Bar in San Mateo, United States
Sushi Edomata
100ptsSolid sushi pick below Yoshizumi's price tier.

About Sushi Edomata
Sushi Edomata is a neighborhood sushi counter on a quiet San Mateo block — a practical mid-range option for two if you want sushi without the booking friction or ceremony of Michelin-tracked rooms nearby. Booking is rated Easy. Confirm pricing and group capacity directly before you plan around it, as detailed venue data is limited.
A Sushi Option Worth Knowing in San Mateo — But How Does It Stack Up?
If you're weighing sushi in San Mateo, the conversation usually starts with Sushi Yoshizumi, which holds a Michelin star and commands reservation lead times to match. Sushi Edomata, at 38 E 25th Ave, occupies a different position: a neighborhood sushi option that doesn't come with Yoshizumi's booking friction or, presumably, its price ceiling. Whether that trade-off works for you depends on what you're actually after.
The address puts Edomata in a quieter stretch of San Mateo — a low-key block rather than a destination dining corridor. Spatially, expect an intimate room scaled for a local sushi counter rather than a large-group dining hall. That kind of setup rewards diners who want proximity to the kitchen and a pace that slows down as the evening moves forward. If late-night energy and a buzzy dining room are the goal, this is not the right address , San Mateo's nightlife gravitates toward venues like B Street & Vine for drinks after dinner. Edomata reads more as an early-to-mid evening destination, where the format suits conversation and focus on the food rather than the scene around you.
For value-seekers, the calculus here is direct: sushi at this tier in the Bay Area typically runs $60–$150+ per head depending on format, and without confirmed pricing in our data, you're leading served calling ahead or checking current menus directly. What the address and format suggest is a mid-tier neighborhood option , more accessible than an omakase-only counter, less polished than a Michelin-tracked room. That's a reasonable fit if you want sushi without the ceremony, especially for a mid-week dinner or a date night where the pressure is off.
On the date-night question specifically: the intimate scale and sushi-counter format make it a workable choice for two. It's not a special-occasion anchor in the way Sushi Yoshizumi is, but it doesn't carry that venue's booking difficulty either. For groups of four or more, the room size may be a limiting factor , worth confirming capacity before you plan around it.
San Mateo has enough dining depth that Edomata sits in a competitive middle ground. If Japanese food and late-evening flexibility matter, Izakaya Ginji offers an izakaya format with more range across the menu. For something entirely different after sushi, Pausa Bar & Cookery is the Italian alternative worth knowing. And if you're building a broader evening itinerary, our full San Mateo restaurants guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are practical starting points. For those visiting from out of town, our San Mateo hotels guide and wineries guide round out the picture.
For context on what a focused cocktail program looks like at the bar level , useful if you're pairing dinner with drinks elsewhere , venues like Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston set a benchmark for what a serious bar program looks like, in case the evening calls for continuing somewhere with that level of intention.
Practical Details
Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy , walk-ins may be possible, but calling ahead is advisable for weekend evenings given the likely small room size. Dress: No confirmed dress code; smart casual is a safe default for a sushi counter in this neighborhood. Budget: Pricing not confirmed in our data , contact the venue directly for current menu pricing before you plan around a specific spend. Groups: Intimate format likely limits larger parties; confirm capacity for groups of four or more. Getting there: 38 E 25th Ave, San Mateo , street parking available in the surrounding blocks.
FAQ
Is Sushi Edomata good for groups?
- Probably not for large parties. The address and sushi-counter format suggest a small, intimate room , the kind of space that works well for two to four people but may not accommodate six or more comfortably. Call ahead to confirm seating capacity before planning a group dinner here. For a larger group in San Mateo, Izakaya Ginji or Pausa Bar & Cookery are likely better fits.
Do I need a reservation at Sushi Edomata?
- Booking difficulty here is rated Easy, which means walk-ins are plausible , but with a small room, weekend evenings can fill without much notice. Calling ahead is the practical move. No website or phone number is currently listed in our data, so your leading option is to search current contact details directly before your visit.
Is the food good at Sushi Edomata?
- No awards or verified ratings are in our data for Edomata, so a direct quality verdict isn't something we can give with confidence. What the format suggests , a neighborhood sushi counter in San Mateo , is a mid-tier experience: more accessible and less ceremonial than a Michelin-tracked room like Sushi Yoshizumi, but a reasonable option if you want sushi without the formality or booking friction of the city's top-ranked spots.
Is Sushi Edomata good for a date?
- Yes, with realistic expectations. The intimate counter setting and focused menu format make it a solid mid-range date option , attentive without being high-pressure. It's not a special-occasion destination in the way a starred room would be, but that also means no three-week booking wait. For a first date or a low-key anniversary dinner in San Mateo, it's a reasonable call. If you want something with more occasion weight, Sushi Yoshizumi is the comparison to make.
What's the signature drink at Sushi Edomata?
- No drink menu data is available in our records. Sushi counters at this format level typically offer sake, Japanese beer, and a short wine list rather than a developed cocktail program. If a serious drinks program matters to your evening, plan to start or finish elsewhere , B Street & Vine is the natural San Mateo pairing for post-dinner drinks, and Bel Mateo Bowl offers a different kind of late-night option in the area.
Compare Sushi Edomata
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sushi Edomata | Easy | ||
| B Street & Vine | Unknown | ||
| Izakaya Ginji | Unknown | ||
| Pausa Bar & Cookery | Unknown | ||
| Sushi Yoshizumi | Unknown | ||
| Bel Mateo Bowl | Unknown |
Comparing your options in San Mateo for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Sushi Edomata good for groups?
Sushi Edomata works for small groups, but like most sushi counters in San Mateo, seating capacity is likely limited. Parties of two or four are the safer bet. Larger groups should call ahead to confirm the space can accommodate, as sushi-focused restaurants at this address format rarely seat parties of six or more comfortably without advance arrangement.
Do I need a reservation at Sushi Edomata?
Booking ahead is advisable, particularly for weekend evenings. Reservation difficulty at Sushi Edomata is rated Easy compared to nearby Sushi Yoshizumi, which requires significant lead time due to its Michelin-starred status. Walk-ins may be possible on quieter weeknights, but calling ahead removes the guesswork given the likely small dining room at 38 E 25th Ave.
Is the food good at Sushi Edomata?
Sushi Edomata holds its own as a sushi option in San Mateo without the prestige credentials of Sushi Yoshizumi, which carries a Michelin star. If you want reliable sushi at an accessible booking difficulty and a lower bar to entry than the area's marquee spot, Edomata is a practical choice. Diners who prioritize technique and provenance above all else should weigh Yoshizumi first.
Is Sushi Edomata good for a date?
Yes, for a low-pressure date with good sushi as the focus. It offers more spontaneity than Sushi Yoshizumi, where competition for seats is real and the format is more formal. Sushi Edomata at 38 E 25th Ave, San Mateo suits a mid-week or weekend date where you want a focused, intimate setting without the booking stress of the area's starred alternative.
What's the signature drink at Sushi Edomata?
Specific drink menu details for Sushi Edomata are not confirmed in available data. Most sushi-focused restaurants at this level in the Bay Area offer sake by the glass or bottle alongside Japanese beer. Your best move is to ask when you call to reserve, which also gives you a chance to confirm current hours and any omakase availability.
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