go—trained at Tokyo's three-star Ishikawa—personally prepares and explains each course using ingredients flown daily from Japan. The $450 omakase format attracts serious Japanese cuisine devotees willing to battle the first-of-month reservation rush for what many consider LA's closest approximation to dining in Kyoto. Expect a meditative two-hour progression through seasonal courses served on the chef's collected antique ceramics.
Must-Try Dishes:
Miso-Glazed Black Cod Rice Pot, Steamed Abalone with Liver Sauce (Awabi), Charcoal Grilled Hokkaido Kinki
What Makes it Special: Two-Michelin-starred kaiseki from Chef Brandon Go, who trained at three-star Ishikawa in Tokyo, served to just seven guests per night
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.
9.1
Josef Centeno’s tasting-counter destination blends Italian structure with Japanese precision, delivering a paced, quietly inventive menu. The room is intimate and minimalist, letting the multi-course progression do the talking. Its current one-star Michelin status marks it as the ZIP’s true special-occasion Italian-leaning anchor.
Must-Try Dishes:
Uni Pasta / Sea Urchin Course, Seasonal Pasta Flight, Sake-Paired Dessert Course
What Makes it Special: A Michelin-starred Italian-Japanese tasting menu led by Josef Centeno.
Notable Picks
#4
Sushi Gen
8.3
A Little Tokyo institution since 1980 where the $23-26 sashimi lunch special delivers halibut, fatty tuna, uni, scallops, and oysters at prices that confuse people given the quality. Strip mall setting, no reservations, long waits—all part of the deal. Regulars know the sashimi lunch is table-only; the dinner omakase and a la carte nigiri satisfy those who want the counter experience.
Must-Try Dishes:
Sashimi Lunch Special, Chirashi Bowl, Omakase
What Makes it Special: Little Tokyo institution offering exceptional sashimi value since 1980
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
Worthy Picks
#6
Camélia
7.7
A French-Japanese bistro from the Tsubaki team that reworks bistro staples with Japanese precision — pot pies built with abalone and snail butter, croque madames layered on shokupan with ham katsu. The Arts District room runs lively-to-loud on weekends, so weeknight reservations land closer to the date-night tone the cooking deserves.
Must-Try Dishes:
Abalone & Shrimp Pot Pie, Croque Madame, Bluefin Tuna Toast
What Makes it Special: French-Japanese bistro from the Tsubaki team where classic French dishes are refined with Japanese technique — pot pies get abalone and snail butter, croque madames are built on shokupan with ham katsu.