Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
AO
1,685Pearl PointsEight seats, Tabelog Gold, fish-forward tasting menu.

About AO
AO in Nishi-Azabu holds a Tabelog Gold Award (2023–2026) and scores 4.65, placing it among Tokyo's top innovative restaurants. The eight-seat counter serves fish-forward, French-influenced omakase at JPY 60,000–79,999 per head, dinner only, Tuesday to Saturday. Book via the OMAKASE platform; arrive on time, as simultaneous service means no course catch-ups.
Is AO worth booking in Tokyo?
Yes, and it sits near the leading of what Tokyo's innovative dining category can offer. AO in Nishi-Azabu holds a Tabelog Gold Award for 2025 and 2026, scores 4.65 on Tabelog, and ranks #58 on Opinionated About Dining's Japan list for 2025. For a restaurant that opened in January 2020, that award trajectory — Silver in 2021 and 2022, Gold every year since 2023 — tells you this is a place that has found its footing and held it. At JPY 60,000–79,999 per head for dinner, it is a serious commitment, but the credentials back it up. If you have already been once and are weighing whether to return or try somewhere else, the answer is to return: the format rewards repeat visits, and the fish-forward, wine-serious approach gives you more to notice the second time around.
The space and format
AO seats eight people at a counter, and that is the entire restaurant. There are no private rooms, no secondary tables, no overflow. The two seatings per evening (17:00 and 20:30, Tuesday through Saturday) mean you either have the counter to yourself or you are sharing it with seven strangers , both of which work, depending on your temperament. The physical format is close and deliberate: a counter-only room where everyone is served simultaneously, and arriving late means you miss courses. That policy is stated clearly in the booking terms, so treat the door-open time (16:45 for the first seating, 20:15 for the second) as your actual arrival target. The dress code is smart casual, perfume-free , the no-fragrance request is genuine, tied to the wine and food aromas the kitchen is calibrating for.
Seasonal timing and what it means for your visit
AO describes itself as particularly focused on fish, which makes the seasonal calendar relevant to your booking decision. Japanese fish cookery at this level is shaped by what is at peak in a given month: spring brings sea bream and surf clam; summer shifts toward ayu and young squid; autumn and winter are when fatty tuna, flounder, and seasonal shellfish are at their most interesting. If you are planning a visit around Japan's shoulder seasons , late autumn (October to November) or early spring (March to April) , those windows align well with the broadest range of premium fish. The wine program has a sommelier on-site and the database notes a particular focus on wine, so pairing alignment across a seasonal menu is a real feature here rather than an afterthought. For returning visitors specifically: if your first visit was in summer, a winter visit will feel like a different restaurant in meaningful ways.
Booking and practical details
Reservations are through the OMAKASE platform only , no walk-ins, no phone bookings for first-timers. The cancellation policy is strict: changes to date, time, or guest count trigger fees calculated from the moment you request the change, not from your original booking date. Book under your own name; the venue explicitly states that proxy bookings create problems. Credit cards (Visa, Mastercard, JCB, Amex, Diners) are accepted. A 10% service charge applies. No parking on-site. The nearest access point is Roppongi Station (Hibiya Line Exit 1c, approximately four minutes on foot). The entrance is on the second floor of a building on Roppongi Dori; use the white spiral staircase beside the ground-floor tenant.
AO vs. comparable Tokyo venues at a glance
| Venue | Cuisine | Price (dinner) | Seats | Booking route |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AO | Innovative / French | JPY 60,000–79,999 | 8 (counter) | OMAKASE platform |
| L'Effervescence | French | ¥¥¥¥ | Counter + tables | Restaurant direct |
| RyuGin | Kaiseki | ¥¥¥¥ | Counter + private | Restaurant direct |
| Crony | Innovative / French | ¥¥¥¥ | Small counter | Online reservation |
| HOMMAGE | Innovative French | ¥¥¥¥ | Small | Online reservation |
Who should book AO
AO is the right choice if you want fish-forward innovative cooking at the highest level Tokyo offers in that category, and you are comfortable with a fully counter-based, simultaneous-service format where timing is non-negotiable. It is a poor fit if you need flexibility , late arrivals, large groups, or private rooms are not options here. For a solo diner or a couple with real interest in seasonal Japanese produce and serious wine, this is about as focused an experience as the city offers at this price point. For context on other innovative dining options across Japan, HAJIME in Osaka and Gion Sasaki in Kyoto represent the same tier in different cities. Closer to Tokyo's own innovative scene, MAZ and Kabi offer comparable ambition at a lower price point, while Chiune and Hasegawa Minoru are worth considering if a slightly different format suits you better. See our full Tokyo restaurants guide for broader coverage of the city's dining options, or explore our Tokyo hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide for the full picture.
Frequently asked questions
- How far ahead should I book AO? Book at least four to six weeks out. AO's eight-seat counter and reservation-only policy via the OMAKASE platform means availability moves quickly, particularly for the 17:00 first seating on weekends. The cancellation policy is strict, so once you have a date, treat it as fixed.
- Is AO good for solo dining? Yes. The eight-seat counter format works well for solo diners , you are seated alongside other guests, the pacing is communal, and the wine program gives a sommelier reason to engage with you throughout. At JPY 60,000–79,999 per head it is a significant solo spend, but the format is genuinely solo-friendly in a way that table-service restaurants at this price often are not.
- What should a first-timer know about AO? Arrive on time , the restaurant serves all dishes simultaneously, and late arrivals miss earlier courses with no option to catch up. Smart casual dress, no perfume. Reservations are under your own name only. Budget for the 10% service charge on leading of the menu price. The cuisine is innovative and French-influenced with a strong fish focus, not a traditional kaiseki or sushi format.
- What are alternatives to AO in Tokyo? For innovative cooking at a similar price, Crony and HOMMAGE are the closest comparisons in Tokyo. For French technique without the innovative angle, L'Effervescence is the cleaner choice. If you want Japanese-rooted cooking at this tier, RyuGin offers kaiseki at a similar spend. Outside Tokyo, akordu in Nara and Goh in Fukuoka sit in the same innovative tier. For a regional comparison in Asia, Soigné in Seoul and alla prima in Seoul draw a similar crowd.
- What should I wear to AO? Smart casual is the stated dress code. AO specifically asks guests to avoid perfume or fragrance , this is a firm request, not a suggestion, tied to the wine and dish aromas. Men should avoid shorts and sandals.
- Can I eat at the bar at AO? The entire restaurant is a counter. All eight seats face the kitchen, so there is no distinction between bar seating and table seating , the counter is the experience. This is counter omakase-style service, not a bar where you can drop in for a drink.
- Does AO handle dietary restrictions? This is not confirmed in the available data. Given the simultaneous-service format and small team, dietary accommodations may be limited. Contact the restaurant directly via the OMAKASE booking platform before reserving, particularly for serious allergies or significant dietary requirements. The venue website is ao-nishiazabu.com.
- Can AO accommodate groups? The maximum party size for a regular seating is eight people , which is the entire counter. The venue lists private use as available for up to 20 people, which suggests buyout arrangements are possible. For a full buyout inquiry, contact the restaurant directly. Note there are no private rooms, so group bookings at the counter mean sharing the space with other diners unless you book the full venue. See also l' Equator if you need private room options at a comparable level in Tokyo, or check 1000 in Yokohama and 6 in Okinawa for innovative dining outside the capital.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book AO?
Book at least 6–8 weeks out, and plan for longer if you are targeting a specific seating. AO takes reservations through the OMAKASE platform only, no walk-ins or phone bookings for new guests. The cancellation policy is strict — changes to date, time, or party size trigger fees based on how far in advance you make the change, so confirm your plans before booking.
Is AO good for solo dining?
Yes, the counter format suits solo diners well. All eight seats are counter seats, so there is no awkward table arrangement for one, and the tasting menu format removes any ordering pressure. Budget JPY 60,000–79,999 for dinner plus a 10% service charge, and note that both seatings (17:00 and 20:30) run simultaneously for all guests — arriving late means missing earlier courses.
What should a first-timer know about AO?
AO runs two fixed seatings per evening (17:00 and 20:30, Tuesday through Saturday), and all guests at a seating are served in sync — late arrivals cannot receive earlier dishes. The restaurant holds Tabelog Gold in 2023, 2024, 2025, and 2026, and scored 4.65 on Tabelog in 2026, which places it among the most consistently rated innovative restaurants in Tokyo. The kitchen focuses on fish, so the menu shifts with seasonal availability.
What are alternatives to AO in Tokyo?
L'Effervescence is the closest alternative for innovative cooking with a European framework and comparable critical recognition. RyuGin offers Japanese haute cuisine with more theatrical presentation if you want stronger local ingredient storytelling. For a different price point in the innovative category, Crony in Tokyo runs a counter format at a lower spend per head. AO's fish focus and Tabelog Gold track record put it above most direct comparisons in its specific lane.
What should I wear to AO?
The restaurant explicitly requests smart casual attire and asks guests to avoid perfume or fragrances — the stated reason is that strong scents interfere with the aromas of the dishes and wines. This is a firmer ask than most Tokyo venues at this level make about fragrance, so factor it in when preparing for the evening.
Can I eat at the bar at AO?
There is no bar at AO — the entire restaurant is an 8-seat counter, and every seat is a dining seat. There is no casual walk-in bar option or abbreviated menu. If you want a seat, you book the full tasting menu through OMAKASE in advance.
Does AO handle dietary restrictions?
The venue database does not document a specific dietary restriction policy. Given the counter format and the kitchen's stated focus on fish, menus are structured around the chef's selection rather than à la carte substitution. check the venue's official channels via the OMAKASE reservation platform or by phone (+81-3-6434-9829) to discuss specific requirements before booking.
Location
Japan, 〒107-0061 Tokyo, Minato City, Kita-Aoyama, 3 Chome−10−13 FPG links OMOTESANDO B 棟2階
Tokyo, Japan
Compare AO
Also Consider
- Harutaka — Sushi, ¥¥¥¥
- L'Effervescence — French, ¥¥¥¥
- RyuGin — Kaiseki, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
- HOMMAGE — Innovtive French, French, ¥¥¥¥
- Crony — Innovative, French, ¥¥¥¥
AO's closest Tokyo comparisons in the innovative-French tier are Crony and HOMMAGE. All three operate small counters, use French technique on Japanese ingredients, and sit at the ¥¥¥¥ tier. AO distinguishes itself on award consistency — four consecutive Tabelog Gold wins and a La Liste score of 84 points in 2026 — and on the depth of its wine program, which has a dedicated sommelier and a particular focus on wine pairing. If wine is central to your evening, AO has a stronger infrastructure for it than most comparably sized Tokyo counters.
For French cooking without the innovative angle, L'Effervescence in Minami-Aoyama is the cleaner alternative: more seats, a slightly more relaxed pace, and a format that accommodates late arrivals more gracefully. If you want Japanese-rooted cooking at the same price tier, RyuGin offers kaiseki with a longer track record and private room options that AO cannot match. RyuGin is the better pick for group dinners or clients who need flexibility; AO is better for a focused two-person meal where the fish and wine are the point.
Harutaka is worth the comparison if you are deciding between innovative cuisine and premium sushi at this spend level. Harutaka is a more traditional counter experience with Edo-style sushi technique; AO applies French structure to similar Japanese fish sourcing. The choice comes down to format preference: composed courses with wine pairings (AO) versus nigiri sequence with sake (Harutaka). Both have Tabelog Gold-tier credentials. AO is harder to book on shorter notice, so if your Tokyo trip is within three weeks, check Harutaka availability first.
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