Best Girls Night Out Japanese Restaurants in Brickell
3 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Paperfish Sushi Brickell
Tokyo-inspired izakaya blending Nikkei flavors with inventive nigiri like torched wagyu and truffle-kissed salmon in a sleek Brickell setting.
Notable Picks
8.3
This Tokyo-meets-Lima izakaya opened in 2021 and quickly earned three consecutive Miami New Times 'Best Sushi' awards under Chef Michael Asalie, who won the South Beach Seafood Festival's sushi battle in 2022. The Paper Tuna and torched salmon nigiri draw the crowds, but the Nikkei-leaning menu—think crispy rice with truffle and acevichado rolls—is where the kitchen really distinguishes itself from Brickell's sushi pack. Dinner service gets loud and energetic, which is either the point or a drawback depending on what you're after. Service can feel transactional during peak hours, and some reviewers find the portions modest for the price point. Best suited for date nights where you want quality fish without the omakase commitment or the scene-y peacocking of flashier neighbors.
Must-Try Dishes:
Paper Tuna, 48-Hour Marinated Black Cod, Salmon Aburi Nigiri
What Makes it Special: Tokyo-inspired izakaya blending Nikkei flavors with inventive nigiri like torched wagyu and truffle-kissed salmon in a sleek Brickell setting.
Worthy Picks
#2
Komodo
7.9
Vibes:
Birthday & Celebration Central
Instagram Worthy Wonders
Group Dining Gatherings
Girls Night Out Approved
David Grutman's three-story Brickell spectacle grosses $41 million annually—the top-earning restaurant in America according to Restaurant Business—and those numbers tell you exactly what you're walking into: a see-and-be-seen celebration factory where the floating bird's nest seating and Instagram moments matter as much as the food. The Peking Duck and Lobster Dynamite are legitimately good, but reviews consistently note that service struggles to keep pace with the crowds and reservations don't always mean much. Expect bottle service energy, steep prices ($115 average check), and a fashionable crowd dressed for the moment. This is where you go for birthday spectacle or impressing out-of-towners who want the full Miami experience—not for a quiet Tuesday dinner.
Must-Try Dishes:
Half Peking Duck, Lobster Dynamite, Miso Chilean Seabass
What Makes it Special: A three-story indoor/outdoor spectacle with floating bird's nest seating that's become Miami's ultimate see-and-be-seen celebration destination.
7.8
Vibes:
Instagram Worthy Wonders
Late Night Legends
Girls Night Out Approved
Birthday & Celebration Central
A London import that doubles as an art installation—Damien Hirst sculptures, Frank Gehry fish lamps, and a crowd that treats dinner as a runway show. The caramelized black cod and robata-grilled items hold their own, but portions run small for the price, and quality can swing between excellent sushi and forgettable cooked plates. Reviews consistently rate the atmosphere five stars and the food closer to 3.5, which tells you exactly who this place is for. Dress code enforcement is inconsistent enough to frustrate, and table placement can make or break the experience—request the main room or risk being banished to a lesser section.
Must-Try Dishes:
Caramelized Black Cod with Spicy Miso, King Crab and Bone Marrow, Crispy Duck Salad
What Makes it Special: A London import with Damien Hirst art and Frank Gehry fish sculptures, where Asian-inspired seafood meets Miami nightlife glamour.