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    Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan

    Kozasa-zushi

    230pts

    Ranked, residential, worth the research effort.

    Kozasa-zushi, Restaurant in Tokyo

    About Kozasa-zushi

    A Shibuya neighbourhood sushi counter with three consecutive years on Opinionated About Dining's Japan list — ranked #438 in 2024 — and an Easy booking rating that sets it apart from Ginza's more demanding omakase circuit. Open Tuesday to Saturday for both lunch and dinner, it is a practical, critically-recognised option for explorers who want serious sushi without a months-long wait.

    A Shibuya sushi counter worth knowing about — if you can get past the lack of information

    If you're weighing Kozasa-zushi against the high-profile omakase rooms of Ginza or Nihonbashi, the comparison resolves quickly on one axis: accessibility. Places like Harutaka or Sushi Kanesaka require advance planning, Japanese-language reservations, and deep pockets. Kozasa-zushi, sitting in the residential pocket of Shinsencho in Shibuya, occupies a different register — recognised enough to appear on Opinionated About Dining's Japan list three years running (ranked #438 in 2024, rising from Recommended in 2023, and repositioning at #526 in 2025), but approachable enough that booking difficulty is rated Easy. That gap between critical recognition and practical accessibility is exactly where this venue earns its place on your shortlist.

    The venue portrait

    Shinsencho is a quieter residential stretch of Shibuya , not the district's retail and transport chaos, but the low-rise, tree-lined streets behind it. That address matters when thinking about what kind of sushi counter Kozasa-zushi is likely to be: neighbourhood-scaled rather than destination-spectacular, intimate rather than formal. The physical room is compact by design, the kind of counter format where the spatial experience is close and direct. You are not watching from a distance. You are at the counter, and the rhythm of the meal is set by what comes in front of you. For a food-focused traveller looking to eat sushi outside the well-worn Ginza circuit, that spatial register is part of the draw.

    The OAD ranking trajectory tells a coherent story. Moving from Recommended (2023) to #438 (2024) before settling at #526 (2025) suggests a venue that earned attention, absorbed it, and has held a stable position in a competitive field. OAD rankings are peer-driven, generated from surveys of serious diners and industry professionals rather than from a single inspector's visit , so a three-year presence on that list, particularly for a neighbourhood sushi-ya in Shibuya rather than a splashy central-Tokyo address, is a meaningful credential. A 4.6 Google rating across 45 reviews adds a layer of consistency: small sample, but directionally positive.

    On the drinks side, the venue's programme should be considered in the context of what a traditional sushi counter typically offers. Edomae-style counters in Tokyo typically pair with sake, beer, and occasionally shochu , the drinks list at a neighbourhood sushi-ya is rarely the main event, but it is worth knowing that the format here is most likely built around rice-forward pairing rather than a cocktail programme. If a serious sake selection matters to you, it is worth confirming directly before booking. For travellers coming from cocktail-focused experiences elsewhere in Shibuya, the drinking context here will be quieter and more restrained by design. That is a feature for some, a limitation for others.

    Kozasa-zushi is open Tuesday through Saturday, running both lunch (12–2 pm) and dinner (6–10 pm) services, with Monday and Sunday closed. The dual-service structure gives you genuine optionality , lunch at a sushi counter in Tokyo typically runs at a lower price point than dinner, though specific pricing here is not available in the public record. Booking is classed as Easy, which at this level of OAD recognition is genuinely useful information: you do not need to fight for a seat months in advance the way you would at Sukiyabashi Jiro Roppongiten or Edomae Sushi Hanabusa.

    For context across Tokyo's wider dining scene, see our full Tokyo restaurants guide. If you're building a broader Japan itinerary, Pearl also covers venues like HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, akordu in Nara, and Goh in Fukuoka. For sushi outside Japan, Sushi Shikon in Hong Kong and Shoukouwa in Singapore are the regional reference points worth knowing. You can also browse our full Tokyo hotels guide, our full Tokyo bars guide, our full Tokyo wineries guide, and our full Tokyo experiences guide when planning around this visit.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Kozasa-zushi?

    • Lunch (12–2 pm) is the practical choice if price sensitivity matters , sushi counters in Tokyo almost universally offer lunch at a lower price point than dinner service, and Kozasa-zushi's dual-service format suggests it is built to handle both without compromise.
    • Dinner (6–10 pm) gives you more time and typically a fuller omakase sequence, which suits explorers who want to experience the counter at its full pace.
    • If you are visiting from outside Shibuya, lunch is the efficient option , you get the counter experience without the evening commitment. If you want to treat this as the centrepiece of a Shibuya evening, dinner makes more sense.
    • Both services run Tuesday through Saturday. Sunday and Monday are closed, so plan your schedule accordingly.

    Can I eat at the bar at Kozasa-zushi?

    • Sushi-ya in Tokyo are almost universally counter-format venues , eating at the counter is the primary and often only experience on offer, not a secondary option beside table seating.
    • At a neighbourhood counter like Kozasa-zushi, the counter IS the room. The spatial experience described by regulars and reflected in OAD recognition is built around that direct, close-range counter format.
    • If you have a specific preference for table seating, it is worth confirming directly with the venue before booking , but the default assumption at this type of restaurant in this price bracket is that the counter is where you eat.
    • For comparison, Hiroo Ishizaka and 1000 in Yokohama are other intimate counter-format venues in the region worth considering if the counter experience is a priority for you. Also see 6 in Okinawa for a similar format in a different Japanese setting.

    Compare Kozasa-zushi

    How Easy to Book: Kozasa-zushi vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Kozasa-zushiSushiEasy
    HarutakaSushi¥¥¥¥Unknown
    RyuGinKaiseki, Japanese¥¥¥¥Unknown
    L'EffervescenceFrench¥¥¥¥Unknown
    HOMMAGEInnovtive French, French¥¥¥¥Unknown
    FlorilègeFrench¥¥¥Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Kozasa-zushi?

    Lunch is the lower-friction option: the 12–2 pm sitting runs Tuesday through Saturday, and if you're visiting Tokyo on a packed itinerary, locking in a midday slot keeps the evening free for other bookings. Dinner runs until 10 pm across the same days, which suits a slower pace. Kozasa-zushi's OAD ranking (up from #438 in 2024 to #526 in 2025 by volume, though 2024 placed it higher directionally) reflects consistent kitchen performance across both services, so the format you can actually book is the right answer.

    Can I eat at the bar at Kozasa-zushi?

    Bar seating is the standard format at sushi counters like Kozasa-zushi in Shinsencho, and the venue's setup is consistent with that model, but the specific number of seats is not publicly confirmed. Given its OAD recognition and the residential, low-profile Shibuya address, walk-in counter access is unlikely — check the venue's official channels or go through a concierge booking service before assuming availability.

    What is Kozasa-zushi known for?

    Kozasa-zushi is primarily known for Sushi in Tokyo.

    Where is Kozasa-zushi located?

    Kozasa-zushi is located in Tokyo, at 10-12 Shinsencho, Shibuya, Tokyo 150-0045, Japan.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    12–2 pm, 6–10 pm
    Wednesday
    12–2 pm, 6–10 pm
    Thursday
    12–2 pm, 6–10 pm
    Friday
    12–2 pm, 6–10 pm
    Saturday
    12–2 pm, 6–10 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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