Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
Miyake Akira
190ptsMichelin-recognised, no intermediary booking required.

About Miyake Akira
Miyake Akira is a Michelin Plate-recognised Japanese restaurant in Roppongi that delivers consistent, high-quality cooking at the ¥¥¥¥ tier without the booking difficulty of Tokyo's starred venues. A Google rating of 4.9 across 140 reviews makes it one of the more reliable options in the neighbourhood for a special occasion dinner where the food, not the spectacle, is the point.
Who Should Book Miyake Akira — and When
If you are planning a special dinner in Roppongi and want Japanese cuisine that punches well above its booking difficulty, Miyake Akira is the right call. This is a venue for couples on a date night, small groups marking an occasion, or a solo diner who wants serious food without the reservation battle that Tokyo's most competitive tables demand. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) confirm the kitchen's consistency, and a Google rating of 4.9 across 140 reviews is unusually strong for a ¥¥¥¥ venue in a city where diners hold high standards without sentiment. The current season makes this a particularly good moment to visit: winter in Tokyo sharpens Japanese menus around warming, ingredient-led cooking, and the Roppongi dining corridor is at its most active from October through February.
The Venue
Miyake Akira sits at street level in the JT Building on Roppongi 3-chome, a quieter stretch of Roppongi that sits away from the nightlife cluster closer to the crossing. The address puts you within walking distance of the Mori Art Museum and the quieter, residential feel of Roppongi Hills — which shapes the clientele. This is not a see-and-be-seen room. Diners here are focused on what is on the plate.
The visual experience at a venue like this tends to be defined by restraint. ¥¥¥¥ Japanese restaurants in Tokyo at the Michelin Plate tier typically favour pared-back interiors where the plating carries the visual weight. Do not arrive expecting a theatrical room. Arrive expecting the food to do the showing off. That trade-off is exactly what makes Miyake Akira worth considering for a special occasion dinner where the conversation, not the spectacle, is the point.
The Michelin Plate designation is specific in what it signals: good cooking that meets Michelin's threshold for quality but does not yet carry a star. In a city with more Michelin stars per capita than any other, that distinction matters. A Plate venue in Tokyo is not a consolation prize , it is a venue the guide's inspectors found worth noting in a field that includes hundreds of serious contenders. For the diner, this translates to a kitchen with demonstrable technique and a commitment to quality, at a price point and booking difficulty that tend to be more accessible than the starred tiers above.
For context on what the ¥¥¥¥ tier means practically: in Tokyo, this typically places a dinner in the ¥15,000–¥30,000 per person range depending on the menu format and drinks. That is a meaningful spend, and it is fair to hold Miyake Akira to a high standard for it. The 4.9 Google rating , sustained across a sample large enough to be statistically meaningful , suggests the kitchen is consistently meeting that bar. A handful of 5-star venues in Tokyo sustain that average across 20 or 30 reviews. 140 reviews at 4.9 is a different kind of signal.
Casual Excellence in a Serious City
What separates Miyake Akira from the upper tier of Tokyo's Japanese dining scene is not ambition , it is accessibility. Tokyo rewards diners who know how to read a room. The venues that are hardest to book are not always the ones that deliver the most satisfying evening. Miyake Akira falls into a category that experienced Tokyo diners seek out deliberately: high-quality Japanese cooking at a venue where you can actually get a table, where the atmosphere does not require you to perform, and where the food justifies a ¥¥¥¥ price tag on its own merits rather than on the strength of a star count.
If you are the kind of diner who wants to compare: Kagurazaka Ishikawa and Azabu Kadowaki operate at the starred tier with correspondingly harder reservations. Myojaku and Ginza Fukuju offer alternative reference points for serious Japanese cooking across Tokyo's neighbourhoods. Jingumae Higuchi is worth considering if you want to extend your comparison to the Omotesando and Harajuku corridor. For a broader view of where Miyake Akira sits within the city's full dining picture, our full Tokyo restaurants guide maps the field across price tiers and cuisines.
If Tokyo is part of a wider Japan itinerary, the same approach to finding high-quality, accessible Japanese cooking applies across the country: Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, Isshisoden Nakamura in Kyoto, and Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama in Osaka all represent the same principle applied in different cities. HAJIME in Osaka, akordu in Nara, and Goh in Fukuoka extend the picture further if your trip takes you south. For something more unusual, 1000 in Yokohama and 6 in Okinawa are worth knowing about.
Know Before You Go
- Cuisine: Japanese
- Price range: ¥¥¥¥
- Location: Roppongi 3-chome, Minato City, Tokyo (JT Building, 1F)
- Awards: Michelin Plate 2024, Michelin Plate 2025
- Google rating: 4.9 / 5 (140 reviews)
- Booking difficulty: Easy , no multi-week advance reservation required at this tier
- Leading for: Date nights, small celebration dinners, solo diners who want quality without formality
- Getting around: Roppongi Station (Hibiya Line, Oedo Line) is the closest access point. See our Tokyo hotels guide for where to stay nearby, and our Tokyo bars guide if you are planning drinks before or after.
- Hours / phone / website: Not confirmed in our data , verify directly before booking
The Verdict
Book Miyake Akira if you want a Michelin-recognised Japanese dinner in Roppongi that does not require weeks of advance planning or an intermediary booking service. The 4.9 rating at scale is the clearest signal available that the kitchen delivers consistently. At ¥¥¥¥ pricing, you are paying for serious cooking at a venue that keeps the experience focused on food rather than theatre. For a date, a small celebration, or any occasion where quality matters more than social currency, this is a strong option in its neighbourhood and tier. If you need a starred venue for the occasion itself, look at Azabu Kadowaki or Kagurazaka Ishikawa , but expect a harder booking process and higher prices. For a broader Tokyo evening, pair dinner here with Tokyo experiences and Tokyo wineries if wine is part of your itinerary.
Compare Miyake Akira
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Miyake Akira | ¥¥¥¥ | Easy | — |
| Harutaka | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
| RyuGin | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
| L'Effervescence | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
| HOMMAGE | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
| Florilège | ¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Tokyo for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Miyake Akira?
Bar seating availability is not confirmed in the venue record for Miyake Akira. What is confirmed is that the restaurant sits at street level in the JT Building on Roppongi 3-chome — a format that typically supports counter-style seating in Tokyo Japanese restaurants at this price point (¥¥¥¥). check the venue's official channels to clarify seating options before booking.
Is Miyake Akira worth the price?
At ¥¥¥¥ with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, Miyake Akira sits in a sensible position for Roppongi: credential-backed and less booking-intensive than the starred competition. If you are comparing against RyuGin or Harutaka at similar or higher price points, Miyake Akira is the lower-friction choice — useful if you are not planning weeks ahead. It is less suited to diners who want a Michelin Star experience; the Plate signals consistent quality, not the ceiling of Tokyo Japanese dining.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Miyake Akira?
Specific menu format and pricing are not available in the venue record, so a direct cost-per-course verdict is not possible here. What the 2025 Michelin Plate does confirm is that Miyake Akira meets a recognised quality threshold at ¥¥¥¥ pricing. If tasting-menu format and Michelin credentials are your benchmarks, this is a reasonable booking for Roppongi — though diners prioritising Michelin Stars should look at RyuGin or Harutaka instead.
What is Miyake Akira known for?
Miyake Akira is primarily known for Japanese in Tokyo.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Tokyo
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- 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.
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- 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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