Best Ramen Restaurants in Downtown LA
13 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Tatsu Ramen
Customizable, late-night tonkotsu bowls in a spacious Arts District setting.
Notable Picks
#1
Tatsu Ramen
8.5
Tatsu’s Arts District outpost brings the brand’s customizable tonkotsu bowls to a big, loft-like space that stays busy deep into the night. Bowls like Bold, Soul, and Hippie Ramen lean rich and punchy rather than traditionalist, drawing a steady mix of locals and late-night crews.
Must-Try Dishes:
Bold Ramen, Soul Ramen, Hippie Ramen
What Makes it Special: Customizable, late-night tonkotsu bowls in a spacious Arts District setting.
The Arts District branch of Tsujita focuses on rich tonkotsu ramen and tsukemen, bringing the brand’s slow-cooked broth and dense noodles east of Little Tokyo. The room is more polished than many ramen shops, making it a comfortable spot to linger over dipping noodles and sides.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chashu Ramen, Tonkotsu Ramen, Chashu Ajitama Tsukemen
What Makes it Special: Well-known Tokyo-rooted ramen brand offering serious tsukemen in the Arts District.
#3
Suehiro DTLA
8
A legacy Japanese comfort-food institution reborn in Downtown, covering ramen, curry, and diner-style classics. Broths and sauces lean hearty and familiar, built for repeat visits rather than trend chasing. Late hours and broad menu make it a dependable all-purpose stop in the neighborhood.
Must-Try Dishes:
Japanese curry rice, Tonkotsu ramen, Chicken karaage
What Makes it Special: Old-school Japanese comfort classics with real Downtown longevity.
#4
Afuri
8
A Tokyo transplant built around yuzu shio—a citrus-forward, chicken-and-seafood broth that runs deliberately lighter than the tonkotsu-heavy LA ramen field. The Arts District location draws groups and couples to communal tables in an energetic, high-volume room, so plan for noise over intimacy. Worth the trip when you want clean, bright flavors instead of the usual rich-and-heavy bowl.
Must-Try Dishes:
Yuzu Shio Ramen, Tsukemen, Buta Gyoza
What Makes it Special: Tokyo import specializing in yuzu shio—a bright, citrus-forward broth built from chicken, seafood, vegetables, and seaweed, unlike the heavy tonkotsu dominating LA's ramen scene.
#5
DTLA Ramen
8
DTLA Ramen is a modern Broadway ramen bar known for rich tonkotsu and a well-regarded spicy creamy vegan ramen, ordered at the host stand and served from an open kitchen. Diners highlight deeply flavored broths, bouncy noodles, and reliable execution across both classic and plant-based bowls, with craft beer and casual downtown energy rounding out the experience. 【3†turn3search9】【3†turn3search13】
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy Tonkotsu Ramen, Spicy Creamy Vegan Ramen, Gyoza
What Makes it Special: Downtown ramen specialist with rich broths and standout vegan options.
#6
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.
Hinodeya builds every bowl on a clear dashi broth of bonito and kombu rather than the heavy tonkotsu that dominates LA ramen—a lighter, umami-forward approach rooted in a Japanese dining lineage dating to 1885. The compact Little Tokyo counter-service format keeps the line moving, making it a reliable solo lunch or late-night stop where the clam ramen and vegan creamy option give the menu uncommon range for a specialist shop.
Must-Try Dishes:
Hamaguri Ramen (Littleneck Clams), Creamy Ramen (Vegan), Takoyaki
What Makes it Special: Rooted in an 1885 Japanese dining tradition, Hinodeya builds every bowl on a clear dashi broth of bonito and kombu rather than heavy tonkotsu, producing ramen that is light yet deeply umami-rich.
Worthy Picks
#8
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
7.9
A Tokushima-style ramen specialist running a 16-hour pork bone broth topped with stir-fried pork belly — a regional Shikoku technique you won't find at most U.S. ramen shops. The format is pure counter-service focus: small room, tight menu, bowls built around richly layered pork fat depth rather than breadth. Works best when you want a dense, heavy-hitting bowl and don't need anything beyond the stool and the steam in front of you.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tokushima Ramen, Spicy Tonkotsu Ramen, Takoyaki
What Makes it Special: One of few U.S. outposts of Tokushima-style ramen, built on a 16-hour pork bone broth with stir-fried pork belly — a regional topping rarely seen outside Shikoku.
#10
Hana Ichimonme
7.9
A Little Tokyo galleria ramen room leaning Kyoto-style and comfort-forward. Broths are rich and well-balanced, with a menu that also nods to donburi and small sides. A solid, dependable sit-down bowl when you want familiar Japanese warmth.
Must-Try Dishes:
Shoyu ramen, Spicy miso ramen, Gyoza
What Makes it Special: Kyoto-leaning ramen comfort inside the Little Tokyo galleria.
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
#12
Rakkan Ramen
7.8
A plant-forward ramen shop in Little Tokyo where the vegan bowl has become the main draw, outselling traditional options by a wide margin—an unusual position for a noodle house in this neighborhood. The late-night hours and counter-service format keep it accessible for post-bar runs and solo dinners alike. With 72% of its 1,194 Google reviewers leaving five stars, it delivers reliably on a narrow, well-executed concept.
Must-Try Dishes:
Vegan Ramen, Garnet, Gyoza
What Makes it Special: Plant-based ramen specialist in Little Tokyo where the vegan bowl outsells every other item on the menu by a wide margin
#13
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