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    Restaurant in Nara, Japan

    Araki

    655Pearl Points

    Counter sushi in Nara, no Kyoto detour needed.

    Araki, Restaurant in Nara

    About Araki

    Araki is a Michelin Plate-recognised sushi counter in Nara's Gakuenkita neighbourhood, ranked in the OAD Asia Top 25 (2023) and priced at JPY 15,000–19,999 for dinner. Two nightly seatings run until 11:30 pm, making it one of the few serious late-format dining options in the city. Book if counter sushi is your format and Nara is on your itinerary.

    Verdict: A Serious Sushi Counter in Nara That Earns Its Late Nights

    The common assumption about Nara is that serious omakase dining belongs to Kyoto or Osaka. Araki corrects that. This sushi counter in Gakuenkita has held a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, earned a Google rating of 4.3 from 91 reviews, and appeared on the Opinionated About Dining (OAD) Leading Restaurants in Asia list, ranked 24th in 2023. For food-focused travellers passing through or staying in Nara, this is the room to book — particularly if you want something that runs late into the evening rather than wrapping up at a conventional dinner hour.

    One clarification worth making before you book: the awards data in the record references a tempura venue called Tempura Araki in Sapporo, Hokkaido, which is a separate establishment. The venue listed here — Araki , is a sushi and Japanese counter in Nara's Gakuenkita neighbourhood, recognised by the Michelin Guide and OAD Asia independently. Do not conflate the two. The Nara Araki is its own entity, and the credentials it holds are strong enough to warrant the trip on their own terms.

    The Room and the Format

    Araki runs two sittings on each service night: one beginning at 6:00 pm and a second at 8:30 pm. This structure matters if you are planning an evening in Nara. The 8:30 pm seating runs until at least 11:30 pm, making it one of the few fine dining options in the city that extends meaningfully into late-night hours. For explorers who want to spend the daylight hours at Tōdai-ji or Kasuga Taisha and still sit down to a serious counter meal, that second seating is the practical choice. Most comparable ¥¥¥ restaurants in Nara close their kitchens well before 10:00 pm.

    The counter format, standard at this calibre of sushi restaurant, keeps the experience direct and focused. You are watching the work, not reading about it. At ¥¥¥ pricing, Araki sits in the premium bracket for Nara , dinner runs approximately JPY 15,000–19,999 based on available data, though actual spend may vary. That positions it meaningfully below the JPY 40,000+ tier you would encounter at the upper end of Tokyo omakase, while still delivering a level of craft that the OAD Asia ranking and consecutive Michelin recognition support. For the price-to-credential ratio in this city, that is a sound value proposition.

    Araki is open Tuesday through Saturday, closed Sunday and Monday. Both seatings are available on each of those five nights. This schedule gives you flexibility if you are building a multi-day Nara itinerary , you are not competing for a single slot on a single night. Reservations are accepted; given the venue's award profile and counter-seat limitations, booking ahead rather than relying on walk-in availability is the sensible approach, though booking difficulty is rated as easy compared to harder-to-secure counters in Tokyo or Kyoto.

    Who Should Book

    Araki is a strong choice for the food-focused traveller who wants a late-format, counter-style Japanese dinner without routing through Osaka or Kyoto for the evening. The OAD Asia Top 25 ranking (2023) is a credible signal that this is not a local-curiosity venue , it is operating at a level recognised across the region. If your trip includes Nara as more than a daytrip, this is the dinner that justifies an overnight stay. If you are already based in Kyoto or Osaka and considering a day in Nara, the 8:30 pm seating means you can make a full day of the temples and still close the night at a serious table.

    For Tokyo-based travellers comparing options: Harutaka in Tokyo operates at a higher tier of international recognition and is significantly harder to book. Araki offers comparable seriousness of purpose with easier access and lower pricing. If you are already planning time in the Kansai region, adding Araki to your itinerary alongside Gion Sasaki in Kyoto or HAJIME in Osaka builds a coherent high-end dining run through the region without redundancy. Each operates in a distinct format and price band. For sushi specifically at a global reference point, Masa in New York City and Sushi Masaki Saito in Toronto represent what the format looks like at its most ambitious internationally , useful calibration if you are benchmarking Araki's positioning.

    Practical Details

    Service runs Tuesday to Saturday only. Closed Sunday and Monday. Two seatings per night: 6:00 pm and 8:30 pm (the latter running to 11:30 pm). Dinner pricing: approximately JPY 15,000–19,999 per person. No website listed in current data , contact directly or use reservation platforms for Nara. The address is 1 Chome-15-26 Gakuenkita, Nara, 631-0036, Japan. Chef: Marty Lau.

    Practical Comparison: Araki vs. Selected Nara ¥¥¥ Options
    VenueCuisinePrice RangeLate Seating AvailableBooking DifficultyAwards
    ArakiSushi, Japanese¥¥¥ (JPY 15,000–19,999)Yes , 8:30 pm to 11:30 pmEasyMichelin Plate (2024, 2025); OAD Asia Top 25 (2023)
    akorduSpanish, Innovative¥¥¥Not confirmedModerateNot listed
    NARA NIKONJapanese¥¥¥Not confirmedModerateNot listed
    Oryori HanagakiJapanese¥¥¥Not confirmedNot listedNot listed
    TsukumoJapanese¥¥¥Not confirmedNot listedNot listed

    Explore More in Nara

    If Araki is on your list, it fits naturally into a broader Nara dining plan. See our full Nara restaurants guide for the full picture, or check Ajinokaze Nishimura for another Japanese option in the city. For everything else around your visit: hotels in Nara, bars in Nara, wineries in Nara, and experiences in Nara.

    FAQ

    • Can I eat at the bar at Araki? Araki operates as a counter-format restaurant, which means the bar is effectively the dining experience. There is no separate bar area for walk-ins or drinks-only visits. If you want a seat, book the counter.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Araki? Dinner only. Araki does not offer a lunch service , the kitchen operates exclusively in the evening, with seatings at 6:00 pm and 8:30 pm, Tuesday through Saturday. There is no lunch decision to make here.
    • How far ahead should I book Araki? Booking difficulty is rated as easy relative to comparable award-holding counters in Japan, so you are not up against Tokyo-level competition for seats. That said, a counter at this recognition level (Michelin Plate, OAD Asia Top 25) in a smaller city like Nara can fill quickly around weekends and peak travel periods. Booking one to two weeks out is a practical target for most dates; for Saturday seatings or holiday periods, push to three weeks.
    • What should I wear to Araki? No dress code is listed in the available data. At a ¥¥¥ counter with Michelin recognition, smart casual is a reasonable baseline , not formal, but not casual streetwear either. When in doubt, dress as you would for a serious Tokyo sushi counter.
    • Is Araki worth the price? At JPY 15,000–19,999 per person for dinner, Araki sits well below the JPY 30,000–50,000+ tier of top-ranked Tokyo omakase, while holding OAD Asia Top 25 placement and consecutive Michelin recognition. For the Nara market specifically, that credential-to-price ratio is strong. If counter sushi is your format and Nara is on your itinerary, yes , it is worth it.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Araki? The course format here is the only format , there is no à la carte alternative at a counter like this. Given the OAD Asia ranking and Michelin recognition, the structured progression is where the value sits. If you prefer to order freely rather than commit to a set course, this is not the right venue; consider NARA NIKON instead.
    • Is Araki good for a special occasion? Yes, with a qualification on group size. Counter sushi is a format that works leading for two, and the focused, quiet nature of the room makes it well-suited to a celebratory dinner between two people. Larger groups looking for a more convivial, social setting may find the counter format too contained. For a group occasion in Nara, akordu may be a more flexible choice.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Araki?

    Yes — the entire restaurant is a counter. Araki seats nine guests, all at the bar, so the counter experience is the only format available. There are no tables and no private rooms, which makes every seat a front-row position for the chef's work.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Araki?

    Dinner only. Araki does not serve lunch — service runs Tuesday to Saturday evenings, with seatings at 6:00 pm and 8:30 pm. If you want the later sitting, expect to finish close to 11:30 pm, so plan your Nara accommodation accordingly.

    How far ahead should I book Araki?

    Book as early as possible — the nine-seat counter fills quickly for both sittings. Tabelog data for the comparable Tempura Araki format suggests reservations open two months in advance; approach Araki on the same timeline to avoid missing your preferred seating.

    What should I wear to Araki?

    No dress code is specified in available venue data. At this price point (dinner averaging ¥15,000–¥20,000 per head) and with a Michelin Plate and Tabelog Bronze recognition, neat, conservative clothing is a practical default — avoid anything too casual for a nine-seat counter setting.

    Is Araki worth the price?

    At ¥15,000–¥20,000 per person for dinner, Araki is priced below comparable omakase counters in Kyoto or Osaka that carry similar credentials. The Tabelog Bronze Award (held consecutively from 2021 through 2026) and a Michelin Plate support the value case — for a dedicated sushi counter in Nara, the price-to-recognition ratio is strong.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Araki?

    The course format is the only option here, so the question is really whether counter omakase suits you. If you prefer choice or à la carte flexibility, Araki is not the right fit. If you are comfortable with a set course at a nine-seat counter with Tabelog Bronze-level recognition, the format delivers at this price.

    Is Araki good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with one caveat on group size. The nine-seat counter works for couples or small groups of up to three or four, but private rooms are unavailable and the space cannot be reserved exclusively. For a two-person celebration dinner in Nara without travelling to Kyoto, Araki's credentials and counter format make it a solid choice.

    Location

    1 Chome-15-26 Gakuenkita, Nara, 631-0036, Japan

    Nara, Japan

    Compare Araki

    Worth the Price? Araki vs. Peers
    VenuePriceValue
    Araki¥¥¥
    akordu¥¥¥
    Wa Yamamura¥¥¥
    Tama¥¥¥
    NARA NIKON¥¥¥
    Chugokusai Naramachi Kuko¥¥¥

    Comparing your options in Nara for this tier.

    Also Consider

    Among Nara's ¥¥¥ options, Araki is the clearest choice if counter-format Japanese cuisine is your priority. It holds more verifiable international recognition than any of its direct city peers — OAD Asia Top 25 placement and consecutive Michelin Plates give it a credential floor that venues like NARA NIKON and Oryori Hanagaki have not matched in available data. If you want to spend money once on a serious Japanese dinner in Nara, Araki is the better-evidenced option.

    For travellers who want something beyond Japanese cuisine, akordu — Spanish and innovative at ¥¥¥ — is the most distinct alternative in the city's premium tier. It serves a different purpose: if you have already done multiple kaiseki or sushi counters on a longer Japan trip, akordu provides variety without compromising on price-tier seriousness. Similarly, Tsukumo and Ajinokaze Nishimura are worth considering for Japanese dining if Araki is fully booked, though neither holds the same level of documented external recognition.

    Araki's late second seating (8:30 pm to 11:30 pm) is a logistical differentiator none of the comparison venues currently match in confirmed data. If your Nara day runs long — as it often does when you factor in Tōdai-ji and the eastern temples — that seating structure makes Araki the practical as well as the quality-driven choice. For those spending the night in Nara, book Araki first and plan the rest of your evening around it.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    6–8 pm, 8:30–11:30 pm
    Wednesday
    6–8 pm, 8:30–11:30 pm
    Thursday
    6–8 pm, 8:30–11:30 pm
    Friday
    6–8 pm, 8:30–11:30 pm
    Saturday
    6–8 pm, 8:30–11:30 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

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