Restaurant in São Paulo, Brazil
Kuro
550Pearl PointsTwo Michelin stars. Book early or miss out.

About Kuro
Kuro holds a Michelin star in both 2024 and 2025, making it one of São Paulo's most decorated Japanese restaurants. Chef Leslie Daniel runs a dinner-only room in Cerqueira César priced at $66+ per head before a well-stocked $$ wine list. Book three to four weeks ahead at minimum; this is not a walk-in option.
Verdict: Book Kuro if Japanese cooking at Michelin level is your target in São Paulo
At the $$$ price point for cuisine (a typical two-course dinner running $66 or more per person) and $$ for wine, Kuro delivers two consecutive years of Michelin recognition — 2024 and 2025 — under chef Leslie Daniel. For a returning visitor, the question is less whether the quality is there and more whether you can actually get a table. The short answer: book well ahead, plan your wine spend carefully, and if you are returning after a first visit, know that the format here rewards deliberate ordering rather than casual drop-ins.
What Kuro Is
Kuro is a Japanese restaurant in Cerqueira César, one of São Paulo's most concentrated dining neighbourhoods, operating under the ownership of the Seminole Tribe of Florida. The general manager is Samantha Phommalyla, and the kitchen is led by chef Leslie Daniel. The Michelin star, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, places Kuro in a short list of starred Japanese addresses in São Paulo alongside Jun Sakamoto. The address , R. Padre João Manuel, 712 , puts it within reach of Jardins, making it a practical choice if you are staying or eating your way through that corridor.
Dinner is the only service offered. If you are looking for a Japanese lunch option in the city, you will need to look elsewhere: Kinoshita and Kan Suke are worth checking for midday availability. For a broader picture of what the city offers, our full São Paulo restaurants guide covers the range.
The Return Visit: What to Focus On
If you have already been once, the wine list is worth your attention on a second visit. With around 100 selections and a cellar of approximately 900 bottles, the list is more considered than a typical Japanese restaurant at this tier. Pricing sits at $$, meaning there is a reasonable spread across price points rather than a top-heavy list of trophy bottles. Corkage is $25, which is a practical option if you have something specific in mind. The wine program lends itself to a more deliberate pairing approach, and a returning diner who skipped the list the first time around should revisit that decision.
Google reviewers rate Kuro at 4.6 across 179 reviews, which at this review count represents a consistent signal rather than a small-sample outlier. For the category and the price tier, that number holds up against comparable Japanese addresses in the city.
On Takeout and Delivery
Kuro's format is not built around off-premise dining. Japanese cooking at the Michelin-starred level depends on precise temperature, texture, and timing in a way that delivery fundamentally disrupts. There is no verified information in the available data about any takeout or delivery offering, and for a restaurant operating at this tier, the expectation should be that the full experience requires eating in the room. If convenience or delivery is part of your decision, Oizumi Sushi or Huto may be worth considering as alternatives that are more likely to suit an off-premise format. For Kuro specifically, plan for a sit-down dinner and treat it as a dedicated occasion rather than an option that works around a busy schedule.
Booking and Practical Details
Reservations: Hard to get. Two Michelin stars across consecutive years in a dinner-only format with no published seat count means demand consistently outpaces availability. Book as far ahead as your schedule allows, and treat a last-minute cancellation as luck rather than a reliable strategy. Budget: Cuisine at $66+ for two courses before beverages; wine list at $$ with corkage available at $25 if you bring your own bottle. Service hours: Dinner only; no lunch service confirmed. Address: R. Padre João Manuel, 712, Cerqueira César, São Paulo. Getting there: Cerqueira César is well-served by rideshare; street parking in the neighbourhood is available but can be limited on busy evenings.
São Paulo Japanese Dining in Context
São Paulo has the largest Japanese diaspora population outside Japan, which means the baseline quality for Japanese cooking in the city is higher than in most South American capitals. Kuro sits at the formal, starred end of that spectrum. For a different register of Japanese dining in the city, KANOE is worth knowing. If you are exploring Japanese dining more broadly across Brazil, the context shifts considerably: Kuro represents a São Paulo-specific concentration of technique and investment that you would not replicate easily in other cities. For reference points outside Brazil, Myojaku and Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo give a sense of the range at the leading of the Japanese fine-dining category globally.
For those building a broader Brazil dining itinerary around starred-level restaurants, Lasai in Rio de Janeiro, Manu in Curitiba, and Manga in Salvador represent the spread of serious cooking outside São Paulo. Within driving or short-flight range, Mina in Campos do Jordão is worth noting for a weekend format. Orixás | North Restaurant in Itacaré and Castelo Saint Andrews in Gramado offer very different registers for regional Brazilian cooking.
If your trip to São Paulo extends beyond restaurants, our São Paulo hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the full picture.
FAQs: Kuro, São Paulo
- How far ahead should I book Kuro? Book at least three to four weeks out as a baseline; longer if you are visiting during peak periods or have a fixed travel date. A Michelin-starred dinner-only restaurant with no published large seat count fills quickly, and walk-in availability is not a realistic option here.
- What should a first-timer know about Kuro? It is a dinner-only Japanese restaurant with a Michelin star in 2024 and 2025, priced at $66+ for a typical two-course meal before drinks. The wine list has around 100 selections with corkage at $25 if you prefer to bring your own. Come prepared to commit to the full experience rather than a quick meal.
- Can I eat at the bar at Kuro? No confirmed bar-seating information is available in the current data. Given the format and the Michelin-starred positioning, this is primarily a reservation-driven room rather than a drop-in bar environment. Contact the restaurant directly to confirm options before planning around it.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Kuro? The Michelin recognition across two consecutive years under chef Leslie Daniel supports the case for committing to the full format rather than ordering light. At $$$ cuisine pricing with a considered wine list, this is a restaurant where the full investment tends to outperform a partial one. If the tasting menu format is available, it is the stronger choice over ordering à la carte minimally.
- Is Kuro worth the price? At $66+ per person for a two-course baseline before wine, and with back-to-back Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025, the price is justified by the category standard. For comparison, Jun Sakamoto sits at the same $$$ cuisine tier and is the closest local peer. Kuro earns its price through Michelin-verified consistency; it is not a speculative spend.
- What are alternatives to Kuro in São Paulo? For Japanese at the same price tier, Jun Sakamoto is the direct peer. For creative cooking at a comparable or higher spend, D.O.M. and Evvai both operate at $$$$ and represent different cuisine directions. Maní at $$$ is worth considering if you want creative Brazilian-international cooking at a similar price point with potentially more booking flexibility.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Kuro?
Book at least three to four weeks out, and longer if you're targeting a weekend. Two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) in a dinner-only format means demand reliably outpaces availability. If your dates are fixed, book the day the reservation window opens.
What should a first-timer know about Kuro?
Kuro is a Japanese restaurant in Cerqueira César, one of São Paulo's most restaurant-dense neighbourhoods, with a Michelin star in both 2024 and 2025. Dinner is the only service, cuisine pricing runs $66 or more for a typical two-course meal, and the wine list carries around 100 selections backed by a 900-bottle cellar. Come with a reservation, a clear idea of your spend, and no expectation of a quick turnaround.
Can I eat at the bar at Kuro?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in the available venue data. Given Kuro's Michelin-starred, dinner-only format, walk-in bar dining is unlikely to be a reliable option — treat a reservation as mandatory rather than optional.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Kuro?
At the $$$ price point, Kuro's back-to-back Michelin stars (2024–2025) under chef Leslie Daniel make a strong case for the full experience over a shorter order. São Paulo's Japanese dining baseline is already high given the city's large Japanese diaspora, so Kuro has to earn its premium — and the Michelin recognition suggests it does.
Is Kuro worth the price?
For Japanese cooking at Michelin level in São Paulo, yes. Cuisine pricing sits at $$ (typical two-course dinner at $40–65), which is reasonable relative to the recognition, and wine pricing is also $$, with corkage available at $25 if you bring your own bottle. The value case is solid as long as the format — dinner-only, reservation-dependent Japanese — matches what you're after.
What are alternatives to Kuro in São Paulo?
Jun Sakamoto is the most direct alternative for Japanese at a high level in São Paulo, with a long-established reputation in the city. For broader fine dining comparisons, D.O.M. and Evvai operate at a similar price and prestige tier but in very different culinary registers. Maní and A Casa do Porco are better fits if you want Brazilian-rooted cooking rather than Japanese.
Location
R. Padre João Manuel, 712 - Cerqueira César, São Paulo - SP, 01411-000, Brazil
São Paulo, Brazil
Compare Kuro
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kuro | Japanese | $$$ | Hard |
| D.O.M. | Modern Brazilian, Creative | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Evvai | Contemporary Italian, Modern Cuisine | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Maní | Brazilian - International, Creative | $$$ | Unknown |
| Jun Sakamoto | Sushi, Japanese | $$$ | Unknown |
| A Casa do Porco | Regional Brazilian, Brazilian | $$ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Kuro and alternatives.
Also Consider
- D.O.M. — Modern Brazilian, Creative, $$$$
- Evvai — Contemporary Italian, Modern Cuisine, $$$$
- Maní — Brazilian - International, Creative, $$$
- Jun Sakamoto — Sushi, Japanese, $$$
- A Casa do Porco — Regional Brazilian, Brazilian, $$
At the $$$ cuisine tier, Kuro's closest direct peer in São Paulo is Jun Sakamoto. Both sit at the same price point and share the Japanese category. Kuro has Michelin recognition that gives it an objective quality signal; Jun Sakamoto's reputation is built on decades of sushi craft. If Japanese cuisine is specifically what you want, try Kuro first and treat Jun Sakamoto as the alternative if you cannot get a table.
If you are weighing Kuro against the city's broader fine-dining field at higher price points, D.O.M. and Evvai both operate at $$$$ and offer modern Brazilian and contemporary Italian respectively. They cost more and lean toward tasting-menu formality. Maní at $$$ offers creative Brazilian-international cooking at the same spend as Kuro and is worth considering if you want local ingredients in a less Japan-focused format. For value, A Casa do Porco at $$ is a different category entirely but is the city's clearest argument for high-quality eating at a lower price.
The booking difficulty calculation favours Kuro for a planned trip: if you are organising weeks out, a Michelin-starred reservation is achievable with lead time. A Casa do Porco historically draws long queues for walk-ins, making it paradoxically harder to access casually despite the lower price. If Japanese cooking is not a requirement and you want the most flexible high-quality option at $$$, Maní tends to be more approachable on shorter notice than either Kuro or the $$$$ tier.
Recognized By
Explore São Paulo
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