Restaurant in Seoul, South Korea
HANE
450Pearl PointsGangnam's focused sushi counter. Book now.

About HANE
HANE is a Michelin-starred sushi counter in Gangnam built around seasonal sourcing and Chef Choi Ju-yong's ingredient-led approach. At ₩₩₩₩, it delivers a quiet, focused alternative to Seoul's louder fine-dining rooms. Book well ahead — this is a hard reservation that will only get harder as recognition grows.
Book HANE Before the Word Spreads Further
If you are looking for a seat at one of Gangnam's most focused sushi counters, the time to act is now. HANE holds a Michelin 1 Star (2024) and sits at ₩₩₩₩ pricing, which puts it squarely in Seoul's upper tier — but it has not yet attracted the same wait times as Tokyo benchmarks like Harutaka or Hong Kong's Sushi Shikon. That gap will close. Book as far ahead as your calendar allows, and if you are returning for a second visit, request the most intimate seating arrangement available — the atmosphere shifts considerably depending on where you sit.
What HANE Is
HANE is a fine-dining sushi restaurant in Gangnam District, operating under the direction of Chef Choi Ju-yong. The kitchen philosophy centres on ingredient sourcing and seasonal produce: each piece of sushi is built around the natural character of the fish or produce rather than layered technique for its own sake. The dining room is described as an elegant space using modern interpretations of traditional materials, which in practice means the atmosphere reads quieter and more considered than the flashier Gangnam dining rooms nearby. The energy here is low and deliberate. If you are coming from a louder contemporary Korean restaurant like Jungsik or a high-energy tasting menu at Mingles, HANE will feel like a different register entirely , more like a conversation than a performance.
That atmosphere is part of the value here. The room does not compete with the food. Noise levels stay low, which makes HANE a practical choice for business dining or any occasion where the table conversation matters as much as what is on the plate. For Seoul's sushi category specifically, this kind of dedicated quiet is not guaranteed at ₩₩₩₩ price points.
Private and Group Dining at HANE
The private or group experience at HANE deserves specific attention, because the venue's format and philosophy make it better suited to small, focused parties than to large celebratory groups. The emphasis on seasonal ingredients and the chef's attention to how each dish is served means the experience rewards diners who are paying close attention. A private dining arrangement here, if available, would be significantly more valuable than the equivalent at a restaurant where the kitchen is cooking for volume. For two people, this is a strong option. For a small group where everyone at the table is genuinely interested in sushi at this level, it works well. For larger parties looking for a celebratory atmosphere with wine pairings, ambient energy, and variety, a venue like alla prima or Kwonsooksoo may serve the group dynamic better.
If you are planning a special occasion at HANE specifically , an anniversary, a client dinner, a milestone meal , the low-noise, high-focus environment is a genuine advantage. You are not fighting the room. The formality of the space is present but not intimidating, which keeps the evening relaxed without becoming casual. Contact the restaurant directly when booking to confirm any private seating arrangements and to communicate the nature of your occasion.
What a Return Visitor Should Know
If you have already eaten at HANE once, the question on a second visit is whether to push further into the seasonal menu or to compare across Seoul's sushi category before returning. Seoul's sushi offering at this level is still developing relative to Tokyo, so HANE's Michelin recognition carries real weight locally. For context, Seoul's Sosuheon approaches traditional Korean fine dining from a similarly ingredient-led position, and the comparison is worth making if you want to understand what HANE is doing within a broader Seoul fine-dining context rather than purely within the sushi category.
On a second visit, ask about what is in season and let that drive your choices rather than defaulting to the same order. Chef Choi's stated approach is to let natural ingredients lead, which means the menu will shift across the year. A winter visit and a summer visit should feel meaningfully different. This is not a kitchen building a fixed greatest-hits menu , the seasonal logic is the point.
Practical Details
HANE is located at 13 Eonju-ro 172-gil in Gangnam District, Seoul. Gangnam is well-served by Seoul Metro Line 9 (Sinnonhyeon station) and Line 2/Sinbundang Line (Gangnam station). Taxis and ride-share apps work reliably in this area at any hour. The restaurant is priced at ₩₩₩₩, which in Seoul's fine-dining context signals a serious meal , expect to budget accordingly for a full omakase or tasting experience. Booking is hard: this is a Michelin-starred counter with limited seats, and demand will only increase as HANE's recognition grows. There is no phone or website listed publicly at time of writing , your leading approach is to search for current booking channels via the restaurant's name, check Korean dining platforms such as Catch Table or Naver Reservations, or ask your hotel concierge to assist. If you are staying in Seoul and want help across the full dining landscape, our full Seoul restaurants guide covers the category in detail. For broader Seoul planning, see also our Seoul hotels guide, bars guide, experiences guide, and wineries guide.
If you are travelling to South Korea beyond Seoul, the fine-dining scene extends further than most visitors expect: Mori in Busan and Double T Dining in Gangneung are worth noting if your itinerary extends to other regions. For more local options around the greater Seoul area, Doosoogobang in Suwon and Pool House in Incheon round out a regional picture that most visitors miss entirely.
Quick reference: Michelin 1 Star (2024) · ₩₩₩₩ · Gangnam District, Seoul · Booking: hard, use Korean reservation platforms or hotel concierge.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about HANE?
Come expecting a counter-format omakase built around seasonal ingredients and Chef Choi Ju-yong's philosophy of letting each product speak for itself. This is not a theatrical experience with elaborate tableside production — the focus is precision and ingredient integrity. HANE holds a Michelin 1 Star (2024), so standards are high and the room is likely small. Book well in advance and arrive with a clear appetite for fish-forward, ingredient-led sushi.
What are alternatives to HANE in Seoul?
For a Korean fine-dining angle with seasonal focus, Onjium is worth considering — it applies similar ingredient discipline to Korean cuisine rather than Japanese sushi. Solbam is a stronger comparison if you want high-end tasting menus in Gangnam at a similar price tier. Zero Complex suits diners who want a more contemporary, multi-course format. L'Amitié is the pick if French technique is preferable to sushi. 7th Door is relevant for wine-forward fine dining pairings rather than sushi-first meals.
Can I eat at the bar at HANE?
The venue's format — a fine-dining sushi counter in Gangnam — strongly implies a counter or bar-style seating arrangement is central to the experience, which is standard for restaurants of this type. However, specific seating configurations are not confirmed in available data, so check the venue's official channels to confirm counter availability before booking.
How far ahead should I book HANE?
Michelin 1 Star sushi counters in Gangnam at the ₩₩₩₩ price tier typically fill two to four weeks out, and HANE's profile is rising. Book at least three weeks ahead as a baseline; if you have a specific date in mind for a special occasion, push to four to six weeks. Specific booking policy details are not publicly documented, so check directly with the restaurant for current availability.
Is HANE good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. HANE is a Michelin-starred fine-dining sushi counter with an elegant space using modern interpretations of traditional materials — that combination of credential and atmosphere suits a meaningful dinner well. It works best as an intimate occasion for two or a small group comfortable with an omakase format. If you need a large private room or a more festive setting, other Gangnam options may serve better.
Is the tasting menu worth it at HANE?
At the ₩₩₩₩ price tier, the value case rests on Chef Choi Ju-yong's ingredient sourcing and the Michelin recognition that validates the kitchen's consistency. If you value seasonal, produce-driven sushi where the chef controls the sequence and pacing, this format delivers that. If you prefer à la carte flexibility or are not invested in omakase as a format, the price is harder to justify — Solbam or L'Amitié may offer a format that fits better.
Is HANE worth the price?
For sushi-focused diners, yes. A Michelin 1 Star (2024) at the ₩₩₩₩ tier in Gangnam is a credible exchange: you are paying for sourcing discipline, chef-led sequencing, and a refined room. It is not the cheapest Michelin option in Seoul, but it is more focused than broader tasting-menu restaurants at the same price. If sushi is not your priority format, Onjium or Solbam return more variety per won.
Location
13 Eonju-ro 172-gil, Gangnam District, Seoul, South Korea
Compare HANE
Also Consider
- 7th Door — Korean, Contemporary, ₩₩₩₩
- Solbam — Contemporary, ₩₩₩₩
- Onjium — Korean, ₩₩₩₩
- L'Amitié — French, ₩₩₩
- Zero Complex — Korean-French, Innovative, ₩₩₩₩
Within Seoul's ₩₩₩₩ tier, HANE is the clearest choice if sushi specifically is your goal. Its Michelin 1 Star puts it on a level with 7th Door and Solbam in terms of recognition, but the format is narrower and more precise. If you want a broad contemporary Korean tasting menu with more variety across courses, 7th Door or Solbam will serve you better. HANE's value is in depth of focus, not range.
For traditional Korean fine dining at the same price point, Onjium is the comparison that matters most — it is the Seoul reference for heritage-led Korean cuisine, while HANE anchors the Japanese-influenced end of the same tier. These are complementary experiences worth doing on the same trip rather than choosing between. If budget is a factor, L'Amitié at ₩₩₩ offers serious French technique at a lower entry price and is easier to book. Zero Complex sits at ₩₩₩₩ with a Korean-French innovative approach and tends to attract a more social, energetic crowd — a better pick if the evening's atmosphere matters as much as the food.
On booking difficulty, all five venues in this tier require advance planning. HANE and 7th Door are the hardest to secure at short notice. L'Amitié is comparatively accessible. If you are building a Seoul itinerary and can only lock in one seat at this level, HANE earns the booking for anyone prioritising sushi — but if your dining priorities are broader, start with Onjium or Solbam and treat HANE as the specialist add-on for a second visit.
Recognized By
Explore Seoul
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