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    Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan

    Crony

    1,830Pearl Points

    Two stars, prix fixe, book early.

    Crony, Restaurant in Tokyo

    About Crony

    Two Michelin stars and #30 on Asia's 50 Best (2025) place Crony among Tokyo's most credentialled innovative French restaurants. Chef Michihiro Haruta's prix fixe menu operates from a glass-walled Higashi-Azabu townhouse with a sustainability-first philosophy. Booking is near impossible without significant advance planning — treat this as the anchor of your Tokyo itinerary, not an afterthought.

    Two Michelin stars, a #30 ranking on Asia's 50 Best (2025), and a dining room inside a glass-walled renovated townhouse in Higashi-Azabu: Crony is one of Tokyo's most credentialled innovative French restaurants, and it earns that status on its own terms.

    If you have eaten here once and are weighing a return, the answer is yes — but go in knowing what you are committing to. Crony operates on a prix fixe format, booking is close to impossible without significant lead time, and the experience is designed around a specific philosophy: simplicity, sustainability, and the quiet pleasure of eating with people who care deeply about where food comes from. That is not marketing language. It is the architecture of every meal served here.

    The Setting and What It Delivers

    The restaurant occupies a detached, glass-walled house across from a park in Minato City. Ascend the stairs beside the kitchen and you arrive in a dining room with a Scandinavian interior — clean lines, houseplants, light that feels considered rather than designed. This is not the stripped-back minimalism common to Tokyo's high-end dining rooms. The space reads warmer, more inhabited. For returning guests, that familiarity is part of the appeal: Crony does not perform luxury, it practices hospitality.

    The name itself signals intent. Crony translates loosely as a sustainable tea-drinking friend , a close circle connecting guests, kitchen staff, and producers. The meal begins with tea in season, a detail that sets the tempo before any food arrives. Chef Michihiro Haruta and sommelier Kazutaka Ozawa opened here in December 2016 with that philosophy already in place. Nearly a decade in, the kitchen has not drifted from it.

    What the Counter Adds

    Positioning of the kitchen relative to the dining room at Crony is not incidental. The stairs run adjacent to the kitchen, meaning arrival involves passing through the engine of the meal rather than being insulated from it. Both service staff and kitchen staff bring dishes to the table , a deliberate structural choice that collapses the distance between cook and guest. For a returning diner, this is where the experience deepens. You are not just repeating a meal; you are re-entering a working relationship. The format rewards familiarity. You notice things on a second visit that registered as atmosphere on the first: the precision of plating, the restraint of seasoning, the way vegetables carry weight in dishes without dominating them.

    Chef Haruta's cooking places vegetables in supporting roles alongside meat and fish , a harder balance to strike than either a fully plant-forward or conventionally protein-led menu. The result, in the kitchen's own framing, is food that is simple yet original. That is a credible claim for a two-star restaurant ranked 30th in Asia. For the returning guest, the question is whether the simplicity still surprises. Based on the sustained critical consensus , two Michelin stars held through 2024 and 2025, a climb from #308 to #227 on Opinionated About Dining's Japan rankings in a single year , it does.

    Sustainability as Practice, Not Positioning

    Crony's sustainability commitment runs across sourcing, waste reduction, staff relationships, and supplier partnerships. This is not a certification or a menu section. It is the operating logic of the kitchen. For guests who have been once, understanding this on a return visit changes how the meal reads. The restraint in the cooking is connected to the restraint in the supply chain. Dishes are not elaborate because elaboration would obscure the ingredient; they are precise because precision is how you honour what a producer grew or raised. That coherence , between philosophy and plate , is part of what justifies the ¥¥¥¥ price point.

    Ratings and Recognition

    • Michelin: 2 Stars (2024 and 2025)
    • World's 50 Best , Asia's 50 Best Restaurants: #30 (2025)
    • Opinionated About Dining , Leading Restaurants in Japan: #227 (2025), #308 (2024), Highly Recommended (2023)
    • Google: 4.6 from 217 reviews

    The trajectory on OAD is telling. Moving from Highly Recommended to #308 to #227 over three years is not noise , it is a kitchen gaining consistent recognition from a peer-voting panel that skews toward industry insiders. Combined with the 50 Best placement, Crony is operating at a level that puts it in direct conversation with the top tier of Tokyo's non-Japanese fine dining.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how Crony sits against L'Effervescence, RyuGin, HOMMAGE, and others in the ¥¥¥¥ Tokyo bracket.

    Know Before You Go

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 1 Chome-20-3 Higashiazabu, Minato City, Tokyo 106-0044
    • Neighbourhood: Higashi-Azabu, Minato City , a quiet, residential pocket of Tokyo well away from tourist circuits
    • Price tier: ¥¥¥¥ (prix fixe format; budget accordingly for beverages and wine pairing)
    • Format: Prix fixe only; meal opens with tea in season
    • Booking difficulty: Near impossible without significant advance planning , see FAQ below
    • Setting: Glass-walled detached house; Scandinavian-influenced dining room; houseplants, warm tones
    • Service model: Both kitchen and service staff deliver dishes to the table
    • Awards: 2 Michelin Stars (2025); Asia's 50 Best #30 (2025)
    • Google rating: 4.6 / 5 (217 reviews)
    • Phone / Website: Not publicly listed , book via specialist reservation services or your hotel concierge

    Explore More in Tokyo and Beyond

    Crony sits at the serious end of Tokyo's innovative French category. If you are building a full itinerary, our full Tokyo restaurants guide covers the breadth of the city's dining. For where to stay, see our Tokyo hotels guide. For drinks, our Tokyo bars guide has the options worth your time.

    If your trip extends beyond Tokyo, the same level of creative ambition shows up at HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, akordu in Nara, and Goh in Fukuoka. For something further afield, 1000 in Yokohama and 6 in Okinawa are worth considering on a longer Japan circuit.

    For global reference points in the innovative tasting-menu category, Atomix in New York City offers the closest structural parallel in terms of philosophy and format. Le Bernardin is the benchmark for French technique at this price level in the US market.

    FAQ

    • Is Crony worth the price? Yes, if you are eating at Tokyo's ¥¥¥¥ tier specifically for creative, philosophy-driven cooking. Two Michelin stars and a #30 Asia's 50 Best ranking in 2025 are not arbitrary , they reflect a kitchen operating with consistent technical and conceptual clarity. The comparison to weigh is L'Effervescence, which occupies a similar French-in-Tokyo lane at the same price tier. Crony edges ahead on sustainability credentials and 50 Best recognition; L'Effervescence may offer a slightly more approachable booking window. If you are spending at this level for a single meal, Crony justifies it.
    • Is Crony good for solo dining? The format , prix fixe, kitchen-adjacent arrival, staff bringing dishes directly to the table , works well for solo diners. You are not penalised for eating alone; the service model means interaction is built into the meal rather than dependent on table conversation. Tokyo's top-end tasting menus generally accommodate solos better than their Western equivalents, and Crony's Scandinavian-inflected room and relatively intimate scale make it a comfortable solo booking. That said, confirm availability when reserving: small dining rooms at this level sometimes hold limited solo seats.
    • How far ahead should I book Crony? Booking difficulty is rated near impossible. For a two-Michelin-star restaurant ranked #30 in Asia, expect a minimum of 4–8 weeks advance notice under the leading conditions , and considerably longer for prime Friday or Saturday slots. Your leading options are a specialist Japan reservation service, a well-connected hotel concierge, or monitoring for cancellations. Walk-ins are not a realistic strategy at this level. If Crony is the anchor of your trip, lock the date before booking flights.
    • Does Crony handle dietary restrictions? The kitchen's philosophy centres on simplicity and sustainability, with vegetables in supporting roles alongside meat and fish. The prix fixe format means the menu is set in advance, so dietary restrictions need to be communicated at the time of booking , not on arrival. No specific allergy or dietary policy is listed in publicly available data. Given the format and the language barrier that may apply, use your reservation intermediary (concierge, booking service) to communicate requirements clearly and in advance.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Crony? No specific pricing difference between lunch and dinner is confirmed in available data, but at Tokyo's two-star level, lunch seatings typically offer the same menu at a lower price , making them the sharper value option. If Crony follows that pattern, lunch is the better entry point for a first-timer or a returning guest watching spend. For the full evening pacing, the glass-walled setting and park-facing position likely read differently after dark. Given the booking difficulty, take whatever slot you can get , but ask specifically about lunch when reserving.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Crony worth the price?

    At ¥¥¥¥, Crony justifies the spend if a tightly structured prix fixe format suits you. Two Michelin stars held since 2024 and a #30 ranking on Asia's 50 Best (2025) are not decorative — the credentials reflect consistent execution. If you want à la carte flexibility at this price level, look elsewhere; Crony is built around the prix fixe experience and the sustainability-driven sourcing that defines it.

    Is Crony good for solo dining?

    Crony is a reasonable solo option: the glass-walled townhouse setting and counter-adjacent arrival route make it less isolating than a traditional formal dining room. The prix fixe format removes menu anxiety, which works in a solo diner's favour. That said, the restaurant's philosophy centres on a communal 'circle of guests' ethos, so the experience tends to reward those who engage with the staff and the story behind each course.

    How far ahead should I book Crony?

    Book at least four to six weeks out. A two-Michelin-star restaurant ranked #30 on Asia's 50 Best (2025) in central Tokyo draws serious demand from both local and international diners. Last-minute availability does occasionally open up, but planning well ahead is the only reliable strategy.

    Does Crony handle dietary restrictions?

    Crony's sourcing philosophy emphasises vegetables — sometimes in an entirely plant-forward format — alongside meat and fish, suggesting a degree of flexibility in the kitchen. That said, specific dietary accommodation details are not documented in available data, so check the venue's official channels when booking to confirm what the kitchen can adjust within the prix fixe structure.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Crony?

    Specific service differences between lunch and dinner are not confirmed in the available data. What is documented is a prix fixe structure that begins with seasonal tea, which frames both services similarly. The glass-walled dining room across from the park likely reads differently in daylight, which may make lunch the more distinctive visual experience — but confirm current service options directly when booking.

    Location

    1 Chome-20-3 Higashiazabu, Minato City, Tokyo 106-0044, Japan

    Tokyo, Japan

    Compare Crony

    Comparing Crony to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    CronyInnovative, French¥¥¥¥Opened in December 2016 by chef Michihiro Haruta and sommelier Kazutaka Ozawa Crony was born from their shared vision of combining culinary artistry with sustainable practices; Nestled within a renovated townhouse, the inviting, houseplant-adorned interior of two-Michelin-starred Crony eschews the typical minimalist of high-end Japanese restaurants. Chef Michihiro Haruta,...; A detached, glass-walled house stands across from a park; ascend the stairs adjacent to the kitchen and you reach a dining room with a Scandinavian interior. The prix fixe menu begins with tea in season. The restaurant’s name refers to ‘friends who will drink tea together always’, referring to the circle of guests, staff and food producers. The chef’s aim is to serve food that is simple yet original. Both service and kitchen staff bring the food to your table.; Crony means "sustainable tea-drinking friend", a close circle of friends connected as a team with extension to the regular supplier and guests visiting the restaurant. Sustainability is in the DNA here, ranging from local over, no food-waste, taking circular steps, respecting your employees & suppliers, etc... Chef Michihiro Haruta cooks with detail for beauty, minimalist, original and with perfection. Vegetables yes, sometimes 100%, but mostly in supporting roles with meat and fish.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Ranked #227 (2025); World's 50 Best Asia's Best Restaurants #30 (2025); Michelin 2 Stars (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Ranked #308 (2024); Michelin 2 Stars (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Highly Recommended (2023)Near Impossible
    HarutakaSushi¥¥¥¥Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    L'EffervescenceFrench¥¥¥¥Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    RyuGinKaiseki, Japanese¥¥¥¥Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    HOMMAGEInnovtive French, French¥¥¥¥Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    MAZInnovative¥¥¥¥Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    A quick look at how Crony measures up.

    Also Consider

    At the ¥¥¥¥ tier in Tokyo, Crony's closest direct comparison is L'Effervescence — both operate as French-influenced, philosophy-driven tasting menus with serious critical recognition. L'Effervescence has a longer track record and may offer a marginally easier booking window. Crony has the stronger current 50 Best position (#30 in Asia, 2025) and a more explicit sustainability framework built into the kitchen's operating logic. If the cooking philosophy matters to you as much as the food itself, Crony is the more coherent choice. If you want French technique in Tokyo with slightly less booking friction, L'Effervescence is the sensible alternative.

    Against RyuGin and Harutaka, the question is format. RyuGin is kaiseki at the same price level — a wholly different experience oriented around Japanese culinary tradition rather than French-inflected innovation. If you are choosing between them for a single high-end Tokyo meal, pick Crony for creative European cooking and RyuGin for the definitive Japanese tasting menu. Harutaka operates in the sushi omakase space — again, a different format entirely. These are not competing restaurants so much as different arguments for how to spend ¥¥¥¥ in Tokyo.

    HOMMAGE and MAZ sit in the same innovative French-adjacent bracket. HOMMAGE is the closest stylistic peer to Crony in terms of French technique applied with a Japanese sensibility. MAZ brings a Latin American perspective to the innovative tasting menu format — a more unusual choice if you want something further from the French canon. For returning Tokyo visitors who have already done Crony once, HOMMAGE is the logical next booking in the same category. For first-timers deciding between them, Crony's 50 Best ranking and OAD trajectory make it the higher-confidence pick. Also worth considering in the broader creative Tokyo dining conversation: Den for innovative Japanese at a slightly lower price point, and Sézanne for contemporary French with arguably more booking flexibility at a comparable tier.

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