Best Trendy Japanese Restaurants in Downtown LA
13 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
KazuNori | Downtown LA
Nozawa-group handroll precision at true Downtown scale.
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.
#2
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.
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.
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.
8.1
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.
#7
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.
#8
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.
Worthy Picks
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.
#10
Rice DTLA
7.9
Rice DTLA is a 100% gluten-free modern Japanese restaurant in the Little Tokyo Galleria with a deep menu of vegan-friendly ramen, crispy rice, and small plates alongside seafood options. Opened in 2024, it has quickly become a destination for diners who need strict gluten-free kitchens but still want contemporary Japanese flavors and plant-based choices.
Must-Try Dishes:
Vegan Ramen, Crispy Rice with vegetable toppings, Baked Dynamite Fried Potato (request vegan prep)
What Makes it Special: A fully gluten-free Japanese kitchen with clearly labeled vegan ramen and plates.
#11
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.
#12
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.
#13
Sushi Asobu
7.7
A newer Little Tokyo izakaya with a tight menu of charcoal-leaning small plates and a thoughtful sake lineup. The room is lively but compact, making it a solid pre-show or late dinner move.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chicken Karaage, Beef Curry, Yellowtail Carpaccio
What Makes it Special: Modern izakaya energy with strong drinks and snackable plates.