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Best Japanese Restaurants in Fairfax

14 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

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Our Top Pick
Tatsu Ramen - Melrose
High-volume, customizable ramen with long hours and rich tonkotsu broths.

Notable Picks

$$ Fairfax Japanese, Ramen
Tatsu’s Melrose location is a high-volume, late-night ramen specialist built around tonkotsu-based bowls, touchscreen ordering, and a steady stream of locals and visitors. Broths lean rich and deeply flavored, with customization options that let regulars tune spice, toppings, and richness to their exact preferences.
Must-Try Dishes: Bold Ramen, Soul Ramen, Hippie (Vegan) Ramen
What Makes it Special: High-volume, customizable ramen with long hours and rich tonkotsu broths.
8.5
$$$$ Fairfax Japanese, Seafood
ADKT LA is a moody French-Japanese spot on Fairfax that leans into cocktails, polished service, and chef-driven plates more than pure sushi. It’s a place for lingering evenings built around wagyu, seafood towers, and shareable small plates rather than a quick roll-and-go meal.
Must-Try Dishes: Seafood Tower, Wagyu Chateaubriand, Matcha Tiramisu
What Makes it Special: French-Japanese cooking in a polished cocktail-forward dining room.
$$ Fairfax Japanese
Sugarfish’s La Brea outpost focuses on Nozawa-style omakase sets where the fish, rice temperature, and sauces are tightly controlled. It’s a streamlined, sit-down sushi experience built around the Trust Me menus rather than sprawling a la carte options.
Must-Try Dishes: Trust Me, Nozawa Trust Me, Blue & Dungeness Crab Hand Roll
What Makes it Special: Tightly scripted omakase-style sushi focused on fish quality and rice.
8.2
$$ Fairfax Seafood, Sushi
Murakami is a long-running Melrose fixture known for build-your-own chirashi bowls and straightforward sushi at moderate prices. It leans more neighborhood workhorse than scene restaurant, with consistently fresh fish that keeps regulars coming back decades after opening.
Must-Try Dishes: Build-Your-Own Chirashi Bowl, Salmon and Tuna Sashimi Combo, Spicy Tuna Roll
What Makes it Special: Decades-old sushi spot centered on customizable chirashi bowls and fresh fish.
$$ Fairfax Japanese, Sushi
A newer fine-dining entrant on Melrose with a sleek interior and a playful, modern approach to nigiri and luxury rolls. The menu mixes pristine raw fish with rich, inventive bites geared for sharing, and the room feels designed for a dressed-up night out. Best for couples who like a bit of showmanship with their sushi.
Must-Try Dishes: Foie gras tuna bomb, Shiso cucumber nigiri, Burrata basil roll
What Makes it Special: High-gloss, nightlife-leaning sushi with luxe, creative toppings.
$$$ Fairfax Japanese, Sushi
Azai Hand Roll is a casual 3rd Street spot centered on customizable hand-roll sets, crispy rice, and sashimi at approachable prices. It’s ideal when you want a quick, build-your-own lineup of rolls with a bit more neighborhood personality than the bigger chains.
Must-Try Dishes: Crispy Rice Spicy Tuna, Hand Roll Set Menu, California Cut Roll
What Makes it Special: Hand-roll focused sushi with flexible set menus and takeout.
$$ Fairfax Seafood, Ramen
Kinari Aburi Sushi & Noodle focuses on flame-seared aburi sushi and thoughtful ramen, including notable gluten-free and plant-based options. The small Fairfax dining room reads as a calm, chef-driven hideaway where torched nigiri and composed bowls feel more deliberate than flashy.
Must-Try Dishes: Aburi Salmon Nigiri, House Gluten-Free Ramen, Soft Shell Crab Roll
What Makes it Special: Aburi-style sushi and ramen with real attention to gluten-free diners.

Worthy Picks

$$ Fairfax Japanese, Sushi
Kaijin is a compact Beverly Boulevard sushi bar that leans on creative rolls and friendly service rather than high design. It’s a go-to neighborhood option when you want familiar nigiri, specialty rolls, and a relaxed counter experience.
Must-Try Dishes: Kaijin Special Roll, Sexy Lady Roll, Crispy Rice
What Makes it Special: Neighborhood sushi bar with creative rolls and a low-key feel.
$$$ Fairfax Japanese, Wings
Blue Ribbon Sushi Bar & Grill at The Grove combines serious sushi with the brand’s cult-favorite fried chicken and oxtail fried rice in a polished mall-adjacent setting. It functions as both a date-night option and a spot for groups who want rolls, cooked plates, and cocktails under one roof.
Must-Try Dishes: Blue Ribbon Roll, Blue Ribbon Fried Chicken Wings, Oxtail and Bone-Marrow Fried Rice
What Makes it Special: Upscale sushi-and-grill hybrid known for fried chicken and rolls.
7.9
$ Fairfax Japanese, Ramen
Inside the Original Farmers Market, Noodle Art specializes in hand-pulled Xi’an-style noodles with several brothier bowls that scratch the same itch as ramen. Bowls come generously portioned and customizable, making it a practical noodle stop during a 3rd and Fairfax run.
Must-Try Dishes: Qishan Style Soup Noodle, Braised Beef Stew Brisket Noodle Soup, Chinese Spicy Cumin Beef Hamburger
What Makes it Special: Hand-pulled Xi’an-style noodles and soups served out of a busy farmers market stall.
$$ Fairfax Seafood, Sushi
Sushi N Matcha Sho is a newer mom-and-pop spot on Melrose where an older couple turns out careful sushi, sashimi, and matcha drinks at reasonable prices. The focus is on takeaway-friendly sets and compact nigiri that still feel crafted rather than mass-produced.
Must-Try Dishes: Negi Toro Roll, Baked Dynamite Roll, Unagi Avocado Roll
What Makes it Special: Small, owner-operated sushi shop balancing fresh fish with fair pricing.
$$ Fairfax Japanese, Ramen
Nagahasu by Sushi Yu/Mi is an intimate Beverly Boulevard sushi bar spun off from a Beverly Hills favorite, focusing on traditional nigiri, omakase sets, and signatures like sushi palettes. Its small footprint and omakase emphasis make it feel like a low-key, at-home extension of higher-priced counters nearby.
Must-Try Dishes: Nagahasu Omakase Set, Sushi Palette, Signature Lover’s Set
What Makes it Special: Compact, omakase-leaning offshoot of a respected local sushi group.
7.8
$$$ Fairfax Japanese, Sushi
A casual, modern sushi bar that’s easy to slip into for a low-key date without sacrificing freshness. Rolls are generous, fish is clean, and the menu covers both classics and a few house specials. Not a white-tablecloth night, but a reliable, cozy option in the Melrose corridor.
Must-Try Dishes: Salmon Citrus Roll, Tuna roll (classic maki), Sashimi lunch/dinner set
What Makes it Special: Casual Melrose sushi with notably fresh fish for the price.
$$$ Fairfax Japanese
Sora is a temaki-focused rooftop bar at the Original Farmers Market offering hand rolls, sashimi, and drinks overlooking the market stalls. It’s more of a casual, view-driven stop than a destination omakase, best used as a snack-and-sake break during shopping or a light night out.
Must-Try Dishes: Spicy Tuna Temaki, Crispy Shrimp Hand Roll, Vegan Avocado-Cucumber Temaki
What Makes it Special: Temaki bar with rooftop views over the Original Farmers Market.