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    Restaurant in Honolulu, United States

    Ginza Bairin

    200Pearl Points

    OAD-ranked katsu, easy to book.

    Ginza Bairin, Restaurant in Honolulu

    About Ginza Bairin

    Ginza Bairin has ranked on the Opinionated About Dining Casual North America list three years running, climbing to #496 in 2025 — a meaningful signal for a Japanese katsu spot on Beach Walk in Waikiki. Booking is easy, service runs lunch and dinner daily, and the kitchen rewards diners who treat it as a sit-down experience rather than a quick stop.

    Is Ginza Bairin Worth Booking for a Special Occasion in Honolulu?

    Yes — and it has been earning that answer for long enough to prove it. Ginza Bairin on Beach Walk is a Honolulu outpost of a Tokyo katsu institution, and it has ranked on the Opinionated About Dining (OAD) Casual North America list three consecutive years: Recommended in 2023, #606 in 2024, and climbing to #496 in 2025. That upward trajectory matters. OAD rankings are driven by frequent-diner votes, not press junkets, which makes three consecutive appearances a meaningful signal that this restaurant is holding and improving its standard.

    The energy inside is focused without being formal. This is a lunch counter and dinner room that takes its product seriously — the ambient feel is closer to a considered neighborhood spot than a tourist-facing beachside restaurant, which is exactly what makes it worth seeking out at 255 Beach Walk. The room rewards diners who are paying attention to what is on the plate, not looking for background noise and a view. If you want atmosphere-first dining in Honolulu, look elsewhere. If you want precision Japanese cooking in a setting that does not try too hard, this is a strong candidate.

    Lunch, Dinner, or Takeout: How to Approach Ginza Bairin

    Ginza Bairin runs the same split-service structure every day of the week: 11 am to 2:15 pm for lunch, then 4 to 9:15 pm for dinner. That midday break is intentional , it is the rhythm of a kitchen that prepares in batches rather than cooking through. For a special occasion dinner, the evening service gives you more time to settle in. For a lower-pressure visit , or if you are weighing whether the kitchen lives up to the OAD ranking before committing to a full dinner , the lunch window is worth using.

    On the question of takeout: katsu is among the formats that travel better than most Japanese cooking. The breaded cutlet holds texture for longer than raw fish preparations, and the accompanying rice and sauce components package cleanly. If you are considering Ginza Bairin for an off-premise occasion , a hotel room celebration, a beach picnic along the Waikiki strip, or a group gathering that does not need a seated service , the food is a reasonable candidate. That said, the full experience reads as a sit-down one: the sauces, the precise temperatures, and the room's quiet attentiveness all contribute to what OAD voters are rewarding. Takeout is a viable option, but it is not where this kitchen is at its leading.

    Booking and Practical Logistics

    Booking difficulty at Ginza Bairin is rated Easy. You do not need to plan weeks ahead to secure a table, which is a meaningful advantage over comparable Japanese dining in Honolulu. For a special occasion or celebration dinner, booking a day or two in advance is sensible rather than strictly necessary , but do not leave it until the day of for a group.

    How Ginza Bairin Compares on Logistics

    VenueCuisineBooking DifficultyOAD / Award StatusLeading For
    Ginza BairinJapanese (Katsu)EasyOAD Casual #496 (2025)Focused Japanese dining, celebration lunch or dinner
    ZiguJapaneseModerate, Japanese omakase-adjacent experience
    FêteNew AmericanModerate, Creative tasting menus, date nights
    Musubi Cafe IyasumeJapanese casualEasy, Quick, affordable Japanese comfort food

    What the OAD Ranking Actually Tells You

    Three consecutive OAD Casual North America appearances , and a jump of 110 positions between 2024 and 2025 , is the clearest external validation Ginza Bairin has. OAD's casual list is compiled from restaurant-industry insiders and experienced diners, so a ranking at #496 in a continent-wide field places Ginza Bairin in a competitive tier that most Honolulu restaurants do not reach. For context on what that level of recognition means in a broader American fine-dining framework, venues like Le Bernardin in New York City and The French Laundry in Napa operate at the leading of OAD's fine-dining lists , Ginza Bairin is earning its recognition in a different tier, but the evaluative rigour of OAD's process is the same.

    Chef Roy Ogasawara leads the kitchen. No further biographical detail is available in our data, but the consistent OAD improvement across three years points to a kitchen with stable leadership and a clear point of view on what it is making.

    Pearl's Take

    Book Ginza Bairin for a celebration lunch or dinner when you want Japanese cooking that has been independently vetted and does not require weeks of advance planning. It is accessible in terms of booking without being a compromise on quality. For visitors exploring the full Honolulu dining picture, it fits alongside stops like Fujiyama Texas for something more casual, or Arancino at The Kahala if you want Italian in a hotel setting. You can find the wider picture in our full Honolulu restaurants guide, and plan around the city with our Honolulu hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    FAQ: Ginza Bairin, Honolulu

    • Can Ginza Bairin accommodate groups? Small groups of 2 to 4 are the most practical fit. Ginza Bairin does not publish a group booking policy in our data, so call ahead for parties larger than 4. The Beach Walk address in Waikiki is accessible, but the room's setup suggests it is built around the individual dining experience rather than large-party logistics.
    • How far ahead should I book Ginza Bairin? Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so same-week reservations are realistic for most nights. For a specific occasion , anniversary dinner, birthday, or a Friday or Saturday evening , booking 2 to 3 days ahead removes any uncertainty. The OAD #496 ranking means the room draws serious diners, so evenings can fill faster than the easy booking rating suggests for popular nights.
    • What should I wear to Ginza Bairin? No dress code is listed in our data. Given the Waikiki location and the OAD Casual classification, smart casual is the right call: clean, presentable, not a swimsuit cover-up. Honolulu's Japanese restaurants in this tier tend to be relaxed in dress while expecting guests to treat the meal seriously.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Ginza Bairin? Dinner is the better choice for a special occasion , the evening service at 4 pm to 9:15 pm gives the meal more time and less rush. Lunch, running 11 am to 2:15 pm, is the value play: you get the same kitchen and OAD-recognised cooking at what is typically a lower price point for midday service in Japanese restaurants. If budget is a factor, lunch is the call. For celebration framing, dinner wins.
    • What should a first-timer know about Ginza Bairin? Ginza Bairin is a Honolulu outpost of a Tokyo katsu tradition, now OAD-ranked for three consecutive years. Come for focused Japanese cooking , katsu is the format , rather than a wide-ranging Japanese menu. The Google rating of 4.3 across nearly 1,900 reviews confirms broad satisfaction, not just insider approval. First visit, go for dinner, keep your order focused, and treat it as a sit-down experience rather than a grab-and-go stop.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Ginza Bairin accommodate groups?

    Ginza Bairin is accessible daily for both lunch and dinner without requiring far-in-advance planning, which makes group coordination easier than at tighter-capacity spots. No group booking policy is documented in available venue data, so check the venue's official channels at 255 Beach Walk to confirm party size limits and seating arrangements before you arrive. For larger groups, calling ahead is the practical move given the split service format.

    How far ahead should I book Ginza Bairin?

    Booking difficulty here is rated Easy — you do not need to plan weeks out the way you would for Sushi Izakaya Gaku or comparable Honolulu spots with tighter reservation windows. A day or two ahead should be sufficient for most visits, though the OAD Casual North America #496 ranking (2025) means peak lunch hours can fill. Same-day availability is realistic outside weekends.

    What should I wear to Ginza Bairin?

    Ginza Bairin holds an OAD Casual North America ranking, which signals the format and atmosphere are relaxed rather than formal. Clean, comfortable clothes fit the context — this is a Beach Walk address in Waikiki, and the OAD 'Casual' designation means there is no evidence of a dress code. Overdressing would be out of place.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Ginza Bairin?

    Both services run the same hours every day of the week (11 am–2:15 pm and 4–9:15 pm), so the kitchen does not change format between sittings. Lunch is the practical call if you want to avoid the busier dinner window and keep the visit low-commitment. Dinner works better if you are pairing the meal with an evening in Waikiki, given the Beach Walk location.

    What should a first-timer know about Ginza Bairin?

    This is a Honolulu outpost of a Tokyo katsu institution, now ranked #496 on OAD Casual North America (2025) — a jump of 110 places from its 2024 position. Chef Roy Ogasawara leads the kitchen. Come expecting Japanese katsu as the core format, not a broad pan-Asian menu. Booking is easy, the split service runs daily, and the address is 255 Beach Walk — walkable from central Waikiki.

    Location

    255 Beach Walk, Honolulu, HI 96815

    Honolulu, United States

    Compare Ginza Bairin

    Recognized Venues: Ginza Bairin and Peers
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    Ginza BairinOpinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #496 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #606 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Recommended (2023)
    Fête
    Liliha Bakery
    Sushi Izakaya Gaku
    Miro Kaimuki
    Zigu

    Comparing your options in Honolulu for this tier.

    Also Consider

    For Japanese dining in Honolulu, Ginza Bairin sits in a distinct position: OAD-ranked, accessible to book, and focused on a specific format rather than trying to cover the full Japanese menu spectrum. Zigu is the closer comparison for diners who want serious Japanese cooking and are willing to work a little harder for a reservation. If refined Japanese execution in a more intimate setting is the priority, Zigu is worth considering alongside Ginza Bairin rather than instead of it.

    For a celebration dinner that steps outside Japanese cooking, Fête offers New American tasting-menu territory with more booking complexity and a higher price ceiling. Miro Kaimuki covers French-Japanese fusion in Kaimuki for diners who want a more destination-driven evening out of the Waikiki core. Neither replaces what Ginza Bairin does — they serve different occasions and different appetites.

    If you are comparing Ginza Bairin to the most casual end of Honolulu's Japanese scene, Sushi Izakaya Gaku gives you an izakaya format with broader menu range and a more social, louder room. Liliha Bakery is not a competitor in cuisine terms but is worth noting as a Honolulu institution for a different kind of low-key, high-satisfaction meal. The clearest booking decision: if you want OAD-vetted Japanese katsu in Waikiki with no booking headache, Ginza Bairin is the answer in this peer set.

    Hours

    Monday
    11 am–2:15 pm, 4–9:15 pm
    Tuesday
    11 am–2:15 pm, 4–9:15 pm
    Wednesday
    11 am–2:15 pm, 4–9:15 pm
    Thursday
    11 am–2:15 pm, 4–9:15 pm
    Friday
    11 am–2:15 pm, 4–9:15 pm
    Saturday
    11 am–2:15 pm, 4–9:15 pm
    Sunday
    11 am–2:15 pm, 4–9:15 pm

    Recognized By

    Explore Honolulu

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