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    Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan

    HYÈNE

    290pts

    Female-led fusion; book before word spreads.

    HYÈNE, Restaurant in Tokyo

    About HYÈNE

    HYÈNE is a Michelin Plate-recognised restaurant in Shibuya's Jingumae, where chef Yoko Kimoto fuses Japanese, Korean, and French culinary traditions in a converted old house. At ¥¥¥ pricing and rated 4.6 on Google, it is one of Tokyo's better-value options for a special occasion dinner — intimate, quiet, and genuinely personal in a city where those qualities cost more elsewhere.

    HYÈNE, Shibuya: Worth Booking?

    If you have visited HYÈNE once and are weighing a return, the short answer is yes — the format rewards repeat visits more than most restaurants at this price tier. Chef Yoko Kimoto's fusion of Japanese, Korean, and French culinary traditions is not a fixed menu you exhaust in a single sitting. Each visit recalibrates slightly depending on what Kimoto is working through creatively, and the dining room in a converted old house in Jingumae holds up as a setting for a special evening. For first-timers, this is a Michelin Plate recipient in both 2024 and 2025, rated 4.6 across 74 Google reviews, and priced at ¥¥¥ — a meaningful step below the ¥¥¥¥ tier that dominates Tokyo's fine-dining conversation. That positioning is part of why it is worth your attention.

    The Experience

    The atmosphere at HYÈNE reads as intimate and considered rather than formal. The old-house setting in a residential pocket of Shibuya's Jingumae district gives the room a warmth that purpose-built dining rooms in Tokyo's hotel restaurants rarely achieve. Sound levels stay low enough for conversation across the table , a genuine advantage if this is a date night, a business dinner, or a celebratory meal where the talking matters as much as the food. It is not a room that pulses or hums with energy; it is quiet and deliberate, which either suits you or it does not. If you are after the kind of low-lit, high-energy Tokyo night that starts with cocktails and builds to something louder, this is not that venue. If you want a room where you can actually hear your guest, this is a reliable choice in a city where ambient noise is increasingly a problem.

    The restaurant's name carries a specific intent. Kimoto has cited an affinity with hyenas , animals often misread, led by females, and essential to the ecosystems they inhabit. That framing is more than a naming exercise; it shows up in how the restaurant positions itself relative to the Tokyo dining establishment. This is not a venue chasing the kaiseki canon or the French fine-dining template. The Japanese-Korean-French combination Kimoto works with reflects her own cultural background and a stated commitment to diversity as a guiding principle. Whether that philosophy translates into something compelling on the plate is what earns or loses the Michelin Plate year after year, and it has held that recognition for two consecutive years, which is a meaningful indicator at this price point.

    Timing Your Visit

    Weekday evenings are the right call for HYÈNE. The Jingumae address puts you close to Omotesando's weekend foot traffic, and a quieter weekday arrival lets the room settle into the pace it is designed for. There is no seasonal data in the public record to suggest a specific time of year outperforms another, but as a rule for restaurants of this type in Tokyo, avoiding Golden Week and the Obon period in August reduces the chance of disrupted service rhythms. For a special occasion dinner , anniversary, birthday, a business meal with someone you want to impress , book a Tuesday or Wednesday evening and arrive at the start of service.

    A Note on Takeout and Delivery

    HYÈNE is a venue where the room and the experience are load-bearing parts of what you are paying for. The old-house setting, the quiet atmosphere, and the format of Kimoto's cooking are not designed to translate off-premise. There is no public record of takeout or delivery service, and the nature of the cuisine , contemporary fusion tasting formats rarely survive a journey , means this is not a restaurant to approach with delivery in mind. If you need a high-quality meal from Shibuya's Jingumae area that travels well, this is the wrong category. Book a table or do not book at all.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how HYÈNE sits against Tokyo peers including RyuGin, L'Effervescence, Florilège, and others.

    Know Before You Go

    • Price tier: ¥¥¥ , below the ¥¥¥¥ ceiling of most comparable Tokyo fine-dining
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024, Michelin Plate 2025
    • Google rating: 4.6 from 74 reviews
    • Address: 5 Chome-13-14 Jingumae, Shibuya, Tokyo 150-0001
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , no extended lead time required at current demand levels
    • Leading for: Special occasions, date dinners, business meals where conversation matters
    • Not ideal for: Large groups, walk-in impulse visits, takeout or delivery
    • Nearest area: Jingumae, walkable from Omotesando

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What should I wear to HYÈNE? Smart casual is the sensible call. At ¥¥¥ pricing with Michelin Plate recognition, HYÈNE occupies a tier where guests are expected to make some effort, but the converted old-house setting and Kimoto's stated ethos around inclusion suggest this is not a venue that enforces a strict dress code. Avoid activewear; a neat, put-together look is enough. For a special occasion dinner, treat it like a mid-tier European fine-dining room rather than a Tokyo hotel restaurant.
    • How far ahead should I book HYÈNE? Booking difficulty is rated easy at current demand levels, which means you are unlikely to need more than a week or two of lead time on most weeknights. That said, if you are planning around a specific date , an anniversary or a birthday , book two to three weeks out to hold your preferred evening. The Michelin Plate recognition in consecutive years (2024 and 2025) and a 4.6 Google rating across 74 reviews suggest demand is building, so earlier is always safer.
    • What should I order at HYÈNE? Specific dishes are not documented in the public record, so naming a dish here would be speculation. What the award context tells you is that Kimoto's Japanese-Korean-French fusion format has passed Michelin scrutiny twice, which means the cooking is consistent enough to trust. The safest approach at a restaurant with this profile is to follow the chef's menu rather than attempting to build a custom order. Let the format do the work.
    • Is HYÈNE good for a special occasion? Yes, with some caveats. The intimate old-house setting, low ambient noise, and ¥¥¥ price point make it a strong choice for a date dinner or a birthday celebration where you want a personal, non-corporate atmosphere. It is a better fit for two people than a large group. If you need a private room or guaranteed separation from other diners for a sensitive business meal, confirm capacity details directly before booking, as seat count is not in the public record. Compared to ¥¥¥¥ options like RyuGin or L'Effervescence, HYÈNE offers a more personal register at lower cost.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at HYÈNE? At ¥¥¥ pricing with two consecutive Michelin Plate awards, the value case is direct relative to Tokyo's ¥¥¥¥ tasting menu circuit. You are not paying Michelin-star rates, but you are getting a format that has been recognised for creative ambition , a Japanese-Korean-French synthesis that is harder to find elsewhere in the city. If you are comparing purely on price-to-recognition ratio, HYÈNE competes well. If you want the full Tokyo tasting menu prestige experience, RyuGin or L'Effervescence will deliver more ceremony at higher cost. HYÈNE is the choice when you want something personal and cross-cultural rather than classical.

    More Tokyo Dining

    HYÈNE sits in a wider Tokyo contemporary dining scene worth knowing. For Japanese-leaning creative cooking, consider hakunei, nôl, FUSOU, JULIA, and KIBUN. For a broader look at the city's restaurant options, see our full Tokyo restaurants guide. Planning beyond Tokyo? HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa are worth your time depending on itinerary. For comparable contemporary cooking in other markets, see Jungsik in Seoul and César in New York City. For hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in the city, see our Tokyo hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    Compare HYÈNE

    HYÈNE Side-by-Side
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    HYÈNEContemporaryCreative cuisine fusing Japanese, Korean and French culinary traditions is infused with the passion of Yoko Kimoto, a chef with both Japanese and Korean DNA. The restaurant’s name is a reference to the vital role the hyena plays in its ecosystem: Kimoto feels an affinity with hyenas, which are led by the females. In this old house, Kimoto offers an experience that mixes new values and cultures through people and cuisine, respecting the principle of diversity and inclusion.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)Easy
    HarutakaSushiMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    RyuGinKaiseki, JapaneseMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    L'EffervescenceFrenchMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    HOMMAGEInnovtive French, FrenchMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    FlorilègeFrenchMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Comparing your options in Tokyo for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to HYÈNE?

    The old-house setting and intimate scale of HYÈNE suggest polished casual rather than formal attire. A blazer or neat separates will fit without feeling overdressed. The room is personal and considered, so anything you would wear to a serious dinner at a friend's home translates well here.

    How far ahead should I book HYÈNE?

    Book at least three to four weeks ahead for weekday evenings, which are the practical sweet spot given the venue's proximity to Omotesando's weekend crowds. HYÈNE holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, and awareness of chef Yoko Kimoto's Japanese-Korean-French format is growing — seats at a 12-person-scale intimate house like this fill faster than the address might suggest.

    What should I order at HYÈNE?

    Specific menu items are not published in available records, but the format is built around chef Yoko Kimoto's integration of Japanese, Korean and French culinary traditions. Trust the kitchen's selection rather than arriving with specific expectations; the concept is explicitly experience-driven and guided by Kimoto's own cultural perspective.

    Is HYÈNE good for a special occasion?

    Yes, specifically for occasions where the story behind the meal matters as much as the food itself. Chef Yoko Kimoto's personal framing around diversity, female leadership and cross-cultural identity gives HYÈNE a distinct character that most ¥¥¥ Tokyo contemporaries lack. For a large group celebration, check capacity first — the old-house format skews intimate and may not accommodate parties above six comfortably.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at HYÈNE?

    At ¥¥¥ pricing with consecutive Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, HYÈNE delivers reasonable value for a guided, chef-led format rooted in a genuinely distinct culinary identity. If you want à la carte flexibility, peer options like L'Effervescence or Florilège offer more established track records at comparable price points. HYÈNE is the stronger call if the personal, cross-cultural angle of Kimoto's cooking is specifically what you are after.

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