Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
Kodama
170ptsOne seating nightly. Book ahead or miss it.

About Kodama
Kodama is a focused French restaurant in Nishiazabu run by Chef Shusaku Toba, operating a single evening seating (6–8 pm) seven days a week. OAD-ranked in Japan's top restaurants for 2025 and recommended since 2023, it is the right call for a serious food traveller who has covered Tokyo's headline addresses and wants something more deliberate — and is currently easier to book than most of its French-dining peers.
Should You Book Kodama?
If you have already eaten at the obvious Nishiazabu destinations and want something more deliberate, Kodama is worth the effort. Chef Shusaku Toba runs a French kitchen in a second-floor space that operates on a tight two-hour window every evening — no lunch service, no walk-in flexibility, no extended late-night option. The Opinionated About Dining ranking (Leading Restaurants in Japan, #591 in 2025; Recommended in 2023) signals consistent quality without the full pressure-cooker booking difficulty of a Michelin-starred room. A 4.7 Google rating across 18 reviews suggests the people who do find it leave satisfied.
Come on a second visit and the things that matter most become clearer: the constraint of a single evening seating (6–8 pm, seven days a week) is not a drawback — it is the structure of the experience. Toba is cooking for a room that turns over once, and that focus shows in execution. First-timers sometimes wrestle with the short window; returning guests tend to arrive early, settle in, and let the pacing do its job.
Lunch vs. Dinner at Kodama
There is no lunch at Kodama. Hours are fixed at 6–8 pm every day of the week, which makes the lunch-versus-dinner question direct: if you want to eat here, dinner is your only option. That uniform schedule also removes the usual trade-off between a lighter midday menu at a lower price point and a full evening carte. For Tokyo French dining that does offer a lunch format , often at a meaningfully lower price , Florilège and L'Effervescence are the more flexible alternatives. If your schedule is fixed around evenings, Kodama's consistency across all seven nights is an asset: there is no premium night or off-night dynamic to second-guess.
Timing and Booking
The single daily seating at 6 pm means the room is not divided into early and late service , everyone starts together. For the explorer who wants to understand a restaurant rather than just eat at it, that uniformity is useful context: Toba is cooking one service, not managing multiple turns. The leading day-of-week approach is mid-week if you want a quieter room; weekend tables fill faster given the neighbourhood's foot traffic in Nishiazabu. Booking is listed as easy relative to the top-tier Tokyo French rooms, but that can shift as OAD recognition compounds. Book as soon as your dates are confirmed.
How Kodama Fits the Tokyo French Scene
Tokyo's French dining tier is deep. At the leading end, Sézanne and ESqUISSE carry Michelin weight and corresponding booking difficulty. Château Restaurant Joël Robuchon sits in a different category entirely , grand, formal, and priced accordingly. Kodama operates below that tier in terms of profile and presumably price, which makes it a practical entry point for a serious food traveller who has already covered the headline addresses. The OAD recognition gives it a credible floor of quality without the full commitment a three-starred room demands.
For context across Japan, the same traveller who books Kodama in Tokyo might also be tracking HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, or akordu in Nara. Internationally, the French dining comparison set includes Les Amis in Singapore and Hotel de Ville Crissier. Kodama sits closer to the focused, chef-driven end of that spectrum than to the grand-institution end.
Practical Details
| Detail | Kodama | Florilège | L'Effervescence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | French | French | French |
| Price tier | Not listed | ¥¥¥ | ¥¥¥¥ |
| Lunch available | No | Yes | Yes |
| Hours | 6–8 pm daily | Multiple seatings | Multiple seatings |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Hard |
| OAD ranked | Yes (#591, 2025) | Yes | Yes |
Explore More in Tokyo and Beyond
Planning a broader trip? Pearl covers the full picture: our full Tokyo restaurants guide, Tokyo hotels, Tokyo bars, Tokyo wineries, and Tokyo experiences are all worth checking before you finalise your itinerary. Further afield, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa round out the serious dining circuit across Japan.
Compare Kodama
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Kodama?
The venue data does not confirm a bar counter option at Kodama. Given the fixed 6–8 pm single-seating format, the room operates as one unified service rather than a drop-in bar experience. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating configurations before assuming counter availability.
What should I wear to Kodama?
Kodama is a second-floor French restaurant in Nishiazabu with a strict single-seating dinner format and an OAD listing — the setting calls for neat, considered clothing at minimum. In Tokyo's French dining tier, that typically means no trainers or casual streetwear. Treat it like a proper dinner reservation rather than a neighbourhood bistro.
Does Kodama handle dietary restrictions?
No dietary policy is confirmed in the available data. French omakase formats generally require advance notice of restrictions rather than accommodating them on the night, so flag any requirements when booking. If a specific diet makes French tasting-menu formats difficult, Kodama may not be the right fit.
Is lunch or dinner better at Kodama?
There is no lunch at Kodama. Hours are fixed at 6–8 pm seven days a week, so the decision is simply whether the single nightly seating works for your schedule. If it does, that format — one sitting, everyone starting together — tends to produce more focused service than split-sitting restaurants in the same tier.
How far ahead should I book Kodama?
Book as early as possible. A single 6 pm seating every night with OAD recognition in 2023 and 2025 means the room fills without much margin. Tokyo's top French tables at venues like Sézanne require months of lead time; Kodama's booking window is not confirmed but erring toward 4–6 weeks minimum is sensible.
Hours
- Monday
- 6–8 pm
- Tuesday
- 6–8 pm
- Wednesday
- 6–8 pm
- Thursday
- 6–8 pm
- Friday
- 6–8 pm
- Saturday
- 6–8 pm
- Sunday
- 6–8 pm
Recognized By
More restaurants in Tokyo
- SézanneOccupying the seventh floor of the Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi, Sézanne earned its first Michelin star within months of opening in July 2021 and now holds three. British chef Daniel Calvert applies French technique to Japanese ingredients, producing a prix-fixe format that Tabelog has recognised with Silver awards every year from 2023 through 2026. It ranked 4th in Asia's 50 Best Restaurants in 2025 and 15th globally in 2024.
- SazenkaSazenka is the address for Chinese cuisine in Tokyo at its most technically demanding. Chef Tomoya Kawada's wakon-kansai approach — Japanese seasonal ingredients applied through Chinese culinary technique — has earned consecutive Tabelog Gold Awards from 2019 to 2026, a #71 ranking on the World's 50 Best 2025, and 99 points from La Liste 2026. At JPY 50,000–59,999 per head, it is one of the hardest tables in the city to book and worth the effort.
- NarisawaNarisawa is Tokyo's most credentialled innovative tasting menu restaurant — two Michelin stars, Asia's 50 Best number 12, and a Tabelog Silver award — running at JPY 80,000–99,999 per head. Book for a milestone occasion, confirm vegetarian or vegan needs in advance, and reserve at least two to three months out. With 15 seats and reservation-only access, this is one of Tokyo's hardest tables to secure.
- FlorilègeFlorilège delivers two Michelin stars and an Asia's 50 Best #17 ranking at a dinner price of ¥22,000 — competitive for Tokyo at this level. Chef Hiroyasu Kawate's plant-forward tasting menus around an open-kitchen counter at Azabudai Hills make this the strongest choice for contemporary French dining in Tokyo if theatrical, produce-led cooking is what you want. Book well in advance; availability is near-impossible at short notice.
- DenDen holds two Michelin stars, a World's 50 Best top-25 Asia ranking, and a Tabelog Silver Award running back to 2017 — and it books out within hours of the two-month reservation window opening. Chef Zaiyu Hasegawa's daily-changing seasonal omakase runs JPY 30,000–39,999 at dinner in a relaxed house-restaurant setting near Gaiemmae. Book by phone only, noon–5 PM JST. Lunch is irregular; plan around dinner.
- MyojakuMyojaku is a 2-Michelin-star, 14-course French-leaning omakase in Nishiazabu holding a 4.47 Tabelog score, Tabelog Silver 2025–2026, and Asia's 50 Best #45 (2025). Chef Hidetoshi Nakamura's water-forward, no-dashi approach shifts meaningfully with the seasons — making timing your reservation as important as getting one. Budget JPY 50,000–59,999 per head plus 10% service charge; reservations only, near-impossible to secure.
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