Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Asanebo
350ptsSerious Japanese cuisine, no downtown markup.

About Asanebo
Asanebo in Studio City is one of the most consistently recognised sushi destinations in Los Angeles, holding an OAD Top 289 ranking in North America (2025) and a Michelin Plate for two consecutive years. At $$$$ per head, it delivers serious Japanese cuisine in a deliberately low-key room. Book three to six weeks out — seats move fast and walk-ins are not a reliable option.
Should You Book Asanebo?
If you're weighing Asanebo against the newer omakase counters that have opened across Los Angeles in the past few years, the comparison cuts quickly in Asanebo's favour for one reason: consistency. Nozawa Bar is harder to get into and carries more buzz, and Sushi Kaneyoshi draws the downtown crowd, but Asanebo has held a position on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in North America list across three consecutive years (2023, 2024, 2025), climbing from Highly Recommended to a ranked #289 in 2025. That kind of sustained recognition is evidence, not marketing. Book it if high-end sushi in a low-key San Fernando Valley setting appeals — and read on if you want to know the conditions under which it earns its $$$$ price point.
The Room and the Experience
Asanebo sits on Ventura Boulevard in Studio City, which immediately tells you something about its register: this is not a downtown showroom designed to photograph well on Instagram. The space is quiet and deliberately scaled down, which works strongly in its favour if you're looking for a dinner where the food gets your full attention rather than the room. For diners coming from the Westside or downtown, the Valley location is a genuine commitment — plan for it. That said, it's exactly the kind of place that rewards the drive, and the low-profile setting is part of why it has maintained a loyal local following for years. Expect an intimate environment with the focused, unhurried pace that defines serious Japanese dining at this tier.
Chef Tetsuya Nakao leads the kitchen. The $$$$ price bracket puts Asanebo in the same spend tier as Hayato in downtown LA and, nationally, closer to the range you'd associate with destinations like The French Laundry in Napa or Masa in New York City , though Asanebo's per-head spend sits below both of those. The 4.6 Google rating across 321 reviews confirms this isn't a one-visit wonder with fading momentum.
Timing and When to Go
Asanebo is open Tuesday through Sunday, 5–10 pm (closed Mondays). For a first visit, Tuesday or Wednesday evenings give you the leading conditions: the room is less likely to be at full capacity, service pace tends to be more relaxed, and you're less likely to be competing with weekend walk-in hopefuls. Friday and Saturday evenings fill fastest, and given the booking difficulty at this level, those are the nights where advance reservations matter most. There's no seasonal menu data in the public record, but as a general rule for Japanese restaurants at this calibre, late autumn and winter months are when cold-water fish quality peaks , worth factoring in if you have flexibility on timing. If you're travelling to Los Angeles specifically for this dinner, build in a weeknight option rather than defaulting to Saturday.
On Takeout and Delivery
This is worth addressing directly because the editorial angle matters here: Asanebo is not a venue you should consider for off-premise dining. The entire value proposition of a $$$$ omakase experience depends on the counter, the pacing, the temperature of each course, and the direct interaction with the kitchen. Sushi at this level loses fundamental qualities the moment it travels , rice temperature and texture, neta condition, and the moment-by-moment calibration that a live omakase provides are inseparable from the in-room experience. If you're looking for high-quality Japanese food that travels well in Los Angeles, that's a different category entirely. For the full Asanebo experience, you need to be in the room. Anyone suggesting otherwise is describing a different restaurant.
By comparison, Morihiro and Shin Sushi operate in adjacent territory in terms of Japanese cuisine quality, but at a price point and format that may be more flexible for different occasions. Q Sushi downtown is another point of comparison for the serious sushi diner in LA.
Booking
Booking difficulty is rated Hard. At a venue with three years of OAD recognition and a Michelin Plate, seats move quickly. Book a minimum of three to four weeks ahead for a midweek table; for Friday or Saturday, push that to six weeks. If you're visiting from out of town and have a specific date, book the moment your travel is confirmed. Walk-in availability is not something to plan around at this tier.
Practical Comparison: Asanebo vs. Peers in Los Angeles
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty | Location | Notable Recognition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asanebo | Sushi / Japanese | $$$$ | Hard | Studio City | OAD Top 289 (2025), Michelin Plate |
| Hayato | Japanese | $$$$ | Very Hard | Downtown LA | Michelin Star |
| Nozawa Bar | Sushi | $$$$ | Very Hard | Beverly Hills | High-profile omakase counter |
| Sushi Kaneyoshi | Sushi / Japanese | $$$$ | Hard | Downtown LA | Michelin Star |
| Kato | New Taiwanese / Asian | $$$$ | Hard | West LA | Michelin Star, James Beard nominee |
For broader planning across the city, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide. For serious sushi dining beyond LA, Sushi Masaki Saito in Toronto and Masa in New York City are the North American benchmarks at the leading of the range. Other high-calibre tasting-format destinations nationally include Alinea in Chicago, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Le Bernardin in New York City, and Emeril's in New Orleans.
The Verdict
Asanebo earns its $$$$ price point for the diner who wants serious Japanese cuisine without the downtown theatre. Three consecutive years of OAD recognition, a Michelin Plate, and a 4.6 rating over 321 Google reviews make the case clearly. Go on a Tuesday or Wednesday if you can, book well in advance, and go in person , there is no off-premise version of this experience worth having.
FAQs
What are alternatives to Asanebo in Los Angeles?
The closest alternatives at the same price tier are Sushi Kaneyoshi and Nozawa Bar for sushi-focused omakase, both Michelin-recognised. Hayato is the option if you want kaiseki rather than sushi-led omakase, and it holds a Michelin Star. Morihiro and Shin Sushi are worth considering if you want serious Japanese cuisine at a slightly less pressured booking window. For a different format entirely at the same price tier, Kato offers the strongest Taiwanese-inflected tasting menu in the city.
How far ahead should I book Asanebo?
Three to four weeks minimum for a midweek table; six weeks for Friday or Saturday. Booking difficulty is rated Hard, and three years of OAD recognition plus a Michelin Plate means seats at this venue don't stay open long. If you're travelling from out of town, book the moment your dates are fixed. Don't rely on walk-ins.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Asanebo?
Yes, with the right expectations. The $$$$ price bracket is justified by sustained critical recognition , OAD Top 289 in North America in 2025, Michelin Plate for two consecutive years, and a strong Google rating across a meaningful number of reviews. It delivers more consistency than many newer omakase counters in LA. If you're comparing it against the absolute ceiling of North American sushi dining (Masa in New York, for instance), Asanebo is positioned well below that spend level while still operating at a serious standard. The value case is solid for what it is.
What should a first-timer know about Asanebo?
The location in Studio City on Ventura Boulevard is deliberate and low-key , don't expect a high-design showroom. The room rewards your full attention on the food. Budget for $$$$ per head, arrive on time (omakase pacing is not flexible), and book well in advance. A weeknight visit for your first time is the better call: the pace is more relaxed and you'll get more from the experience than on a crowded Friday. Dress is smart casual at this tier; nothing in the database specifies a dress code, but the formality of the cuisine suggests you calibrate accordingly.
Can I eat at the bar at Asanebo?
Seat count and specific seating configuration are not confirmed in the available data for Asanebo. At venues operating at this price and recognition tier in the LA sushi category, counter seating is common and often preferred , it puts you directly in front of the kitchen. Contact the venue directly to ask about counter availability when booking, especially if you're a party of one or two where counter seats are typically easier to secure than a full table.
Compare Asanebo
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Asanebo in Los Angeles?
Hayato in Downtown LA is the closest peer for precision Japanese cuisine at a similar price point, but it requires planning months ahead rather than weeks. Kato offers a more contemporary, LA-inflected tasting format if strict Japanese tradition isn't the priority. For something more theatrical at $$$$, Vespertine is a different category entirely — it's a concept-driven experience, not a sushi counter. Asanebo is the call if you want OAD-recognised Japanese cooking in a lower-friction setting than downtown venues demand.
How far ahead should I book Asanebo?
Book three to four weeks out as a baseline. Asanebo has held OAD Top North America recognition for three consecutive years through 2025, which keeps demand steady. Weeknight slots — Tuesday through Thursday — open up more reliably than Friday or Saturday. Don't assume a last-minute spot will materialise; at this tier, it rarely does.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Asanebo?
At $$$$, it earns the price if serious Japanese cuisine is the format you're after. Three years of OAD Top North America placement and a Michelin Plate through 2024 and 2025 confirm it's operating at a consistent level, not coasting on reputation. If you're comparing value against downtown omakase counters with higher profile and higher price, Asanebo tends to deliver comparable quality without the venue premium. If you want a la carte flexibility, it's not the right fit.
What should a first-timer know about Asanebo?
Asanebo sits on Ventura Boulevard in Studio City — it's a neighbourhood restaurant in register, not a showroom built for social media. Chef Tetsuya Nakao has maintained the kitchen's standard across multiple years of independent critical recognition, so expectations should be set around focused, precise Japanese cooking rather than elaborate theatre. Come on a Tuesday or Wednesday evening for the most settled experience. Dress accordingly for a $$$$, critically recognised room.
Can I eat at the bar at Asanebo?
Bar seating availability is not confirmed in current venue data, so don't plan your visit around it. Call ahead to ask — the restaurant operates Tuesday through Sunday, 5–10 pm, and direct contact is the only reliable way to confirm seating options. At a venue with hard booking difficulty, assuming walk-in or bar access at this price point is a risk not worth taking.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–10 pm
- Tuesday
- 5–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 5–10 pm
- Thursday
- 5–10 pm
- Friday
- 5–10 pm
- Saturday
- 5–10 pm
- Sunday
- 5–10 pm
Recognized By
Similar venues by awards
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