Restaurant in Honolulu, United States
Miro Kaimuki
200Pearl PointsBook ahead. Honolulu's most decorated dinner table.

About Miro Kaimuki
Miro Kaimuki is Honolulu's highest-ranked restaurant on the Opinionated About Dining North America list (#140 in 2025), running a French-Japanese kitchen under Chef Chris Kajioka in the Kaimuki neighbourhood. Dinner only, Wednesday through Monday. Book ahead and treat it as the anchor of your Honolulu eating — nothing else in the city operates at this tier.
Verdict: One of Honolulu's Most Serious Kitchens, Worth Booking for Dinner
Miro Kaimuki operates without a listed price range, but the Opinionated About Dining ranking — #140 in North America in 2025, and as high as #90 in 2023 — places it in genuinely rarefied company. This is not a restaurant you book casually. It is the kind of place you plan a trip around, or at minimum plan your Honolulu dinner around. Chef Chris Kajioka runs a French-Japanese kitchen in the Kaimuki neighbourhood that has held a place on North America's most credible independent restaurant list for three consecutive years. For a first-timer, the short version is this: book it, go at dinner, and treat it as the anchor of your Honolulu eating.
What to Expect Your First Time
Miro Kaimuki sits at 1108 12th Ave in Kaimuki, a residential neighbourhood southeast of Waikiki that has become Honolulu's most concentrated stretch of serious independent restaurants. The kitchen works in a French-Japanese register, which at this level typically means precision technique applied to local Hawaiian produce and seafood, with classical French structure underlying the plating and sequencing. Chef Kajioka trained under some of the most demanding kitchens in the country before returning to Honolulu, and the restaurant's consistent placement on the OAD list reflects that pedigree translating into sustained execution rather than a one-year spike.
The restaurant's Google rating of 4.7 across 376 reviews is a meaningful signal at this level: volume plus score together suggest the experience holds up across multiple visits and diner types, not just for critics or industry insiders. For a first-timer, that consistency matters. You are not gambling on a hot opening.
The editorial angle here is worth naming directly: Miro Kaimuki does not offer a brunch or breakfast service based on available data. Hours run dinner only, 5–9 pm, Tuesday closed. If you are visiting Honolulu and want a serious morning or weekend meal, you will need to look elsewhere for that format , but for dinner, this is the table to prioritise. The French-Japanese cuisine type is better suited to an evening format in any case: the kind of composed, coursed cooking this kitchen specialises in benefits from a slower pace and the full dinner window.
The OAD Ranking in Context
Opinionated About Dining list is the most credible crowd-sourced fine dining ranking in North America, weighted heavily toward serious food travellers and industry professionals. A ranking of #140 in 2025 puts Miro Kaimuki in the same tier as restaurants that draw destination diners from the mainland and internationally. For context on what French-Japanese cuisine looks like at this calibre elsewhere, consider 1920 in Megève or Zest by Konishi in Hong Kong , kitchens working in similar registers with similar precision. Honolulu is not a market that typically produces restaurants at this tier, which makes Miro Kaimuki's sustained ranking more notable than the number alone suggests.
For broader context on what company Miro Kaimuki keeps at the national level, the OAD list places it alongside restaurants like Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Le Bernardin in New York City. That is the competitive set. It is a high bar, and Miro Kaimuki has held its position on the list across three years.
Practical Details
Reservations: Book in advance , OAD-ranked restaurants at this level in a city with limited comparable options fill quickly, particularly on weekends. Friday and Saturday evenings are the hardest seats. Hours: Wednesday through Monday, 5–9 pm; closed Tuesday. Address: 1108 12th Ave C, Honolulu, HI 96816, Kaimuki neighbourhood. Dress: No dress code is listed, but the restaurant's ranking and format suggest smart casual is appropriate , Honolulu's dining culture is relaxed, but this is not a flip-flops situation. Budget: Price range is not published, but French-Japanese restaurants operating at OAD Top 150 level typically run $150–$250 per person with beverages. Plan accordingly. Booking difficulty: Easy by Pearl's assessment, though weekend evenings will require more lead time.
How It Compares
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FAQ: Miro Kaimuki
- What should a first-timer know about Miro Kaimuki? Go for dinner, book ahead, and treat it as a coursed experience rather than a drop-in meal. The French-Japanese format means the kitchen is building a composed progression through the meal. Arrive on time, allow the full evening, and do not come expecting an à la carte menu where you order independently. The OAD ranking signals that this kitchen is operating at a level where the full experience matters more than any single dish.
- What should I order at Miro Kaimuki? Specific menu items are not available in verified data. At this level of French-Japanese cooking, the kitchen typically drives the experience through a set or prix-fixe format. Trust the progression rather than trying to engineer your own selection. If a counter or tasting format is available, take it for a first visit.
- How far ahead should I book Miro Kaimuki? For weekday dinners, one to two weeks is likely sufficient. For Friday and Saturday evenings, aim for three to four weeks minimum. The OAD ranking and limited comparable competition in Honolulu mean the restaurant draws both locals and visitors, and peak travel periods (winter holidays, spring break, summer) will compress availability faster than the baseline suggests.
- Can I eat at the bar at Miro Kaimuki? Bar seating details are not confirmed in available data. For a first visit, book a table rather than relying on walk-in or bar availability. If bar seating exists and allows a shorter commitment, it may suit solo diners or spontaneous visits, but the full table experience is the safer recommendation.
- What should I wear to Miro Kaimuki? No dress code is listed. Smart casual is the right call for a restaurant at this ranking: collared shirt or equivalent effort, not beachwear. Honolulu dining culture runs relaxed compared to New York or San Francisco, and the local diner base reflects that, but the kitchen's seriousness warrants matching it at least modestly.
- Is lunch or dinner better at Miro Kaimuki? Dinner is the only option. The restaurant opens at 5 pm and does not offer lunch or brunch service. If you are looking for a serious daytime meal in Honolulu, you will need to look at other venues. For dinner, Wednesday through Monday 5–9 pm is your window.
- Is Miro Kaimuki good for a special occasion? Yes, clearly. An OAD Top 150 ranking in North America, a French-Japanese kitchen operating at the highest level in Honolulu, and a 4.7 Google rating across nearly 400 reviews make it the strongest argument for a special occasion dinner in the city. Anniversaries, milestone birthdays, or a once-in-visit splurge all fit the format.
- What are alternatives to Miro Kaimuki in Honolulu? For New American cooking with a different register, Fête is Honolulu's leading comparison at a serious but less formal level. For Italian in a hotel setting, Arancino at The Kahala offers a different kind of occasion meal. For something more adventurous and bar-forward, Bar Maze runs a cocktail bar-omakase format that suits a different mood. Fujiyama Texas and Ginza Bairin cover Japanese formats at a more accessible price point. None of them match Miro Kaimuki's OAD standing, but they are the right alternatives depending on what you are after.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Miro Kaimuki?
Bar seating availability is not confirmed in current venue data. Given Miro Kaimuki's OAD Top 140 North America ranking and its limited dinner-only hours (5–9 pm, closed Tuesdays), the restaurant operates at high occupancy most nights. check the venue's official channels before arriving and expecting walk-in bar access.
How far ahead should I book Miro Kaimuki?
Book at least 2–3 weeks out, and further for Friday and Saturday. Miro Kaimuki has held an OAD Top 140 North America ranking for three consecutive years, which sustains consistent demand in a city with few comparable options at this level. Weekend slots go first.
What should I wear to Miro Kaimuki?
No dress code is specified in the venue record, but the restaurant's sustained OAD ranking and French-Japanese format place it firmly in Honolulu's most serious dining tier. Dress neatly — clean, put-together clothes are appropriate; beachwear is not.
Is lunch or dinner better at Miro Kaimuki?
Dinner is the only option. Miro Kaimuki operates from 5–9 pm six days a week with no listed lunch service, so there is no comparison to make. Plan accordingly and book a dinner slot.
Is Miro Kaimuki good for a special occasion?
Yes, it is one of the stronger cases for a special occasion dinner in Honolulu. Chef Chris Kajioka's French-Japanese kitchen has ranked in the OAD Top 90–140 in North America every year since 2023, which puts it in legitimate company for milestone meals. Book a table with advance notice and mention the occasion when reserving.
What are alternatives to Miro Kaimuki in Honolulu?
For a different register: Fête offers a more approachable prix-fixe format in downtown Honolulu; Arancino at The Kahala delivers polished Italian in a luxury hotel setting for guests who prefer that context. Bar Maze is the move if you want a serious bar programme over a full dinner commitment. None of them match Miro's OAD credential for pure kitchen credibility.
What should I order at Miro Kaimuki?
Specific menu items are not published in the available venue data, and the menu at an OAD-ranked kitchen at this level changes with availability. The French-Japanese format under Chef Kajioka suggests a tasting-driven approach — go with the full progression rather than ordering selectively.
Location
1108 12th Ave C, Honolulu, HI 96816
Honolulu, United States
Compare Miro Kaimuki
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Miro Kaimuki | French - Japanese | Easy | |
| Fête | New American | Unknown | |
| Arancino at The Kahala | Italian | Unknown | |
| Bar Maze | Cocktail Bar-Omakase | Unknown | |
| Fujiyama Texas | Japanese | Unknown | |
| Ginza Bairin | Japanese | Unknown |
A quick look at how Miro Kaimuki measures up.
Also Consider
- Fête — New American, New American
- Arancino at The Kahala — Italian, Italian
- Bar Maze — Cocktail Bar-Omakase, Cocktail Bar-Omakase
- Fujiyama Texas — Japanese, Japanese
- Ginza Bairin — Japanese, Japanese
How Miro Kaimuki Compares in Honolulu
Miro Kaimuki sits at the top of Honolulu's independent restaurant tier by a clear margin. Its OAD Top 150 North America ranking has no equivalent among the city's peers — Fête is the closest alternative in terms of kitchen ambition and serious local reputation, running a New American programme that draws a similar diner profile, but it operates at a less formal register and without comparable national recognition. If you want the most credible table in Honolulu, Miro Kaimuki is the answer. If you want excellent food with a slightly lower commitment level, Fête is the right fallback.
Arancino at The Kahala suits a different occasion: Italian in a hotel setting, reliable and polished, good for groups or diners who want a known quantity rather than a composed French-Japanese progression. It is the safer choice, not the better one. Bar Maze runs a cocktail bar-omakase format that is genuinely interesting for adventurous diners or solo visits, but it is a different format and a different mood — think late evening rather than primary dinner reservation.
Fujiyama Texas and Ginza Bairin cover Japanese cooking at a more accessible price point and are easier to book on short notice. They are good options for casual meals or when Miro Kaimuki is unavailable, but they are not substitutes for what Kajioka's kitchen does. If your trip has room for one serious dinner and one casual Japanese meal, the pairing works well.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–9 pm
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- 5–9 pm
- Thursday
- 5–9 pm
- Friday
- 5–9 pm
- Saturday
- 5–9 pm
- Sunday
- 5–9 pm
Recognized By
Explore Honolulu
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