Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
Ginza Fukuju
650ptsTwo Michelin stars. Secure a table first.

About Ginza Fukuju
Ginza Fukuju holds two consecutive Michelin stars (2024, 2025) for a reason: Chef Katsuhiro Onodera's restrained, Tohoku-rooted Japanese cooking is among the most focused in the city. At the ¥¥¥¥ price tier, the quiet Ginza room and composed service earn their place. Getting a table is near impossible — start planning six to eight weeks out, minimum.
Verdict
Ginza Fukuju earns its two Michelin stars — held consecutively in 2024 and 2025 — and if you can secure a table, you should. Chef Katsuhiro Onodera works with a deliberately narrow ingredient palette rooted in his Tohoku upbringing, and the result is Japanese cooking that feels specific rather than encyclopaedic. This is not the place for a wide-ranging kaiseki survey; it is the place to understand what restraint looks like at the highest level. Book it for a special occasion, for a solo meal where you want to think about what you are eating, or for a return visit after a first dinner somewhere more accessible. Do not expect it to be easy to get into.
The Experience
Ginza Fukuju sits on the fifth floor of a building in Ginza 8-chome, one of Tokyo's most concentrated blocks of serious dining. The room is quiet by Ginza standards. This is not a venue where energy radiates off the walls or where conversation competes with a curated playlist. The atmosphere is composed, deliberate, and calibrated to match the cooking. If you went once and found the stillness striking, expect more of the same on a return visit , it is a consistent character, not a variable one.
The service operates at the same register as the room: attentive without being theatrical, knowledgeable without being pedantic. At the ¥¥¥¥ price point, this is exactly what the format demands. Where some comparable Tokyo restaurants at this tier use visible service ritual to justify the bill, Fukuju relies on the cooking to carry the weight. Whether that trade-off works for you depends on whether you want to be performed at or simply fed very well. For most diners who have already visited once, the answer is the latter.
Onodera's creative starting point is Kesennuma, a coastal city in Miyagi Prefecture flanked by mountains and ocean. That geographic duality shows up directly in the menu: ingredients from both land and sea arrive in combinations that feel like they have been thought through over years rather than assembled for novelty. The awards text notes turban shell and bamboo shoot soup served in seashells as a seasonal spring greeting, and crab baked in the shell alongside hot pots described as simultaneously hearty and delicate. These are not decorative descriptions , they are the architecture of the menu. If you visited in a different season, a return visit in spring specifically is worth planning for, as the seasonal framing appears to be central to how the restaurant marks the calendar.
With a Google rating of 4.6 from 31 reviews, the sample size is small enough that individual outliers carry weight. What the rating does confirm is the absence of significant dissatisfaction at this level , guests who make it in tend to leave satisfied. That consistency aligns with the two-star Michelin assessment across consecutive years, which is a more reliable credential than any single review aggregate.
Booking
Getting a table at Ginza Fukuju is classified as near impossible. At the ¥¥¥¥ price tier with two consecutive Michelin stars and a profile that attracts both domestic and international diners, demand significantly outpaces availability. No booking method or phone number is publicly listed in the venue data. For international visitors, the most practical route is through a hotel concierge with established Tokyo relationships, or through a specialist reservation service. Start the process at minimum six to eight weeks out; for spring visits, when the seasonal menu is at its most distinctive, plan further ahead. Walk-in access is not a realistic option.
The address is Ginza 8-chome, 8-19, fifth floor, in Chuo City. Ginza is well-served by Tokyo's subway network, making arrival logistics the simplest part of the booking process.
Who Should Book
Return visitors to Tokyo who have already worked through the more accessible ¥¥¥¥ tier , venues like Myojaku or Kagurazaka Ishikawa , will find Fukuju a natural next step. It rewards diners who come with context: an understanding of seasonal Japanese cooking, an appreciation for minimalism, and patience with a format that does not explain itself. First-time visitors to Tokyo's high-end dining scene may be better served starting with Azabu Kadowaki or Jingumae Higuchi before returning to Fukuju on a subsequent trip.
Solo diners should consider Fukuju seriously. The quiet room, the ingredient-focused menu, and the absence of theatrical performance make it a better solo experience than many comparable venues. Groups work too, but the intimate atmosphere suits pairs and individuals more naturally than larger parties.
For broader Japan trip planning, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto and HAJIME in Osaka operate in an adjacent register and are worth considering alongside Fukuju if you are building a multi-city itinerary. See also Isshisoden Nakamura in Kyoto and Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama for comparable Japanese cooking in the Kansai region. Elsewhere in Japan, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa each offer high-level dining worth building a trip around.
For your full Tokyo planning, see our guides to Tokyo restaurants, Tokyo hotels, Tokyo bars, Tokyo wineries, and Tokyo experiences. For another serious kaiseki option, Kioicho Fukudaya is worth adding to your shortlist.
Compare Ginza Fukuju
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ginza Fukuju | Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Katsuhiro Onodera unearths exquisite flavours by combining the barest minimum of ingredients. The starting point for his creativity is his Tohoku hometown of Kesennuma, where he grew up surrounded by mountains on one side and ocean on the other. Turban shell and bamboo shoot soup, served in seashells, is a homegrown greeting to welcome the spring. Crab baked in the shell and hot pots are somehow hearty and delicate at the same time. The dishes engage all five senses, leaving lasting memories of what you ate.; Michelin 2 Stars (2025); Michelin 2 Stars (2024) | Near Impossible | — |
| Harutaka | Sushi | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| L'Effervescence | French | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| RyuGin | Kaiseki, Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| HOMMAGE | Innovtive French, French | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Crony | Innovative, French | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Tokyo for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Ginza Fukuju?
The venue has no publicly confirmed bar seating format. Given its fifth-floor Ginza location, two consecutive Michelin stars, and ¥¥¥¥ pricing, the setup is almost certainly a formal seated service rather than a counter walk-in. Treat it as reservation-only and plan accordingly.
What are alternatives to Ginza Fukuju in Tokyo?
If Fukuju's table is unavailable, Kagurazaka Ishikawa and Harutaka are credible ¥¥¥¥ alternatives with strong Michelin records and somewhat more accessible booking windows. RyuGin offers a similarly rigorous Japanese format with slightly higher international name recognition, which can actually make Fukuju feel more rewarding for repeat Tokyo visitors.
Is Ginza Fukuju good for solo dining?
Yes — the quiet room and ingredient-focused format that defines Chef Onodera's cooking rewards attentive solo diners more than group tables. At ¥¥¥¥, the per-head cost is the same regardless of party size, so solo is a straightforward choice if you can get the reservation.
What should I wear to Ginza Fukuju?
The venue's dress code is not publicly documented, but Ginza 8-chome context and two Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025 set a clear expectation: dressed-up is safe, casual is a risk. Business attire or its equivalent is a reasonable baseline for a ¥¥¥¥ Ginza room.
Is Ginza Fukuju good for a special occasion?
Yes, provided the occasion suits an intimate, restrained setting rather than a celebratory one. Chef Onodera's cooking — minimal ingredients, deep technique, rooted in Tohoku — creates a considered rather than festive atmosphere. If your group wants theatre or a buzzy room, look elsewhere; if the meal itself is the event, Fukuju holds up at the two-Michelin-star level.
Recognized By
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