Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
IRUCA TOKYO
250ptsBudget Michelin ramen worth planning around.

About IRUCA TOKYO
IRUCA TOKYO holds a 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand for ramen that combines clam, spiny lobster, chicken, and beef broths with flourishes like porcini-truffle paste and yuzu butter — serious ingredient ambition at the ¥ price tier. Rated 4.0 across 1,351 Google reviews, it is one of Roppongi's most disproportionately rewarding meals for the spend. Worth planning around, not just stumbling into.
Verdict
IRUCA TOKYO earns its 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand not by playing it safe with ramen conventions but by pushing the format further than most bowls in Roppongi dare to go. Clam, spiny lobster, free-range chicken, and beef combine into a soup with genuine depth, and the porcini-and-truffle paste variant of soy-sauce ramen is the kind of flourish that makes this a special-occasion stop rather than a quick lunch. At the ¥ price tier, it is one of the most disproportionately rewarding bowls in Tokyo for the spend. Book it for a solo counter seat, a date with appetite for something more considered than a standard tonkotsu, or any occasion where you want a Michelin-recognised meal without a four-figure bill.
About IRUCA TOKYO
Seats at IRUCA TOKYO are the constraint you need to plan around. The kitchen operates at a scale where bowls are made with real intention, not mass production, and that means the room fills. If you are visiting Roppongi with a ramen stop in mind, this is not a walk-in-whenever situation, particularly if you have a specific bowl in mind. Arriving early or checking reservation availability in advance is the sensible approach, and given the Bib Gourmand recognition it now carries, demand has only grown since the 2024 listing.
The flavour architecture here is what separates IRUCA TOKYO from the volume of ramen options in the city. The broth draws on multiple protein sources — clam for minerality, spiny lobster for sweetness and marine depth, free-range chicken for body, and beef for weight — combined in a way that produces something more layered than any single-base bowl. Paste made from porcini mushrooms and truffles can be added to the soy-sauce ramen, shifting the bowl from clean umami to something earthier and more complex mid-meal. The salt ramen takes a different direction: yuzu-flavoured butter introduced into the broth creates a creamy, citrus-lifted finish that is unusual in Tokyo's ramen scene without being gimmicky.
The name comes from the Japanese word for dolphin, chosen as a symbol of peace and a message of friendship across oceans. That framing is worth knowing because it explains the internationalist approach to the menu: ingredients and combinations here are not governed by what is traditional but by what produces the leading bowl. That is an editorial decision that shows up clearly in the food.
IRUCA TOKYO sits in Roppongi at 4 Chome-12-12, Minato City, putting it within reach of Roppongi's gallery district, hotels, and the broader Minato nightlife zone. For travellers already in that part of Tokyo, slotting this in as a lunch or dinner , or even a late-night bowl after a gallery visit , is logistically direct. If you are building a broader Tokyo itinerary around food, our full Tokyo restaurants guide covers the city's leading across every category, and our full Tokyo hotels guide can help if you are still planning where to base yourself.
Within Tokyo's Michelin Bib Gourmand ramen tier, IRUCA competes against serious kitchens. Chukasoba Ginza Hachigou and Chukasoba KOTETSU are both worth knowing in this category; IRUCA's differentiator is the ingredient ambition , the lobster and truffle elements are not standard in the Bib ramen field. Afuri is a useful reference for yuzu-inflected salt ramen, but operates at much higher volume and without the same ingredient specificity. Fuunji is the comparison for sheer intensity of tsukemen broth; IRUCA is more refined in flavour, if slightly less forceful. Chuogo Hanten Mita covers a different register entirely, so the overlap is minimal.
If you are travelling across Japan and building a serious dining list, the regional context matters: HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, and akordu in Nara sit at a very different price point and format, but for a multi-city trip that includes a Tokyo ramen anchor at the ¥ tier, IRUCA is the bowl to plan around. For ramen comparisons outside Japan, Akahoshi Ramen in Chicago and Afuri Ramen in Portland represent the US's most serious attempts at the format , neither matches the ingredient depth IRUCA brings at this price tier.
Google reviewers rate IRUCA TOKYO at 4.0 across 1,351 reviews, which at this volume is a reliable signal of consistent execution rather than outlier enthusiasm. The Michelin Bib Gourmand is the stronger credential: it confirms the kitchen is delivering quality at a price the inspectors considered disproportionately good value. For Tokyo, where ramen quality is genuinely competitive, that combination of volume and recognition puts IRUCA in a short list of bowls worth a deliberate visit rather than a convenient stop.
For more on Tokyo's food, drink, and stay options: our full Tokyo bars guide, our full Tokyo wineries guide, and our full Tokyo experiences guide cover the city across every category. If you are also planning stops in Fukuoka or Yokohama, Goh in Fukuoka and 1000 in Yokohama are worth your attention, and 6 in Okinawa is a standout if your itinerary stretches south.
Practical Details
Location: 4 Chome-12-12 Roppongi, Minato City, Tokyo 106-0032 Price: ¥ (budget-tier; one of Tokyo's most affordable Michelin-recognised bowls) Reservations: Booking in advance is advisable given Bib Gourmand recognition and limited seat count; walk-ins possible but not guaranteed Booking difficulty: Easy Dress: No formal dress code; casual is standard for the format Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 Google Rating: 4.0 (1,351 reviews)
How It Compares
Compare IRUCA TOKYO
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRUCA TOKYO | Ramen | The chef displays his originality in each bowl as he pursues a unique interpretation of ramen. Broths of clam, spiny lobster, free-range chicken and beef combine to create a soup of satisfying depth. Paste of porcini mushrooms and truffles switches up the flavour of soy-sauce ramen. Salt ramen is infused with yuzu flavoured butter to impart a creamy fragrance. ‘Iruca’ comes from the Japanese for ‘dolphin’, a symbol of peace and a message of friendship to spread across the oceans.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | Easy | — |
| 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
What should a first-timer know about IRUCA TOKYO?
Go in knowing this is a small-format kitchen in Roppongi where bowls are built with real intention — clam, spiny lobster, free-range chicken and beef broths combined for depth, with porcini and truffle paste available to shift the flavour profile of the soy-sauce ramen. It holds a 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand, meaning the kitchen delivers cooking the Guide considers worth a detour at a price that won't strain a budget. Hours and reservation policy are not publicly listed, so arriving early or checking current booking channels before you go is the practical move.
Does IRUCA TOKYO handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is built around multi-component broths — clam, spiny lobster, chicken and beef — so strict pescatarian, vegetarian or shellfish-free diners will find the options limited by design. Dietary accommodation details are not documented in available venue data, so check the venue's official channels before visiting if restrictions are a factor. For ramen with more flexible formats, venues like T's TanTan at Tokyo Station offer plant-based alternatives.
Can IRUCA TOKYO accommodate groups?
IRUCA TOKYO operates at small-kitchen scale, which typically means limited capacity and no private dining provision. Groups larger than four should verify seating availability before showing up, as the format favours individual diners and small parties. For larger groups looking for a Michelin-level Tokyo dining event, a full-service restaurant like RyuGin will be a more practical fit.
Is IRUCA TOKYO good for solo dining?
Yes — counter-style ramen shops at this scale are among the most natural formats for solo dining in Tokyo, and a ¥ price point means there's no pressure to commit to a multi-course spend. The 2024 Bib Gourmand recognition makes it a high-value solo stop in Roppongi, a neighbourhood where solo-friendly budget eating can otherwise be harder to find.
What should I order at IRUCA TOKYO?
The soy-sauce ramen with porcini and truffle paste is the bowl that signals the kitchen's ambition most clearly, shifting a familiar format into unexpected territory. The salt ramen with yuzu-flavoured butter is the lighter call, with a creamy, fragrant finish. Both are built on the same multi-component base broth, so either choice reflects the chef's approach — picking one depends on whether you want depth or brightness leading the bowl.
Recognized By
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