Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Akikos
240Pearl PointsOAD-ranked sushi. Book lunch to get in.

About Akikos
Akikos is one of San Francisco's most consistently recognised sushi destinations, ranked #373 on the Opinionated About Dining North America list in 2025 and rising three consecutive years. Under chef Ray Lee, it offers lunch and dinner Tuesday through Friday with Saturday dinner only — easy to book now, but that window is narrowing. A strong pick for special occasions and serious sushi diners.
Should You Book Akikos?
If you're weighing Akikos against San Francisco's higher-profile omakase rooms, here's the short answer: Akikos earns its place on the same shortlist. While venues like Ken and Sato Omakase compete for the city's serious sushi attention, Akikos has climbed the Opinionated About Dining North America rankings three consecutive years — from Recommended in 2023 to #399 in 2024 to #373 in 2025 — which is a trajectory worth noting before you decide where to spend your dinner budget. A 4.5 Google rating across 770 reviews adds further weight. Book it.
The Venue Portrait
Akikos sits at 430 Folsom St in SoMa, under chef Ray Lee, and operates on a schedule that rewards those who plan ahead: Tuesday through Friday for both lunch (11:30am–1:30pm) and dinner (5:30–8:30pm), Saturday for dinner only, closed Sunday and Monday. The kitchen windows are narrow, so missing your slot is not a minor inconvenience , it means waiting a week or more for another chance at the same seat.
For a special occasion dinner, the dinner service is the obvious call. The room runs two seatings per evening and the tight close at 8:30pm means the kitchen is focused rather than stretched. If the occasion matters , anniversary, business dinner, a date where you want the meal to land , dinner on a weekday gives you the full experience without the Saturday premium on availability.
Think about Akikos as a multi-visit restaurant rather than a one-and-done. The format and the kitchen's consistency make the case for returning. On a first visit, come for dinner and let the progression of the meal do the work. On a second visit, lunch is worth trying: it's a rarer offering for a restaurant of this caliber, it runs the same Tuesday-to-Friday window, and it gives you a different read on the kitchen's range. A third visit, if you're a regular or building toward one, is where Saturday dinner becomes the natural default , fewer competing obligations, the week's leading product likely in house.
The OAD ranking places Akikos firmly in the company of serious North American sushi destinations. For context on what that tier looks like globally, it sits in the same conversation as venues like Harutaka in Tokyo and Sushi Shikon in Hong Kong, though at a very different price point and with a distinctly California-inflected approach. Domestically, the comparison set includes Providence in Los Angeles for caliber of recognition, and the overall arc of chef-driven tasting-format dining represented by places like Smyth in Chicago.
Booking is easy relative to the difficulty level you'd expect from a restaurant rising this fast. That window won't stay open indefinitely as the OAD ranking continues to climb, so the current moment , ranked but not yet impossible to get into , is worth acting on. Check availability for a Tuesday or Wednesday dinner if you want the path of least resistance. Saturday dinners will be the first to fill.
For the full picture of where Akikos fits in San Francisco's dining scene, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide. If you're building a broader trip, our San Francisco hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are useful starting points. For a pre- or post-dinner drink option in the neighbourhood, Friends Only is worth knowing about.
Practical Details
| Detail | Akikos | Ken | Wako |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Sushi | Sushi | Sushi |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Moderate |
| Lunch available | Tue–Fri | Check venue | Check venue |
| Dinner hours | 5:30–8:30pm | Check venue | Check venue |
| Closed | Sun & Mon | Check venue | Check venue |
| OAD North America rank | #373 (2025) | , | , |
| Google rating | 4.5 (770) | , | , |
Related sushi options in San Francisco worth comparing: Wako and Sato Omakase.
How It Compares
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Akikos good for solo dining? Yes. A sushi counter format is one of the leading setups for solo diners , you're engaged with the meal and the kitchen rather than sitting across from an empty chair. Akikos is a strong solo pick, and the lunch service (Tuesday–Friday, 11:30am–1:30pm) is particularly well-suited: lower-key than dinner and easier to book on short notice.
- Is Akikos good for a special occasion? It's one of the better choices in San Francisco for exactly this purpose. The OAD #373 North America ranking (2025) and 4.5 Google rating give you confidence the meal will hold up. For a high-stakes dinner , anniversary, promotion, important client , Akikos sits at the right caliber level without requiring the months-out booking lead time of The French Laundry in Napa or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg.
- Is lunch or dinner better at Akikos? Dinner is the right first choice for a celebration or if you want the full experience. Lunch (11:30am–1:30pm, Tuesday–Friday only) is worth targeting on a return visit , it's an unusual offering for a restaurant at this recognition level, and it reads differently from dinner in pace and feel. First-timers: go to dinner. Return visitors: try lunch.
- What should a first-timer know about Akikos? The kitchen closes at 8:30pm , earlier than most San Francisco restaurants of this caliber , so plan your evening accordingly. The OAD ranking has moved up three consecutive years, which suggests the kitchen is in a strong current phase. Booking is easy now, but that may not last as the ranking continues to rise. Chef Ray Lee leads the kitchen at 430 Folsom St, SoMa.
- Can I eat at the bar at Akikos? Bar seating details are not confirmed in our data. For a sushi restaurant of this format, counter seating is typically the preferred option regardless , it's where you're closest to the preparation. Contact the venue directly to confirm seating configurations before you book.
- What are alternatives to Akikos in San Francisco? For sushi specifically: Ken, Sato Omakase, and Wako are the closest comparisons. For the broader fine dining tier in San Francisco, Lazy Bear is worth considering if you want a tasting-format experience in a different cuisine register. See our full San Francisco restaurants guide for the wider picture.
- Does Akikos handle dietary restrictions? No specific dietary accommodation policy is listed in our data. Given the sushi format , where the sequence and sourcing of fish is central to the experience , it's worth contacting the restaurant directly before booking if you have significant restrictions. Don't assume flexibility without confirming.
- What should I wear to Akikos? No formal dress code is listed. For a restaurant ranked in the OAD Top 400 in North America, smart casual is the safe default: neat, considered, not overly casual. You won't be turned away for jeans, but the room and the meal warrant dressing with some intention.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Akikos good for solo dining?
Yes. Omakase-format sushi rooms are among the most solo-friendly dining formats — the counter puts you directly in the action, and the chef-driven pacing means you're never waiting on a table. Akikos's limited hours (Tuesday through Saturday, with lunch only on weekdays) make it easy to drop in for a solo lunch sitting without the social pressure of a dinner booking.
Is Akikos good for a special occasion?
It works well for a low-key special occasion, but set your expectations by format, not ambiance. This is a focused sushi room in SoMa, not a grand-room celebration venue like Quince or Atelier Crenn. The OAD Top 373 ranking (2025) signals genuine culinary seriousness, which makes it a credible choice for anyone who considers a well-executed omakase meal the occasion itself.
Is lunch or dinner better at Akikos?
Lunch is the smarter booking if availability is your priority. Dinner runs Tuesday through Friday and Saturday only, making Saturday dinner the hardest seat. Lunch (Tuesday through Friday, 11:30am–1:30pm) is a shorter window but tends to be easier to secure. The format is the same either way, so choose based on your schedule rather than any quality difference.
What should a first-timer know about Akikos?
Akikos operates tight hours: closed Monday and Sunday, with a narrow lunch window and an evening service that ends at 8:30pm. Chef Ray Lee runs the kitchen, and the OAD ranking (up from #399 in 2024 to #373 in 2025) suggests the kitchen is on an upward trajectory. Book ahead — this is not a walk-in venue, and the limited service windows mean seats are finite.
Can I eat at the bar at Akikos?
Bar seating availability isn't confirmed in the venue record. For an omakase-format sushi room, counter seating is typically the primary configuration, but whether Akikos offers a walk-up bar option is worth confirming directly when you book — especially if you're coming solo or as a pair on short notice.
What are alternatives to Akikos in San Francisco?
For high-end omakase in SF, Benu and Quince operate at a similar prestige tier but with more formal dining room formats and higher price points. Lazy Bear offers a chef-driven tasting experience with a very different, more communal energy. If you want to stay in the sushi lane but haven't been able to secure an Akikos seat, look at other OAD-tracked sushi rooms in the city as a reference point.
Does Akikos handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary restriction policies aren't documented in the venue record. Omakase menus are generally structured in advance and can be difficult to modify significantly, especially for shellfish or seafood allergies in a sushi-focused room. Contact Akikos directly before booking if you have serious dietary requirements — this is not a format that typically accommodates substitutions easily.
Location
430 Folsom St, San Francisco, CA 94108
San Francisco, United States
Compare Akikos
Also Consider
- Lazy Bear — Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Atelier Crenn — Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Benu — French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$
- Quince — Italian, Contemporary, $$$$
- Saison — Progressive American, Californian, $$$$
How Akikos Compares in San Francisco
Against the city's $$$$ tasting-format restaurants, Akikos offers a distinct value proposition: a rising OAD-ranked sushi counter that is currently easier to book than most of its caliber peers. Benu and Atelier Crenn both carry Michelin three-star status and require significantly more advance planning. Quince sits at a similar booking difficulty to Akikos but operates in a different cuisine register entirely (Italian-influenced contemporary). If you want a tasting-format meal from a kitchen with strong critical momentum and don't want to compete for a reservation months out, Akikos is currently the most accessible option at this recognition level.
For pure cuisine comparison, Saison and Lazy Bear are the relevant benchmarks for experience quality and price positioning in the progressive American format — but neither overlaps with Akikos on cuisine. If your priority is sushi specifically, Akikos is the strongest OAD-credentialed option in the city right now. The decision between Akikos and a room like Lazy Bear comes down to format preference: sushi counter versus progressive American tasting menu.
For a special occasion where cuisine matters less than overall experience caliber, Benu is the highest-credential option in San Francisco but demands the most planning. Akikos is the call if you want comparable recognition, a sushi-specific format, and a booking you can secure in the near term rather than months ahead.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 11:30 am–1:30 pm, 5:30–8:30 pm
- Wednesday
- 11:30 am–1:30 pm, 5:30–8:30 pm
- Thursday
- 11:30 am–1:30 pm, 5:30–8:30 pm
- Friday
- 11:30 am–1:30 pm, 5:30–8:30 pm
- Saturday
- 5:30–8:30 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore San Francisco
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