Restaurant in Kanazawa, Japan
Kataori
1,550ptsEight seats. Book months ahead. Worth it.

About Kataori
Kataori is a two-Michelin-starred kaiseki counter in Kanazawa, ranked number one in Japan by Opinionated About Dining in 2025 and a six-time Tabelog Gold Award winner. Eight seats, an 11-course omakase built around daily-sourced Hokuriku seafood, and a philosophy of restraint over spectacle. Budget JPY 60,000–79,999 per person all-in. Reservation-only; book as early as possible.
Is Kataori Worth Booking for a Trip to Kanazawa?
Yes, and it is one of the strongest arguments for visiting Kanazawa at all. Kataori holds two Michelin stars, a Tabelog score of 4.72, and six consecutive Tabelog Gold Awards (2021 through 2026). Opinionated About Dining ranked it the number-one restaurant in Japan for 2025. At JPY 40,000–49,999 per head (with actual spend averaging JPY 60,000–79,999 including drinks and the 10% service charge), this is a serious financial commitment — but the credential stack puts it in the same conversation as Gion Sasaki in Kyoto or HAJIME in Osaka, and the regional focus on Hokuriku ingredients gives it a specificity those venues cannot replicate.
The Counter Is the Whole Point
Kataori seats exactly eight people, all at a single counter. That constraint is not incidental — it defines the experience. Chef Takuya Kataori personally sources fresh fish and seafood from Hokuriku markets each day, then works through an 11-course omakase format built around what arrived that morning. From a counter seat, the logic of the menu becomes visible: you see the ingredients, you understand the sequencing, and the pacing feels calibrated to the room rather than to a kitchen operating at scale. The restaurant's described philosophy of “subtractive cooking” , pulling back technique to let the ingredient carry the course , reads most clearly from that vantage point.
Kataori is particularly noted for its winter snow crab preparations. If you are planning a visit primarily around that, the November-to-March window is the obvious target. The autumn matsutake mushroom season is also significant: the restaurant adjusts its evening opening to 18:00 during that period, so check before you book. The menu changes with the seasons throughout the year, which makes a second visit in a different season genuinely different, not merely incremental. For context on how seasonal kaiseki works at this level, compare the approach at Ifuki in Kyoto or Kikunoi in Tokyo.
The drink program leans into sake, with the restaurant flagging a particular focus on nihonshu. Wine is available, but if sake is your format, this is one of the better counters in Japan to explore Hokuriku producers alongside food. No perfume is permitted , a practical note worth filing before you arrive.
How Far Out Do You Need to Book?
Kataori is reservation-only, and despite its location away from Kyoto or Tokyo's main tourist circuits, the eight-seat counter fills well in advance , especially for the winter crab season and autumn matsutake period. Book as early as your travel dates allow. The restaurant does not have an official website, so reservations need to go through a third-party platform or directly by phone (+81-76-255-1446). Tabelog lists the booking as reservation-only with no walk-in option. The restaurant is about 15 minutes on foot from Kanazawa Station, or a 7-minute walk from the Hashibacho bus stop , manageable, but factor it into your evening logistics.
Wednesday and Sunday are the only days that include a lunch service (noon to 2:30 pm); all other days are dinner-only. If your schedule is tight, that narrows your options. Dinner runs in two seatings: 5:00–7:30 pm and 8:00–10:30 pm.
Practical Details
Eight counter seats. No private rooms, no private-hire option. Not family-friendly. Credit cards accepted (Visa, Mastercard, JCB, Amex, Diners). No electronic money or QR code payments. Fully non-smoking. No parking on site. Budget JPY 60,000–79,999 per person all-in, including the 10% service charge. No perfume.
Quick reference: 8-seat counter, JPY 60–79k all-in, reservation-only, dinner most nights, lunch Wed & Sun only.
How It Compares in Kanazawa
For kaiseki specifically in Kanazawa, the closest peer is Zeniya. Both operate at the leading of the city's Japanese cuisine category, but Kataori's counter format and the personal sourcing approach make it the more intimate of the two , better for a solo diner or a couple who want to be close to the cooking. Zeniya offers a more conventional dining room experience that may suit groups or diners who prefer not to be at a counter all evening.
If you want high-end dining in Kanazawa without the kaiseki commitment, Budoonomori Les Tonnelles offers a French alternative, while Hamagurizaka Maekawa delivers a focused yakitori experience at a meaningfully lower price point. For explorers who want to work through Kanazawa's full range, Kisanuki and Komatsu round out the Japanese cuisine tier. See our full Kanazawa restaurants guide for the complete picture, and our Kanazawa hotels guide if you are planning an overnight stay around the meal.
FAQs
Is lunch or dinner better at Kataori?
- Lunch is only available Wednesday and Sunday, at the same price as dinner (JPY 40,000–49,999 listed, JPY 60,000–79,999 average with drinks). Dinner gives you more scheduling flexibility since it runs six days a week in two seatings. If your Kanazawa itinerary is flexible, a Wednesday or Sunday lunch slot is slightly easier to win than peak winter-season dinner slots, but the omakase format and pricing are equivalent.
Is Kataori good for a special occasion?
- Yes, with conditions. The two-Michelin-star credential, the OAD Japan number-one ranking for 2025, and the intimate 8-seat counter make it a strong choice for a significant meal. However, there are no private rooms and no private-hire option, so if total privacy is the requirement, this is not the right venue. For a couple or two guests who want the leading meal of a Japan trip as the occasion itself, it works well.
What should a first-timer know about Kataori?
- The format is omakase , 11 courses, no substitutions, no menu choices. Budget JPY 60,000–79,999 per person including drinks and the 10% service charge. No perfume is permitted (this is a firm policy, not a preference). The restaurant has no official website; book by phone or via Tabelog. It is about 15 minutes on foot from Kanazawa Station. First-timers to Hokuriku kaiseki should know that the cooking is deliberately restrained , the philosophy emphasises the ingredient over technique, so expect clarity rather than elaborate plating. If you want more comparison context, Goh in Fukuoka and Harutaka in Tokyo operate at a comparable award level in different formats.
Can Kataori accommodate groups?
- The counter seats eight total. A group of four to eight can in principle book the entire counter, but there is no private-hire option and no private rooms. If your party exceeds eight, this venue cannot accommodate you. For groups needing a private room in Kanazawa, Zeniya is the better alternative at a comparable quality level. Reach Kataori directly at +81-76-255-1446 to discuss availability for larger parties.
Is Kataori good for solo dining?
- Yes , this is one of the better solo dining formats in Japan at this level. The 8-seat counter puts a solo guest directly in the centre of the action, and the omakase format removes any awkwardness about ordering. At JPY 60,000–79,999 all-in, it is a significant solo spend, but the counter experience at two-Michelin-star level in a city with Kanazawa's ingredient quality is hard to replicate. For solo travellers building a Japan itinerary around counter dining, also consider 1000 in Yokohama and akordu in Nara for contrast in different cities and formats.
Explore more of what Kanazawa offers: bars, wineries, and experiences.
Compare Kataori
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kataori | Easy | — | |
| Respiracion | Unknown | — | |
| Sushi Kibatani | Unknown | — | |
| Zeniya | Unknown | — | |
| Hamagurizaka Maekawa | Unknown | — | |
| Kyo Gion Negiyaki Kona | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Kataori and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at Kataori?
Both services run the same omakase format at the same price point (JPY 40,000–49,999 listed; reviews suggest closer to JPY 60,000–79,999 all-in), so the decision is logistical rather than qualitative. Lunch is only available Wednesday and Sunday, which limits flexibility for most itineraries. If your travel schedule allows a Wednesday or Sunday slot, lunch lets you plan the rest of the day around the meal; otherwise, book whichever dinner session is available.
Is Kataori good for a special occasion?
Yes, provided the format fits. Kataori holds two Michelin stars and has ranked #1 on Opinionated About Dining's Japan list (2025), which gives it the credentials for a serious celebration. The eight-seat counter means the atmosphere is intimate rather than ceremonial — there are no private rooms and no private-hire option, so if your occasion requires a dedicated space, look elsewhere. For a couple or small group where the meal itself is the event, it delivers.
What should a first-timer know about Kataori?
The restaurant opened in May 2018 at 3-36 Namikimachi, about 15 minutes on foot from Kanazawa Station. It seats eight at a single counter, reservation-only, with no walk-in option. Budget JPY 60,000–79,999 per person based on actual guest spend, add 10% service charge, and note that perfume is not permitted. Chef Takuya Kataori's approach centres on Hokuriku region ingredients with what the restaurant calls 'subtractive cooking' — restraint over complexity — so come expecting precision and seasonal produce, not elaborate theatrics.
Can Kataori accommodate groups?
The counter holds eight people total, so a group of eight is technically the maximum — and that means you would be the entire restaurant. Private hire is listed as unavailable, so a group booking of that size would still share the space in the normal counter format. For groups larger than eight, Kataori is not an option. Parties of four to six are the practical sweet spot; confirm directly by phone (+81-76-255-1446) since maximum party size is not published.
Is Kataori good for solo dining?
Yes — counter-only restaurants at this level are generally more comfortable for solo diners than table-service kaiseki, and Kataori's eight-seat format means solo guests are a normal part of service rather than an afterthought. At JPY 60,000–79,999 all-in per the review average, it is a significant solo spend, but for a diner who prioritises direct access to the chef and the full seasonal omakase, Kataori ranks #1 in Japan on OAD (2025), which justifies the outlay.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–7:30 pm, 8–10:30 pm
- Tuesday
- 5–7:30 pm, 8–10:30 pm
- Wednesday
- 12–2:30 pm, 5–7:30 pm, 8–10:30 pm
- Thursday
- 5–7:30 pm, 8–10:30 pm
- Friday
- 5–7:30 pm, 8–10:30 pm
- Saturday
- 5–7:30 pm, 8–10:30 pm
- Sunday
- 12–2:30 pm, 5–7:30 pm, 8–10:30 pm
Recognized By
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