Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
Neki
190ptsCasual French with real technique, fair price.

About Neki
Neki holds a 2025 Michelin Plate and offers French cooking with Japanese ingredients and Middle Eastern spices in a casual, wine-bottle-lined room in Tokyo's Nihonbashikabutocho district. At ¥¥¥, it costs less than the city's formal French tier and books easily. The right choice if you want serious, free-styled cooking without a ceremonial dining format.
A Michelin-recognised French restaurant in Tokyo's finance district that punches well above its price tier
If you're weighing Neki against Tokyo's ¥¥¥¥ French heavyweights — L'Effervescence, Sézanne, or Château Restaurant Joël Robuchon — the calculus is direct: Neki costs less, asks less of you in terms of formality, and still carries a 2025 Michelin Plate. For an explorer who wants serious cooking without the ceremony of a full-dress tasting room, Neki is the smarter booking.
The Venue
Neki sits in Nihonbashikabutocho, the old financial quarter of Chuo City, a neighbourhood that has been quietly converting vacant bank buildings and brokerage offices into dining and drinking spaces over the past several years. The address , 8-1, Kabutocho Heiwa Building No. 4 , places it in that pocket of eastern Tokyo where the Edo-era money infrastructure still shapes the streetscape. That context matters because it sets the tone: Neki is not a white-tablecloth room trying to project prestige. The interior is stacked with wine bottles and hung with album covers, and the music playing in the background refuses to settle into a single genre. The atmosphere is casual in a way that feels considered rather than accidental.
That deliberate casualness is the whole argument for booking Neki. In a city where French dining frequently means kaiseki-adjacent formality or high-stakes prix-fixe menus with extended service rituals, Neki operates with a lighter hand. The chef's approach is French at its foundation but free-styled in execution , pulling Japanese ingredients into the framework, working with fermented vegetables as a recurring technique, and reaching for Middle Eastern spices in ways that are handled with enough skill to avoid novelty for its own sake. Organic wines anchor the drinks side, which aligns well with the ingredient-forward cooking style.
This kind of cooking , cross-cultural but technically grounded, casual in presentation but not in execution , has become a recognisable mode at a certain tier of Tokyo restaurant. What distinguishes Neki is that the Michelin Plate recognition suggests the kitchen is delivering on the concept reliably, not just occasionally. A Google rating of 3.9 across 159 reviews tells a more nuanced story: this is a restaurant that generates strong opinions, and some diners will prefer the more structured environments of peers like Florilège or ESqUISSE. If you want predictability and polish above all else, the ¥¥¥¥ options in Tokyo's French tier will serve you better.
Who Should Book
Neki is the right call for a specific type of diner: someone who has already done the formal French rooms in Tokyo and wants something with less ceremony, or someone visiting from outside Japan who finds the wine-bar-meets-bistro format more comfortable than a multi-hour tasting procession. The Nihonbashikabutocho location makes it an easy choice for an evening in that part of the city, and the ¥¥¥ price tier means you can eat and drink well without the commitment of a ¥¥¥¥ blowout. It also pairs naturally with broader Tokyo food exploration , for context on where Neki sits in the city's French dining map, our full Tokyo restaurants guide is a useful reference, along with our guides to Tokyo bars and Tokyo experiences.
For those planning a broader Japan itinerary, Neki's relaxed format offers a useful contrast to the more structured dining available at places like HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, or akordu in Nara. If you are moving through the country and want to map the range of what Japanese-inflected European cooking can look like, Neki belongs on that itinerary. For completeness, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa represent other points on that spectrum worth considering.
Booking and Practicalities
Booking difficulty at Neki is rated Easy, which is a meaningful advantage in a Tokyo dining market where the most-discussed restaurants routinely require weeks of lead time or membership-adjacent access. No website or phone number is listed in current records, which means you will likely need to approach the booking through a third-party reservation platform or a hotel concierge if you are staying nearby. The Tokyo hotels guide includes properties with strong concierge services if that route is useful. No dress code is documented, and given the wine-bar atmosphere and album-cover interior, smart casual is a safe assumption , this is not a room where you need to dress for an occasion, though arriving well-dressed would not be out of place.
Hours are not confirmed in current data, so verify before you go. Nihonbashikabutocho is accessible from central Tokyo without difficulty, and the neighbourhood has enough around it , bars, natural wine spots, and the financial district's repurposed interiors , to make an evening in the area worth the trip even if you are not staying close by.
The Verdict
Neki earns its Michelin Plate by doing something harder than it looks: delivering technically credible French cooking with a genuine cross-cultural sensibility, in a casual room, at a price point below the city's top-tier French competition. It is not the right booking if you want the full Tokyo fine-dining experience with service choreography and an extended tasting arc. It is the right booking if you want a sharp, ingredient-driven meal with good organic wine in a room that takes the food seriously without making you feel like you are attending a ceremony. For comparable experiences outside Tokyo, Les Amis in Singapore and Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier represent what happens when French cooking in Asia and Europe each commits fully to the format , useful benchmarks if you are calibrating expectations.
Compare Neki
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at Neki?
At ¥¥¥ pricing with a Michelin Plate behind it, Neki's format delivers credible French cooking without the ceremony tax you pay at L'Effervescence or Sézanne. The chef's cross-cultural approach — Japanese ingredients, fermented vegetables, Middle Eastern spices — gives the menu a point of view that justifies the spend. If you want straightforward classic French, look elsewhere. If you want a kitchen that takes risks at a reasonable price point, it's worth it.
Is Neki worth the price?
Yes, for what it is. The ¥¥¥ tier is well below Tokyo's top French rooms, and the Michelin Plate recognition signals the kitchen is doing something right. The value case is strongest if you're comparing it against similarly priced options in the neighbourhood — not against ¥¥¥¥ destination restaurants where the room and service are part of what you're paying for.
What should a first-timer know about Neki?
The setting in Nihonbashikabutocho's old financial district is part of the appeal — this is a neighbourhood that has been converting former bank buildings into independent restaurants and bars, and Neki fits that mood. The interior is covered in wine bottles and album covers, with genre-less music playing throughout, so arrive expecting a relaxed room, not a formal dining experience. Booking is rated Easy relative to Tokyo's more competitive French tables.
What should I order at Neki?
The venue data doesn't specify individual dishes, so ordering blind is a real possibility here. The kitchen is built around French technique applied to Japanese ingredients and fermented vegetables, with Middle Eastern spices used selectively. Leaning into whatever the chef is featuring that day is the right approach — this is not a venue where the menu stays static. Pair with the organic wine list, which is matched to the modern cooking style.
What are alternatives to Neki in Tokyo?
HOMMAGE and Florilège are the closest comparisons if you want French cooking with a Japanese sensibility at a similar or adjacent price tier. L'Effervescence and RyuGin sit higher on formality and price. Harutaka is a different format entirely — omakase sushi — but competes for the same diner who wants technique without stiff ceremony. Neki is the most casual of the group and the easiest to book.
Does Neki handle dietary restrictions?
No specific dietary policy is documented for Neki. Given the kitchen's heavy use of fermented ingredients and cross-cultural spicing, it's worth contacting the restaurant directly before booking if you have specific restrictions. The French base cuisine typically involves dairy and meat, so vegetarians and vegans should confirm options in advance.
Is Neki good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key celebration with someone who appreciates creative cooking over formal atmosphere. The wine-bottle-lined room and ambient music make it feel like a knowing local pick rather than a white-tablecloth event. For a milestone dinner where the setting needs to signal significance, a ¥¥¥¥ room like L'Effervescence would read as more intentional.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Tokyo
- SézanneOccupying the seventh floor of the Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi, Sézanne earned its first Michelin star within months of opening in July 2021 and now holds three. British chef Daniel Calvert applies French technique to Japanese ingredients, producing a prix-fixe format that Tabelog has recognised with Silver awards every year from 2023 through 2026. It ranked 4th in Asia's 50 Best Restaurants in 2025 and 15th globally in 2024.
- 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.
- DenDen holds two Michelin stars, a World's 50 Best top-25 Asia ranking, and a Tabelog Silver Award running back to 2017 — and it books out within hours of the two-month reservation window opening. Chef Zaiyu Hasegawa's daily-changing seasonal omakase runs JPY 30,000–39,999 at dinner in a relaxed house-restaurant setting near Gaiemmae. Book by phone only, noon–5 PM JST. Lunch is irregular; plan around dinner.
- 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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