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Best Japanese Restaurants in Torrance

11 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

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Our Top Pick
Kitakata Ramen Ban Nai
Classic Kitakata-style ramen with light, springy noodles and precise broths.

Notable Picks

$$ Torrance Japanese, Ramen
Kitakata Ramen Ban Nai specializes in light, springy, curly noodles and soy-forward broths served in a compact shop along Pacific Coast Highway. Locals come for bowls that balance clean, pork-light broths with generous chashu and precise toppings, making it one of South Torrance’s most reliable ramen stops.
Must-Try Dishes: Kitakata Shoyu Ramen, Chashu Ramen, Green Chili Shio Ramen
What Makes it Special: Classic Kitakata-style ramen with light, springy noodles and precise broths.
$$ Torrance Japanese, Sushi
Sushi Gone Wild is a compact, high-energy sushi bar where locals crowd in for creative rolls, generous sashimi, and a lively neighborhood feel. With strong multi-platform ratings and hundreds of reviews, it’s the go-to South Torrance spot when you want fun, reasonably priced sushi with real regulars’ energy.
Must-Try Dishes: Salmon Gone Wild roll, Baked Alaska roll, Dragon roll
What Makes it Special: Lively neighborhood sushi bar with creative rolls and strong value.
$ Torrance Japanese
Ichimi Ann is a soba-focused noodle shop in Rolling Hills Plaza, praised for springy buckwheat noodles and a focused menu of tempura, rice bowls, and comforting broths. Regulars treat it as a low-key noodle house where quality stays high whether you’re slurping cold zaru soba or warming up with hot kake udon.
Must-Try Dishes: Cold zaru soba, Tempura soba, Katsu-don
What Makes it Special: Soba-centered noodle house with consistently praised handmade buckwheat noodles.
8.4
$$ Torrance Japanese
Koshiji is a cozy yakitori-focused izakaya on Hawthorne where skewers grill over binchotan in full view of the counter. South Bay regulars come for carefully seasoned chicken, offal, and vegetables, plus a solid list of sake and beer in a room that feels closer to Tokyo than a strip mall.
Must-Try Dishes: Negima chicken thigh skewer, Tsukune chicken meatball skewer, Beef tongue skewer
What Makes it Special: Binchotan-grilled yakitori with a cozy, transportive izakaya atmosphere.
$$ Torrance Japanese, Sushi
Ginza AYCE Sushi is a busy all-you-can-eat spot in the Torrance Crossroads center, known for a long list of rolls, hot dishes, and nigiri at a fixed price. High review volume and steady crowds make it a reliable choice for big appetites, birthdays, and groups wanting to linger over rounds of sushi.
Must-Try Dishes: Baked lobster roll, Spicy salmon rolls, Salmon collar
What Makes it Special: High-volume all-you-can-eat sushi with big variety and late hours.
Torrance Japanese, Ramen
Located inside the Tokyo Central PCH food court, Ramen Ginza Onodera serves refined, dashi-driven bowls supervised by the team behind Sushi Ginza Onodera. The focus is on clear, deeply savory shoyu and fish-based broths that feel more omakase-closing course than typical mall ramen.
Must-Try Dishes: Premium Fish Broth Shoyu Ramen, Premium Onodera Kiwami Shoyu Ramen, Black Garlic Ramen
What Makes it Special: Michelin-associated ramen concept showcasing clear, fish-forward shoyu broths.
$ Torrance Japanese, Ramen
Ko-Ryu Ramen is a long-running Crenshaw shop best known for rich, spicy broths and customizable bowls in a tight, counter-heavy space. Regulars build their own combinations of chashu, spice levels, and add-ons, making it a go-to for big-flavor ramen on the South Torrance side streets.
Must-Try Dishes: Spicy Miso Ramen, Shacho Ramen, Garlic Bomb Ramen
What Makes it Special: Customizable, spice-forward bowls in a small, ramen-first shop.
$$ Torrance Japanese, Ramen
Torrance Yokocho is a newer izakaya built to evoke Japan’s lantern-lit alleyways, with QR-code ordering, a full bar, and a menu that ranges from yakitori and karaage to ramen and small plates. It’s become a lively night-out option in 90505 for groups wanting a street-food-inspired atmosphere without leaving the neighborhood.
Must-Try Dishes: Assorted yakitori skewers, Tonkotsu ramen, Takoyaki
What Makes it Special: Lantern-lit izakaya channeling Japanese yokocho street alleys with full bar.
$$ Torrance Japanese, Sushi
Fusion Sushi is a long-running PCH sushi house offering a broad menu of classic and American-style rolls, tempura, and cooked plates in a casual, modern room. It draws repeat locals for generous rolls, late hours, and a comfortable sit-down setting that works for everything from casual dates to small celebrations.
Must-Try Dishes: Lobster roll, Aloha roll, Albacore sashimi
What Makes it Special: Broad sushi menu with big, shareable rolls and late-night hours.

Worthy Picks

7.7
$$ Torrance Japanese, Ramen
Umenoya is a busy Crenshaw ramen house offering a long menu that ranges from classic tonkotsu to yuzu shio and tsukemen. The broths skew rich and hearty, with big bowls and late hours that make it a default option for South Bay ramen cravings.
Must-Try Dishes: Spicy Miso Ramen, Tonkotsu Ramen, Yuzu Shio Ramen
What Makes it Special: Big, late-night bowls with one of the area’s widest ramen menus.
7.7
$ Torrance Japanese, Sushi
Kozo Sushi at Rolling Hills Plaza is a counter-service, takeout-forward sushi shop focused on affordable rolls, bowls, and party trays. Originating as a to-go concept, it’s popular with shoppers and nearby workers who want quick, reliable sushi without committing to a full restaurant meal.
Must-Try Dishes: Salmon Lovers roll, Manager’s special spicy tuna bowl, Eel steak roll
What Makes it Special: Takeout-focused sushi shop delivering fast, inexpensive rolls and bowls.