Best Sushi Restaurants in Elmhurst
7 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Akino
A high-volume AYCE format that still rewards sashimi-and-nigiri-first ordering.
Notable Picks
#1
Akino
8.3
Vibes:
Group Dining Gatherings
Family Friendly Favorites
Trendy Table Hotspots
Birthday & Celebration Central
An all-you-can-eat spot that wins when you lean into clean nigiri and repeatable sashimi rounds instead of over-ordering rolls. It’s busy and fast-paced, but the payoff is variety with solid execution for the format—especially if you arrive early or reserve.
Must-Try Dishes:
Salmon sashimi, Yellowtail nigiri, Scallop with ponzu (monthly special)
What Makes it Special: A high-volume AYCE format that still rewards sashimi-and-nigiri-first ordering.
#2
Rakuzen
8
Vibes:
Group Dining Gatherings
Birthday & Celebration Central
Family Friendly Favorites
Trendy Table Hotspots
An all-you-can-eat sushi option where you get the best results by ordering deliberately: smaller rounds, fewer novelty rolls, and a steadier rotation of nigiri plus hot apps. It’s built for groups and long meals, but restraint is what keeps the experience strong.
Must-Try Dishes:
Nigiri, Spicy salmon sashimi, Shrimp tempura
What Makes it Special: AYCE format that works best with disciplined, small-batch ordering.
Worthy Picks
#3
Sushi Island
7.9
A neighborhood sushi-and-roll kitchen that’s built for reliable delivery, takeout, and casual meals more than a destination sushi bar. Keep it focused on crowd-pleasing rolls and the cooked appetizers, and it lands as a steady, repeatable option in the ZIP.
Must-Try Dishes:
Shrimp Tempura, Salmon Avocado roll, Bora Bora roll
What Makes it Special: A roll-forward menu that holds up well for takeout and delivery.
7.9
Vibes:
Quick Bites Champions
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
Trendy Table Hotspots
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
A boba-first shop that’s surprisingly structured on the sushi-roll side, with a full roll menu that works best for quick, casual cravings. Think of it as a dual-mission stop: one signature roll plus a drink, not a long sit-down sushi night.
Must-Try Dishes:
Ocean Roll, Volcano Roll, Crunchy Roll
What Makes it Special: A boba shop with a legit, extensive sushi-roll lineup.
7.6
Vibes:
Business Lunch Power Players
Quick Bites Champions
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
Comfort Food Classics
A lunch-special driven Japanese cafe where the move is bento-and-sushi efficiency rather than a long sit-down sushi night. It’s a practical neighborhood pick—best when you order from the value lanes and keep expectations aligned with the casual setup.
Must-Try Dishes:
Bento box lunch special, Beef negimaki, Sushi/sashimi piece specials
What Makes it Special: A bento-and-sushi lunch spot built around specials and speed.
#6
Teriyaki One
7.6
Vibes:
Quick Bites Champions
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
Hidden Gems Heaven
A counter-service, convenience-driven Japanese stop that’s most useful for a low-key sushi date built around takeout and a short walk rather than a full sit-down. Keep the order minimal and fish-forward, then add one warm bowl or teriyaki plate so it eats like dinner, not snacks.
Must-Try Dishes:
Spicy salmon roll, Salmon avocado roll, Chicken teriyaki bowl
What Makes it Special: A quick counter format that makes sushi date night possible on a budget.
#7
Kido Sushi
7.5
A food-court conveyor-belt sushi counter that’s best treated as a quick, low-commitment sushi run while you’re at Queens Center. It’s not trying to be a traditional sushi bar—go for speed, simple nigiri and rolls, and a clean, snackable stop.
Must-Try Dishes:
Miso soup, Edamame, Agedashi tofu
What Makes it Special: Conveyor-belt sushi inside Queens Center for a fast sushi hit.