Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Hayato
2,105Pearl PointsBook early or miss LA's hardest reservation.

About Hayato
Hayato is the most coveted reservation in Los Angeles: a seven-seat kaiseki counter in Row DTLA where chef Brandon Hayato Go cooks directly in front of guests and narrates every course. Two Michelin stars, ranked #2 by the LA Times and #10 in North America by OAD. Near-impossible to book, but worth pursuing for a serious special occasion.
The Verdict
Hayato is the most coveted dinner reservation in Los Angeles, and the credentials back that claim: two Michelin stars, ranked #2 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024, and #10 in North America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025. If you can secure a seat at this seven-seat kaiseki counter in Row DTLA, book it without hesitation. The service philosophy here is the central reason to pay the price of admission — chef Brandon Hayato Go cooks in front of you, explains every ingredient as he works, and treats the meal as a sustained conversation rather than a transaction. That model either justifies the cost entirely or means nothing to you depending on how much the human dimension of dining matters. For most guests at this level of spending, it justifies everything.
About Hayato
Picture arriving at a small counter inside Row DTLA on a Wednesday evening. The kitchen is open, the room seats seven, and the scent of charcoal and dashi signals that something deliberate is already underway. Before the first course arrives, Brandon Hayato Go is already talking — about where the fish came from, why a particular variety of onion needed ninety minutes over hot embers rather than sixty, what the floating bits of junsai plant in the broth are doing there. This is not ambient hospitality. It is the entire point of the restaurant, and it is why Hayato sits in a different category from nearly every other expensive dinner in Los Angeles.
The service model at Hayato is inseparable from the food, which is the reason the price holds up under scrutiny. Go prepares each course in full view of the counter and narrates the provenance and seasonality of each ingredient throughout the evening. His sake selection is described in the awards record as vast, with some bottles rarely seen outside his dining room, and his knowledge of the list is reportedly as deep as the list itself. For a special occasion dinner , an anniversary, a milestone birthday, a business meal where the conversation genuinely matters , this format delivers more substance per hour than any comparable room in the city. The counter also creates an unexpected social dynamic: by mid-evening, according to the public record, strangers at the seven seats often merge into something resembling a single party, trading reservation war stories and sharing pours. That outcome is not accidental. It is a product of the scale and the format.
The food is kaiseki, meaning a multi-course progression built around seasonal ingredients and traditional Japanese technique. The awards record references dishes like kinmedai golden eye snapper prepared to preserve skin texture while softening the flesh, and grilled shiro amadai served with dashi and junsai plant. These are specific, technically demanding preparations, not decorative ones. The level of attention Go applies to each element , the ninety-minute ember treatment of onion petals is the example most frequently cited in public records , reads as the kind of obsessive precision that earns two Michelin stars and stays there across multiple years. Hayato has held two stars since at least 2024 and appeared in the Opinionated About Dining North America top 13 for three consecutive years (2023, 2024, and 2025, climbing to #10 in the most recent edition).
For the right diner, this is the clearest case in Los Angeles for spending at the leading of the price range. The format rewards guests who want to understand what they are eating, who value direct engagement with the cook, and who are celebrating something worth the investment. It is a poor fit if you prefer a more anonymous dining experience, if the kaiseki format feels too structured, or if you are hoping to split the evening between dinner and a bar crawl , the counter runs until 10:30 PM and the meal is the event.
Compare Hayato to n/naka, the other Los Angeles reference point for serious Japanese fine dining: n/naka is more formally Italian-kaiseki in its approach and seats more guests, which makes it marginally easier to book and slightly less intimate. Hayato's seven-seat format makes the counter rarer and the experience more direct. For Japanese fine dining in a global context, the closest analogues are in Tokyo , venues like Myojaku and Azabu Kadowaki operate in the same register of intimate, chef-driven precision , but Hayato holds its own against that comparison with a track record that is now documented across multiple award cycles.
Booking is near impossible in any conventional sense. Reservations open at the start of each month and sell out before most diners can complete the process. The waitlist is the practical entry point for most guests. If you are planning a specific occasion, build in lead time of at least one to two months and treat the waitlist as your primary strategy. The restaurant operates Wednesday through Sunday, evenings only, which limits the available slots further. For special occasion planning, treat this like booking a table at The French Laundry in Napa or Alinea in Chicago , it requires advance planning and some flexibility on date.
Hayato sits at 1320 E 7th St #126 in Row DTLA, a mixed-use development in Downtown Los Angeles. The address puts it close to other serious dining in the area, and for guests building a full Los Angeles itinerary, the full Los Angeles restaurants guide covers the broader field. Nearby Japanese options worth knowing include Bar Sawa and IMA. For a wider evening in the area, the Los Angeles bars guide and Los Angeles hotels guide are useful starting points.
Know Before You Go
More to Explore in Los Angeles
- n/naka , Japanese fine dining, a key Hayato comparison
- Bar Sawa , Japanese, Downtown LA
- IMA , Japanese, Los Angeles
- Hinoki & The Bird , Japanese-inspired, Los Angeles
- 715 , Los Angeles
- Our full Los Angeles restaurants guide
- Our full Los Angeles hotels guide
- Our full Los Angeles bars guide
- Our full Los Angeles wineries guide
- Our full Los Angeles experiences guide
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Hayato?
There is no ordering at Hayato. The format is a set multi-course kaiseki meal determined by chef Brandon Hayato Go, built around seasonal and market-driven ingredients. Your only decision is whether to add sake pairings, which is worth considering given that Go's selection includes bottles rarely found outside his dining room.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Hayato?
Yes, if kaiseki is your format and you can secure a seat. Two Michelin stars, a top-10 ranking on Opinionated About Dining's North America list, and the #2 spot on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024 all point in the same direction. The value case rests on the full service model: an open counter, seven seats, and a chef who narrates every course. If you want a la carte or a larger group setting, this is not the right room.
Can Hayato accommodate groups?
The entire restaurant is a seven-seat counter, so the hard ceiling is seven guests, and that would effectively mean buying out the room. In practice, most bookings are for parties of two. If you need to seat more than four, check the venue's official channels to understand whether a full buyout is possible — don't assume it is.
Is lunch or dinner better at Hayato?
Hayato does not serve lunch. The restaurant operates Wednesday through Sunday, evenings only, with service from 6:30 PM. Wednesday through Sunday are your only options, and the format is identical each night — a single seating of the chef's multi-course kaiseki menu.
How far ahead should I book Hayato?
Slots open at the start of the month and sell out almost immediately, so same-month booking is not realistic for most diners. Get on the waitlist as early as possible and treat cancellations as your main route in. The difficulty here is closer to The French Laundry or Lazy Bear than to a standard two-Michelin-star restaurant — plan accordingly.
Location
1320 E 7th St #126, Los Angeles, CA 90021
Los Angeles, United States
Compare Hayato
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hayato | Japanese | $$$$ | Near Impossible |
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Camphor | French-Asian, French | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Gwen | New American, Steakhouse | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Holbox | Mexican Seafood, Mexican | $$ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Los Angeles for this tier.
Also Consider
- Kato — New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
- Vespertine — Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
- Camphor — French-Asian, French, $$$$
- Gwen — New American, Steakhouse, $$$$
- Holbox — Mexican Seafood, Mexican, $$
How Hayato Compares
At the top of the Los Angeles fine dining tier, Hayato and Kato are the two most decorated options, but they serve fundamentally different purposes. Kato's New Taiwanese format is more flexible in pacing and more accessible in booking terms; Hayato's seven-seat kaiseki counter is stricter in format and harder to secure, but the chef-to-guest interaction at Hayato is more direct and sustained. If the specific experience of a chef explaining every element of your meal matters to you, Hayato is the clearer choice. If you want technical precision with slightly more flexibility on timing and group size, Kato is the practical alternative.
Vespertine operates in a similar price bracket with an avant-garde progressive format that prioritises atmosphere and concept over conversational service. It is the right choice if experiential theatre is the goal; Hayato is the right choice if the food and the chef's direct engagement are the priority. Camphor offers French-Asian fine dining at the same price point with considerably better booking availability and a broader group-size suitability — a sensible option if you cannot get into Hayato or prefer a more conventional service style. Gwen serves the same price tier for guests whose priority is a premium steakhouse experience rather than Japanese fine dining.
If budget is the variable and you are willing to trade down on the formal dining experience, Holbox is a fraction of the price with a serious culinary reputation in its own register — a $$ Mexican seafood counter that punches well above its price point. It does not compete with Hayato on format or occasion suitability, but for a meal that rewards attention to ingredient quality without the kaiseki commitment, it is worth knowing.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- 6:30–10:30 pm
- Thursday
- 6:30–10:30 pm
- Friday
- 6:30–10:30 pm
- Saturday
- 6:30–10:30 pm
- Sunday
- 6:30–10:30 pm
Recognized By
Explore Los Angeles
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