Best Solo Dining Japanese 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.
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
8.7
Vibes:
Quick Bites Champions
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
Trendy Table Hotspots
Business Lunch Power Players
The high-volume Downtown handroll bar that keeps the standard for fast, consistent Nozawa-group quality. Warm rice, cold fish, and snappy nori land with repeatable precision, and the short menu encourages ordering a full run. It’s built for efficiency but still tastes cared for.
Must-Try Dishes:
Toro hand roll, Lobster hand roll, Yellowtail jalapeño hand roll
What Makes it Special: Nozawa-group handroll precision at true Downtown scale.
#4
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.
#6
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
8.2
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.
#8
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
#9
Sushi Go 55
8
A long-running Little Tokyo-area standby that stays focused on clean sashimi and classic nigiri without the Downtown hype tax. The fish is fresh and portioned generously, and the vibe remains quietly neighborhood-rooted. Great for a dependable sushi meal that doesn’t feel like a scene.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chirashi bowl, Salmon belly nigiri, Hamachi nigiri
What Makes it Special: Quiet Little Tokyo staple with strong chirashi and sashimi value.
#10
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.
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
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
#13
Marugame Monzo
7.9
A compact Little Tokyo counter shop where udon noodles are hand-cut and made to order behind the glass — the kind of place that draws a line because the process is the product. It works as a focused, one-bowl mission: pick your udon style, watch it come together, and eat it before the texture changes. The tight space fills fast and stays loud, so come for the craft, not the ambiance.
Must-Try Dishes:
Uni Udon, Mentai Udon, Carbonara Udon
What Makes it Special: Udon noodles are hand-cut and made to order in full view behind the counter at this compact Little Tokyo shop.
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.
7.8
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.
#16
Torigoya
7.7
A dedicated yakitori counter in Little Tokyo's Weller Court where skewers are grilled over binchotan charcoal using free-range Jidori chicken, continuing the tradition of the former Kokekokko. The intimate bar seating puts you close to the grill action, making it a natural fit for solo visits or small groups willing to wait for a seat on busy nights. Execution leans reliable rather than revelatory—most skewer sets deliver, though the occasional miss keeps it from reaching the top tier of LA's yakitori scene.
Must-Try Dishes:
10-Skewer Yakitori Set, Oyakodon, Tsukune (Chicken Meatballs)
What Makes it Special: Intimate yakitori counter in Little Tokyo where every skewer is grilled over imported Japanese charcoal by trained chefs who treat each cut of the bird with precision.