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    Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan

    124. KAGURAZAKA

    290pts

    Michelin-noted yakitori omakase worth booking.

    124. KAGURAZAKA, Restaurant in Tokyo

    About 124. KAGURAZAKA

    A Michelin Plate-recognised yakitori omakase counter in Kagurazaka, Tokyo, running at ¥¥ pricing. The structured omakase opens with chicken heart, sequences sake-friendly vegetable and tofu courses through the meal, and closes with chicken broth ramen. One of Tokyo's better-value formally recognised yakitori counters, with Easy booking difficulty. Best for food-focused diners who want counter-seat access to the grill.

    A Michelin-Recognised Yakitori Counter in Kagurazaka Worth Booking

    The meal begins with a single chicken heart skewer. It is not an accident of sequencing — it is a deliberate statement of intent. The deep, rich flavour of that first bite at 124. KAGURAZAKA tells you immediately what kind of counter this is: one that leads with confidence rather than crowd-pleasing approachability. If you are looking for a yakitori omakase that earns its Michelin Plate recognition through considered structure and genuine flavour logic rather than spectacle, this Shinjuku City counter is worth your time.

    124. KAGURAZAKA holds Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, placing it firmly within the tier of Tokyo restaurants that reviewers consider technically sound and worth a special trip. At a ¥¥ price range, it represents one of the more accessible entry points into formally recognised yakitori dining in Tokyo — a city where Michelin-acknowledged yakitori counters frequently run ¥¥¥ or higher. That combination of credential and price point is the core reason to book here over less-documented alternatives.

    The Omakase Structure: Why the Counter Matters

    The omakase format at 124. KAGURAZAKA is structured with deliberate pacing. The chicken heart opening is followed by norimaki , bite-size chicken tenderloin wrapped in nori seaweed , which shifts the register from the intensity of offal to something cleaner and more delicate. Cooked vegetable salads and deep-fried tofu appear across the meal, functioning as palate punctuation between skewer courses rather than as afterthoughts. These vegetable and tofu intervals are worth paying attention to: they vary the tone meaningfully and, crucially, pair well with sake, making beverage pairing a legitimate part of the experience rather than an optional extra.

    The meal closes with ramen in chicken broth, served in dragon-pattern bowls with nori. The nostalgic framing is intentional , this is a counter that uses its closing course to create a sense of completion rather than simply ending the meal. For food enthusiasts who read structural narrative into tasting menus, that kind of sequencing signals a kitchen that thinks about the full arc of a sitting, not just individual skewers in isolation.

    Counter format itself is central to the 124. KAGURAZAKA experience. Sitting directly across from the grill gives you visual access to timing, heat management, and the physical process of yakitori in a way that table seating cannot replicate. This is not incidental atmosphere , it is information. You see what is being prepared, in what order, and at what pace. For a food-focused diner, the counter at a well-run yakitori-ya is the only seat worth taking, and 124. KAGURAZAKA's omakase is built around that format.

    The Name, the Address, the Details

    Name is a double reference: both the shop's address (Wakamiyacho 12-4, Shinjuku City) and the birthday of a member of staff. That kind of deliberate, personal detail embedded in the brand signals the kind of operation this is , small, considered, and not optimising for scale. The restaurant is located on the third floor of the Fillpark Kagurazaka Wakamiya building, which means first-time visitors should confirm the entrance before arrival, as third-floor counters in Tokyo residential-commercial buildings are easy to walk past.

    Kagurazaka as a neighbourhood context matters for timing. The area draws a mix of local regulars and international visitors, particularly in the evenings. It is not a tourist-heavy stretch in the way that Shinjuku station precincts are, which keeps the atmosphere quieter and more neighbourhood-focused. For a counter meal requiring attention and some degree of quiet, Kagurazaka is a better base than the louder yakitori strips around Yurakucho or Shimbashi. If you are planning a broader Tokyo evening, pairing 124. KAGURAZAKA with the area's sake bars and traditional streets makes more sense than combining it with a late-night Shinjuku itinerary.

    On booking difficulty: the rating is Easy, which is notable for a Michelin-recognised counter. Book as far in advance as practical , a week to ten days ahead should be sufficient in most cases , but do not treat that as a reason to delay. Counter seats at small Tokyo yakitori-ya fill on short timelines when word spreads, and the absence of a website or listed phone number in current records means the booking channel may be in-person or through a hotel concierge. If you are arriving from outside Tokyo, ask your accommodation to assist.

    How 124. KAGURAZAKA Compares in Tokyo's Yakitori Landscape

    For yakitori-focused diners building a Tokyo itinerary, the relevant comparisons are within the genre. BIRD LAND in Ginza is the benchmark premium yakitori counter in Tokyo, operating at a higher price point and with a longer reputation. Asagaya BIRD LAND offers a comparable experience in a different neighbourhood. Yakitori Omino, Aramaki, and Chataro are all worth considering depending on your preferred neighbourhood and price tolerance. The case for 124. KAGURAZAKA specifically is the Michelin Plate credentialing at ¥¥ pricing , if recognition matters to your decision and budget is a consideration, this is the counter that makes the most sense at this price tier.

    If your Japan trip extends beyond Tokyo, the yakitori category is well-served at Torisaki in Kyoto and Torisho Ishii in Osaka for regional comparisons. For a broader view of Japan's fine dining scene, HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, and akordu in Nara represent the upper tier of regional Japanese dining worth planning around. See our full Tokyo restaurants guide for the complete picture, or explore our Tokyo hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide to build out the rest of your trip.

    Know Before You Go

    • Cuisine: Yakitori omakase
    • Price range: ¥¥
    • Address: Fillpark Kagurazaka Wakamiya 3F, Wakamiyacho 12-4, Shinjuku City, Tokyo
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024, Michelin Plate 2025
    • Google rating: 4.1 (25 reviews)
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , book 7–10 days ahead; no listed website or phone; try hotel concierge or in-person
    • Leading time to visit: Weekday evenings for the quietest counter experience; Kagurazaka is less crowded mid-week
    • Format: Omakase counter; counter seating is the core experience
    • Dress code: Not specified; smart casual is appropriate for a Michelin-recognised counter at this price tier
    • Sake pairing: The menu is structured with sake pairing in mind , vegetable and tofu courses are sequenced to complement sake orders

    FAQ: 124. KAGURAZAKA

    • What should a first-timer know about 124. KAGURAZAKA? The restaurant is on the third floor of the Fillpark Kagurazaka Wakamiya building , locate the entrance before your booking time. The format is omakase: no menu choices, and the kitchen controls pacing. The meal opens with chicken heart and closes with chicken broth ramen, so arrive knowing the full run time is part of the experience. At ¥¥ with Michelin Plate recognition, it is one of the better-value formal yakitori options in Tokyo.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at 124. KAGURAZAKA? Yes, at ¥¥ pricing with two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions. The omakase structure has genuine logic: offal-forward opening, nori-wrapped tenderloin, vegetable and tofu courses designed to pair with sake, and a closing ramen course. That is more considered sequencing than most counters at this price. For a comparable level of structure at BIRD LAND or premium yakitori counters, expect to pay significantly more.
    • Is 124. KAGURAZAKA worth the price? At ¥¥, yes. Michelin Plate recognition at this price tier is the core value argument. You are getting a formally recognised omakase counter with deliberate course structure for less than most Tokyo yakitori-ya with equivalent credentials charge. If budget is not a constraint and you want the most celebrated yakitori in Tokyo, BIRD LAND runs higher and has a longer track record , but 124. KAGURAZAKA is the better call on value.
    • Is 124. KAGURAZAKA good for a special occasion? It works well for a food-focused occasion where the meal itself is the event , an anniversary dinner for two diners who both eat meat and are interested in yakitori as a format. It is not the right choice if your guest needs vegetarian options or prefers a more formal, white-tablecloth setting. For larger group celebrations, the counter format limits flexibility. Consider RyuGin or L'Effervescence if the occasion demands a grander room.
    • Can I eat at the bar at 124. KAGURAZAKA? The omakase format is counter-based, so counter seating is standard rather than optional. This is central to the experience , the counter position gives you direct sight lines to the grill and access to the pacing of the meal as it unfolds. If you prefer table seating at a distance from the kitchen, this counter format may not suit you.
    • What should I wear to 124. KAGURAZAKA? No dress code is listed, but smart casual is appropriate. At a Michelin Plate counter in Kagurazaka, overly casual clothing (sportswear, shorts) would be out of place. A clean, neat outfit is sufficient , this is not a black-tie environment, but it is a considered dining room.
    • Does 124. KAGURAZAKA handle dietary restrictions? The omakase format is chicken-centric and structured around a fixed sequence, which means significant dietary restrictions (vegetarian, vegan, severe poultry allergies) cannot be accommodated in practice. No specific allergy or dietary policy is listed. Contact the restaurant directly before booking if you have requirements , the kitchen's ability to adapt a structured omakase is limited by design.
    • What are alternatives to 124. KAGURAZAKA in Tokyo? For yakitori specifically: BIRD LAND is the premium benchmark at a higher price; Yakitori Omino, Aramaki, and Chataro are strong alternatives depending on location and budget. For a broader Tokyo fine dining comparison, see our full Tokyo restaurants guide. Outside Tokyo, Torisaki in Kyoto and Torisho Ishii in Osaka are the relevant regional yakitori comparisons.

    Compare 124. KAGURAZAKA

    124. KAGURAZAKA in Context: Awards and Value
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    124. KAGURAZAKAThe numbers in the name are both the address of the shop and the birthday of a member of staff. The first skewer is chicken heart, because the deep, rich flavour of this cut makes a strong impression. norimaki (bite-size chunks wrapped in nori seaweed) of chicken tenderloin, cooked vegetable salads and deep-fried tofu intersperse the omakase set meal, varying the tone and providing items that pair agreeably with sake. Ramen in chicken broth closes out the presentation. Served in dragon-pattern bowls with nori to evoke a certain sense of nostalgia.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)¥¥
    HarutakaMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best¥¥¥¥
    RyuGinMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best¥¥¥¥
    L'EffervescenceMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best¥¥¥¥
    HOMMAGEMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best¥¥¥¥
    FlorilègeMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best¥¥¥

    Comparing your options in Tokyo for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does 124. KAGURAZAKA handle dietary restrictions?

    The omakase format is structured around chicken-focused skewers — from heart to tenderloin — with ramen in chicken broth closing the meal. There is no documented flexibility for pescatarian, vegetarian, or poultry-free diets. If dietary restrictions apply, check the venue's official channels before booking; the fixed omakase structure leaves limited room for substitution.

    Can I eat at the bar at 124. KAGURAZAKA?

    The venue is a counter-format yakitori spot on the third floor of a Kagurazaka building — the counter is the dining experience, not a secondary option. Sitting at the bar is the standard format here, not an upgrade or alternative. That setup suits solo diners and couples particularly well.

    What should I wear to 124. KAGURAZAKA?

    The ¥¥ price point and neighbourhood setting suggest a casual-to-neat register rather than formal attire. Kagurazaka is a relaxed, residential dining district; arriving in smart casual clothes is appropriate. Nothing in the venue record indicates a dress code, so avoid overdressing.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at 124. KAGURAZAKA?

    Yes, if yakitori omakase is the format you want. The meal is structured with deliberate pacing — chicken heart opens, norimaki and cooked vegetable salads vary the tone, and ramen closes — which makes the sequencing part of the point. At ¥¥, it delivers Michelin Plate-recognised quality without the pricing pressure of Tokyo's premium yakitori tier.

    Is 124. KAGURAZAKA good for a special occasion?

    It works well for a low-key special occasion between two people — the omakase format, the deliberate sequencing, and the Michelin Plate recognition (2024, 2025) give it enough occasion weight without formality. For larger groups or a grander setting, it is less suitable; the counter format is compact and the address is a third-floor walk-up in a residential Kagurazaka block.

    Is 124. KAGURAZAKA worth the price?

    At ¥¥, yes. Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 confirms the kitchen is operating at a consistent standard, and the omakase structure — from chicken heart through to ramen in chicken broth — justifies the format at this price tier. It is not the cheapest yakitori in Tokyo, but it is well below the city's premium yakitori ceiling and delivers a complete, considered meal.

    What are alternatives to 124. KAGURAZAKA in Tokyo?

    BIRD LAND in Ginza is the benchmark for premium yakitori in Tokyo — higher price, more formal, and harder to book. For a similar neighbourhood-counter feel at a comparable ¥¥ range, explore Kagurazaka's own dining strip, which has several grilled-skewer specialists. If you want to step outside yakitori entirely, Florilège and L'Effervescence offer omakase at a different format and significantly higher price point.

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