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    Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan

    Maisen

    205Pearl Points

    Institutional tonkatsu, no guesswork required.

    Maisen, Restaurant in Tokyo

    About Maisen

    Maisen is Tokyo's most recognisable tonkatsu address — a converted Omotesando bathhouse with an OAD Casual Japan ranking and 4,600 Google reviews averaging 4.4 stars. Booking is easy, the format is accessible for first-timers, and the setting works for dates and special occasions without requiring a high-end budget. A reliable, crowd-validated choice in the category.

    Verdict

    Maisen is the right answer if you want tonkatsu done with consistency and institutional credibility in the middle of Omotesando. Ranked #88 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Japan list in 2024 and #104 in 2025, it sits at the reference end of Tokyo's tonkatsu category — a place where the format is reliable rather than experimental. For a special occasion meal that doesn't require a four-figure budget, it delivers on atmosphere, pedigree, and the kind of crowd-validated quality that 4,600 Google reviewers (averaging 4.4 stars) tend to agree on.

    The Room and the Setting

    Maisen occupies a converted bathhouse in Minami-Aoyama, and the visual effect is immediately distinct from the tiled counter operations you'll find at specialists like Butagumi or Katsuyoshi. High ceilings, warm wood tones, and a dining room that reads as occasion-appropriate without being formal — this is a setting you can bring a date, a parent, or a business acquaintance to without any framing awkwardness. The space is large enough that you rarely feel squeezed, which matters for a special occasion framing. It is the kind of room that photographs well from your seat.

    The Food Format

    Tonkatsu is a category where the variables are narrow: the quality of the pork, the crumb, the oil temperature, and the cabbage on the side. Maisen's reputation rests on loin and fillet cuts that have been a Tokyo reference point for decades. The menu format is approachable for first-timers , you are ordering a set, not building a tasting menu , which makes it low-stress for groups mixing first-time visitors to Japan with regulars. For those exploring the broader tonkatsu field in Tokyo, Ginza Katsukami, Fry-ya, and Katsusen each offer different entry points to the same category. Outside Tokyo, the tonkatsu conversation extends to Jukuseibuta Kawamura in Kyoto and Kyomachibori Nakamura in Osaka if your itinerary takes you further afield.

    Drinks at Maisen

    This is not a venue where the drinks program is the reason you book. Tonkatsu restaurants in Japan conventionally pair with cold beer, highballs, or green tea , functional pairings that suit the fried format and the casual pace of the meal. Maisen follows that convention. If a considered cocktail list or sake program matters to your booking decision, this is not where you will find it. For Tokyo's drinks-forward dining, our full Tokyo bars guide covers the options in depth. What Maisen offers instead is a clean, low-friction food-and-drink experience where the plate is the point.

    When to Go

    Maisen runs the same hours every day of the week , 11am to 9pm , which makes it genuinely flexible for itinerary planning. Lunch is the higher-traffic window given its Omotesando location and proximity to shopping. If you want a quieter room and a more relaxed pace, mid-afternoon (between 2pm and 5pm) is your window. For a special occasion dinner, arriving at 6pm gives you a settled room without the end-of-service rush. There is no meaningful difference in the menu between lunch and dinner, so the decision is purely about atmosphere and crowd density.

    Practical Details

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 4 Chome-8-5 Jingumae, Shibuya, Tokyo 150-0001
    • Hours: Daily 11am–9pm
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-ins are generally viable, particularly mid-week and in the mid-afternoon window
    • Cuisine: Tonkatsu (Japanese fried pork cutlet sets)
    • Setting: Converted bathhouse; large dining room; suits dates, groups, and solo diners
    • Awards: Opinionated About Dining Casual Japan #88 (2024), #104 (2025)
    • Google rating: 4.4 from 4,600 reviews
    • Nearest area: Omotesando / Minami-Aoyama, Shibuya
    • Good for: Special occasions, first-time Tokyo visitors, solo dining, casual group meals
    • Also explore: Our full Tokyo restaurants guide | Tokyo hotels | Tokyo experiences

    Pearl Picks , More from Japan

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • How far ahead should I book Maisen? Booking difficulty is easy , walk-ins work well here, particularly mid-week or during the mid-afternoon lull. If you are coming on a weekend or planning around a specific time, a same-day or next-day reservation is a sensible precaution given its Omotesando footfall, but you are not looking at the multi-week lead times required at Tokyo's high-demand tasting-menu counters.
    • What should a first-timer know about Maisen? The format is simple: you are ordering a tonkatsu set, not a multi-course menu. The converted bathhouse setting is distinctive and immediately recognisable. It is a practical, low-stress introduction to the category for first-time visitors to Tokyo or Japan, and its OAD Casual Japan ranking (#88 in 2024) gives you confidence you are not making a misstep. Arrive knowing what cut you prefer , loin for more fat and flavour, fillet for leaner texture.
    • What are alternatives to Maisen in Tokyo? For tonkatsu specifically: Butagumi skews more specialist and ingredient-focused; Ginza Katsukami is the Ginza option if location matters; Katsuyoshi and Fry-ya offer different takes on the same fried format. If you are comparing across cuisines at the same casual-to-mid price tier, our full Tokyo restaurants guide maps the full field.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Maisen? Dinner is the better choice for a special occasion , the room is calmer after 6pm and the Omotesando shopping crowd has thinned. Lunch is busier and better suited to a quick, efficient meal. The menu is the same across both services, so your decision comes down entirely to pace and atmosphere.
    • Is Maisen good for a special occasion? Yes, within the tonkatsu category. The converted bathhouse setting reads as occasion-appropriate without the formality or price pressure of a kaiseki or tasting-menu dinner. It is the right call for a celebration where you want a memorable room and reliable food without committing to a ¥¥¥¥ spend. For high-end alternatives in Tokyo, Harutaka or RyuGin are the natural step up.
    • Is Maisen good for solo dining? Yes. The format , individual sets, a large room, no minimum spend pressure , is well-suited to solo visits. It is one of the more comfortable solo dining options in the Omotesando area, where many restaurants skew toward group bookings. The mid-afternoon window is particularly relaxed for a solo lunch.
    • Does Maisen handle dietary restrictions? Tonkatsu is a pork-based, wheat-breaded, deep-fried format , it is structurally incompatible with pork-free, gluten-free, or vegetarian diets. No contact details are available in our current data to confirm specific accommodations. If dietary restrictions are a factor, contact the restaurant directly before booking.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Maisen? Maisen is a full dining room operation in a converted bathhouse rather than a counter-style bar setup. It does not operate as a bar venue, and the drinks program is not a standalone draw. If bar seating or cocktail-led dining is your priority, our Tokyo bars guide is the better starting point.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Maisen?

    Maisen accepts walk-ins and does not require advance reservations in the way a tasting-menu restaurant would, but lunch hours draw consistent queues given its OAD Casual Japan ranking. Arriving at or just after opening at 11am gives you the best chance of a short wait. If your schedule is tight, aim to visit mid-afternoon between the lunch and dinner rushes.

    What should a first-timer know about Maisen?

    Maisen is a tonkatsu specialist, so the menu is focused: expect pork cutlet variations with rice, miso soup, and shredded cabbage as the core format. The setting is a converted bathhouse in Minami-Aoyama, which makes it visually distinct from counter-style tonkatsu shops. It has ranked in the top 110 casual restaurants in Japan on Opinionated About Dining two years running, so the baseline quality is well-documented.

    What are alternatives to Maisen in Tokyo?

    For tonkatsu specifically, Tonki in Meguro is the counter-purist alternative with a longer queue culture and a more stripped-back room. If you want to stay in the Omotesando area but shift category entirely, the neighbourhood has strong representation in washoku and French-influenced dining. Maisen is the right call when you want tonkatsu with institutional consistency rather than a hunt for a smaller specialist.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Maisen?

    Lunch is the higher-traffic period, which means longer waits but a livelier room. Dinner is quieter and the same menu applies — Maisen runs identical hours every day, 11am to 9pm, so there is no dinner-only format or special evening offering to chase. If avoiding a queue matters more than atmosphere, an early dinner visit around 5–6pm is the practical move.

    Is Maisen good for a special occasion?

    Only if the occasion is casual and the group enjoys tonkatsu as a format. The converted bathhouse setting adds some visual interest, but this is not a place built around ceremony or extended service. For a milestone dinner in Tokyo, RyuGin or L'Effervescence are more appropriate formats. Maisen works well for a celebratory lunch with friends who want quality without formality.

    Is Maisen good for solo dining?

    Yes. Tonkatsu restaurants are naturally solo-friendly — individual portions, counter seating options, and no pressure to order across multiple courses. Maisen's consistent hours and no-advance-booking norm make it a low-friction solo lunch stop in Omotesando.

    Does Maisen handle dietary restrictions?

    Tonkatsu is a pork-forward category by definition, which makes Maisen a poor fit for non-pork diets. There is no documented alternative protein or vegetarian tonkatsu option in the venue record. If dietary flexibility is a factor, this is not the right venue.

    Location

    4 Chome-8-5 Jingumae, Shibuya, Tokyo 150-0001, Japan

    Tokyo, Japan

    Compare Maisen

    Maisen vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    MaisenTonkatsuOpinionated About Dining Casual in Japan Ranked #104 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Japan Ranked #88 (2024)Easy
    HarutakaSushi¥¥¥¥Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    RyuGinKaiseki, Japanese¥¥¥¥Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    L'EffervescenceFrench¥¥¥¥Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    HOMMAGEInnovtive French, French¥¥¥¥Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    FlorilègeFrench¥¥¥Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Comparing your options in Tokyo for this tier.

    Also Consider

    Maisen sits in a different category from Tokyo's ¥¥¥¥ fine dining circuit. Comparing it directly to Harutaka (sushi, ¥¥¥¥) or RyuGin (kaiseki, ¥¥¥¥) is less a quality contest than a format decision. If your Tokyo dining budget has room for one serious splurge, RyuGin or Harutaka will give you a more technically demanding and service-intensive experience. Maisen is the right call when you want a genuine Tokyo dining moment — distinctive setting, credentialed category, no formality — at a fraction of the spend.

    Against Florilège (French, ¥¥¥), the comparison is more about cuisine preference than price tier. Florilège offers a more creative, chef-driven format; Maisen offers a simpler, more repeatable experience within a tightly defined Japanese category. For a special occasion where French cuisine is not the point, Maisen's setting and category credibility make it the more logical choice. L'Effervescence and HOMMAGE both operate at ¥¥¥¥ and require more planning — neither is a walk-in option.

    Within the tonkatsu category itself, Maisen's main competition comes from Butagumi and Katsuyoshi. Butagumi skews more ingredient-obsessive and is better for diners who want to engage with pork provenance; Katsuyoshi is the counter-style, quieter alternative. Maisen's advantage is the room — no other tonkatsu address in Tokyo offers a comparable architectural setting — and its ease of access in the Omotesando area. If location, setting, and low booking friction matter more than hyper-specialist pork sourcing, Maisen is the right answer.

    Hours

    Monday
    11 am–9 pm
    Tuesday
    11 am–9 pm
    Wednesday
    11 am–9 pm
    Thursday
    11 am–9 pm
    Friday
    11 am–9 pm
    Saturday
    11 am–9 pm
    Sunday
    11 am–9 pm

    Recognized By

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