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    Restaurant in Seoul, South Korea

    스시조 - Sushi Cho

    320pts

    La Liste-ranked sushi, easier to book than you'd expect.

    스시조 - Sushi Cho, Restaurant in Seoul

    About 스시조 - Sushi Cho

    Sushi Cho is a La Liste-recognised sushi counter in central Seoul with a 4.5-star Google rating across nearly 700 reviews. It scores well for solo diners and food travellers who want a focused omakase experience rather than a broader tasting menu format. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, making it more accessible than most venues at this recognition level.

    Verdict: A La Liste-Recognised Sushi Counter Worth Planning Around

    699 Google reviews averaging 4.5 stars puts Sushi Cho in a narrow band of Seoul restaurants where the crowd consensus and critical recognition actually align. La Liste scored it 76 points in 2026 (down slightly from 78 in 2025, though still comfortably inside the global top tier), which places it on the same international radar as destinations like Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City. If you are in Seoul specifically to eat well and sushi is a format you value, Sushi Cho deserves a place on your list.

    The Room and the Format

    Sushi Cho sits on Sogong-ro in central Seoul, one of the city's more accessible dining corridors. The address puts it within reach of the Myeongdong and City Hall areas, meaning it works logistically whether you are staying nearby or coming in from across the city. Korean sushi counters of this calibre typically run as intimate, counter-forward rooms where proximity to the chef is part of the experience — the spatial logic rewards solo diners and couples more than groups. If you are planning around the room itself, earlier seatings on weeknights tend to offer a quieter atmosphere; weekend evenings attract a fuller house and a different energy.

    Multi-Visit Strategy

    For a venue at this recognition level, one visit is enough to form an opinion, but two visits is where the picture fills in. On a first visit, let the kitchen set the pace — this is a counter-format restaurant where the chef's sequence matters, and resisting the impulse to customise will tell you more about what the kitchen does well. On a second visit, you have the context to ask more specific questions: how the restaurant handles seasonal transitions in its fish sourcing, whether there is flexibility around a specific course, and which elements of the menu have evolved. Seoul's sushi scene has matured considerably, and returning diners at La Liste-ranked counters often report that the experience deepens with familiarity. If you are the type of diner who found value in repeat visits to counters like Kwonsooksoo or Soigné, Sushi Cho fits that same framework.

    How Sushi Cho Sits in Seoul's Broader Scene

    Seoul's top-end dining options have expanded sharply. Mingles, Jungsik, and alla prima all compete for the same calendar slots. What separates Sushi Cho from that set is format specificity: this is a sushi counter, not a tasting menu restaurant that incorporates Japanese technique. If sushi as a discipline is what you are after, Sushi Cho is the clearer choice. If you want Korean-forward fine dining with broader range, Kwonsooksoo or Jungsik will serve you better. Browse our full Seoul restaurants guide to calibrate your shortlist further.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is relatively unusual for a La Liste-ranked counter in Seoul , book one to two weeks ahead to be safe, but last-minute slots are more available here than at comparable venues. Dress: Smart casual is appropriate for a room at this level; the central Seoul location and international clientele mean the dress standard sits between relaxed and formal. Budget: Price range is not confirmed in available data, but La Liste Top 100-adjacent counters in Seoul typically run in the ₩₩₩₩ range , plan for a full omakase spend. Getting there: The Sogong-ro address is close to City Hall and Euljiro 1-ga metro stations. Further Seoul context: See also our Seoul hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide for trip planning around this booking.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What should I wear to Sushi Cho? Smart casual is the practical standard here. A La Liste-recognised counter in central Seoul draws a mix of business diners and international food travellers , avoid gym wear, but a jacket is not required. Err toward neat rather than formal.
    • Does Sushi Cho handle dietary restrictions? Counter-format sushi restaurants are structurally limited in their ability to accommodate significant dietary restrictions , the omakase sequence is built around fish, and substitutions can disrupt the kitchen's flow. Contact the venue directly before booking if you have specific requirements. No website or phone number is currently listed in public data, so approach through your booking platform or hotel concierge.
    • Is Sushi Cho good for solo dining? Yes, and arguably better than for groups. Counter seating is the natural format for solo diners , you get direct access to the kitchen's rhythm, better sight lines, and no coordination overhead. Seoul's sushi counters at this level consistently receive positive feedback from solo travellers. If solo fine dining in Seoul interests you, also consider alla prima, which runs a similarly counter-forward format.
    • What are alternatives to Sushi Cho in Seoul? For Korean-forward fine dining at a similar price tier, Mingles and Jungsik are the obvious comparisons. For innovative tasting menus, Soigné and alla prima are worth considering. If you want to stay within the sushi format but explore beyond Seoul, Mori in Busan is a relevant regional comparison.
    • How far ahead should I book Sushi Cho? Booking difficulty is rated Easy by Pearl's data, which means one to two weeks ahead is typically sufficient. That said, La Liste recognition does generate international demand, particularly during peak travel months (spring cherry blossom season and autumn). If your dates are fixed, book as soon as they are confirmed.
    • What should I order at Sushi Cho? Specific menu items are not confirmed in available data, and fabricating dish descriptions would not serve you. At a Korean sushi counter of this calibre, the safest approach is to follow the omakase sequence rather than ordering à la carte , the La Liste recognition reflects the kitchen's performance as a whole, not individual dishes.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Sushi Cho? Korean sushi counters at this level are almost always structured around counter seating as the primary format, not a secondary option. Seat count is not confirmed in available data, but the counter is likely the main dining surface. Confirm directly when booking whether bar-only or walk-in counter seats are available on quieter nights.

    For more options across South Korea, see also 권숙수 - Kwon Sook Soo in Gangnam-gu, Double T Dining in Gangneung, Market Café in Incheon, Baegyangsa Temple in Jangseong-gun, and 더 플라잉 호그 - The Flying Hog in Seogwipo. For the full regional picture, visit our Seoul wineries guide.

    Compare 스시조 - Sushi Cho

    Getting a Table: 스시조 - Sushi Cho and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    스시조 - Sushi ChoKorean SushiEasy
    SolbamContemporary₩₩₩₩Unknown
    OnjiumKorean₩₩₩₩Unknown
    7th DoorKorean, Contemporary₩₩₩₩Unknown
    L'AmitiéFrench₩₩₩Unknown
    Zero ComplexKorean-French, Innovative₩₩₩₩Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to 스시조 - Sushi Cho?

    Dress as you would for a La Liste-recognised counter: neat, presentable, and not casual. There is no published dress code in the venue record, but at a critically acknowledged sushi address on Sogong-ro — central Seoul, business and luxury hotel corridor — jeans and trainers will read as underdressed. Business casual or a step above is the safe call.

    Does 스시조 - Sushi Cho handle dietary restrictions?

    No dietary policy is documented for Sushi Cho. In a counter-format Korean sushi setting, the menu typically follows a fixed sequence built around fish, so vegetarian or shellfish-allergy requests can be structurally difficult. check the venue's official channels before booking if restrictions apply — do not assume flexibility at this format.

    Is 스시조 - Sushi Cho good for solo dining?

    Yes. A sushi counter is one of the few fine-dining formats where solo dining is genuinely well-suited — you sit at the bar, the pacing is set by the kitchen, and there is no odd-numbered seating awkwardness. Sushi Cho's La Liste recognition (76 points in 2026) makes it a credible solo occasion-dining choice in Seoul.

    What are alternatives to 스시조 - Sushi Cho in Seoul?

    For Korean haute cuisine rather than sushi, Onjium and Mingles are the most direct comparison at similar recognition levels. If you want another sushi counter, Seoul's top-end sushi scene is competitive — check availability across multiple venues, since Sushi Cho's booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is an advantage over harder-to-reserve alternatives.

    How far ahead should I book 스시조 - Sushi Cho?

    One to two weeks ahead is enough — booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is notably accessible for a La Liste-ranked counter in Seoul. That said, 'Easy' does not mean same-day: lock in your date before travel, especially on weekends or around Korean public holidays when central Seoul dining fills quickly.

    What should I order at 스시조 - Sushi Cho?

    No specific menu items are documented in the venue record, and inventing dish descriptions would be misleading. At a Korean sushi counter of this recognition level, the format is almost certainly a set course — your job is to show up, not to pre-select. If you have strong preferences, confirm the format when you book.

    Can I eat at the bar at 스시조 - Sushi Cho?

    The counter format at a venue like Sushi Cho is typically the primary seating arrangement, not an add-on. Given its sushi counter classification and La Liste standing, bar-style seating is likely the standard experience here. Confirm specifics when booking, but this is not a venue where the bar is a walk-in fallback — reserve in advance regardless.

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