Bar in Tokyo, Japan
FUGLEN ASAKUSA
100ptsScandinavian coffee and cocktails, historic Tokyo.

About FUGLEN ASAKUSA
Fuglen Asakusa brings Oslo's dual café-and-cocktail format to one of Tokyo's most walkable historic neighbourhoods. The Nordic aesthetic is consistent and considered, the cocktail program leans on Scandinavian botanicals and aquavit, and booking is easy. Return visitors who've only had coffee should come back for the evening drinks — that's where the bar's real ambition shows.
Fuglen Asakusa: Verdict
Fuglen Asakusa is the right call if you want Scandinavian-influenced coffee and cocktails in one of Tokyo's most walkable historic neighbourhoods. The Oslo original built its reputation on a dual-identity format — specialty coffee by day, vintage-inspired cocktails by night — and the Asakusa outpost carries that same structure into a setting that pairs naturally with the temple streets outside. For a first-time visitor, it's an easy yes. If you've been once and stuck to coffee, the evening cocktail program is worth returning for.
What to Expect
The visual draw here is the room itself: mid-century furniture sourced from Nordic flea markets, clean lines, and natural light during daytime hours. The aesthetic is deliberate and coherent , this is not a generic café with a spirits shelf bolted on. When the light drops, the space shifts register without physically changing, which is the point. You're in the same chairs, but the drinks program takes over.
The cocktail menu is where Fuglen's ambition is clearest. The house style leans on Scandinavian aquavit, Nordic botanicals, and a restraint that separates it from the louder, more theatrical bars in the Ginza circuit. Drinks are not complicated for complexity's sake. If you're used to the technical precision of Bar High Five or the experimental depth of Bar Benfiddich, Fuglen reads as quieter and more approachable , which is a feature, not a flaw, depending on the evening you want.
Asakusa is a strong location choice for anyone pairing a drink with a walk around Senso-ji or an early dinner in the neighbourhood. Booking is direct , this is not a hard reservation, and walk-in capacity generally holds through mid-week evenings. Weekends near the temple district get busier with both tourists and locals, so earlier in the evening is the safer call. For more options across the city, see our full Tokyo bars guide or browse our full Tokyo restaurants guide for the surrounding area.
If you're building a broader Japan itinerary, it's also worth comparing the format against Bar Nayuta in Osaka or The Sailing Bar in Nara , both offer distinct regional takes on the same considered-bar category. For planning beyond bars, our Tokyo hotels guide and experiences guide cover the broader picture.
Know Before You Go
- Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-ins generally available, especially mid-week
- Leading time to visit: Early evening to catch the day-to-night transition; weekends are busier near Senso-ji
- Format: Dual-use café and cocktail bar , coffee by day, Nordic cocktails by night
- Neighbourhood: Asakusa, Taito City , well-connected and walkable from major temple sites
- Price tier: Data not available , expect mid-range Tokyo café and bar pricing based on comparable venues
- Good for: Solo drinks, low-key dates, neighbourhood evenings; less suited to large groups or late-night noise
Compare FUGLEN ASAKUSA
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| FUGLEN ASAKUSA | — | ||
| Bar Benfiddich | World's 50 Best | — | |
| Bulgari Ginza Bar | World's 50 Best | — | |
| Star Bar Ginza | World's 50 Best | — | |
| The Bellwood | World's 50 Best | — | |
| Tender Bar | — |
What to weigh when choosing between FUGLEN ASAKUSA and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the signature drink at FUGLEN ASAKUSA?
Fuglen built its reputation on Scandinavian-style specialty coffee during the day and Nordic-influenced cocktails at night, following the same dual format as the original Oslo location. The coffee program is the stronger draw for most visitors — expect precise filter and espresso work rather than heavily sweetened drinks. Specific menu items are not confirmed in current data, so check the counter when you arrive.
Is FUGLEN ASAKUSA good for a date?
Yes, particularly for a daytime or early-evening date. The mid-century Nordic interior — sourced furniture, clean lines, natural light — gives the space a considered atmosphere without being stiff or formal. Asakusa's walkable streets and proximity to Senso-ji make it a practical starting point before moving on elsewhere. It works better for two than for a group.
Does FUGLEN ASAKUSA have happy hour deals?
Fuglen Oslo introduced a happy hour format that carried over to the Tokyo locations, typically covering the transition window between coffee service and cocktail hours. Confirmed pricing and current hours for the Asakusa branch are not available in the venue record — verify directly at the bar on arrival or check their social channels before visiting.
What's the crowd like at FUGLEN ASAKUSA?
A mix of Tokyo specialty-coffee regulars, design-aware locals, and international visitors exploring Asakusa beyond the temple circuit. The room draws people who care about how a space looks and what's in the cup — not a party crowd, not a tourist trap. Daytime leans quieter and more focused; evenings shift toward the cocktail side with a slightly more social feel.
Is the food good at FUGLEN ASAKUSA?
Food is not the reason to come here. Fuglen's format globally centres on drinks — coffee first, cocktails second — with food playing a minor supporting role at best. If food is a priority, eat nearby in Asakusa before or after your visit. The neighbourhood has strong options within easy walking distance of the 2 Chome-6-15 address.
More bars in Tokyo
- 8bit Cafe8bit Cafe in Shinjuku is Tokyo's retro gaming bar — a fun, low-pressure stop that works best as an early-evening warm-up rather than a serious cocktail destination. Walk-ins are easy and the crowd is casual and young. Go for the atmosphere, not the bar program, and plan to move on to somewhere like Bar Benfiddich for the serious drinking.
- A10A10 is a basement bar in Ebisu West, Shibuya — a neighbourhood that signals a drinks-serious crowd over a nightlife-first one. Booking difficulty is low, making it accessible for first-timers, but confirm capacity and hours directly before visiting. Best suited to small groups of two to four looking for a considered, low-noise drinking environment in one of Tokyo's more relaxed upscale pockets.
- Ahiru StoreAhiru Store is a relaxed neighbourhood wine bar in Tomigaya, Shibuya, suited to unhurried evenings and easy to book when busier Tokyo bars are full. The atmosphere stays calm and conversational, making it a practical choice for explorers who want a quieter, more residential side of Tokyo's drinking scene rather than a polished Ginza experience.
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