Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan

    Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku

    250pts

    Three generations, Michelin-recognised, absurdly affordable.

    Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku, Restaurant in Tokyo

    About Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku

    Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) and has served hand-formed onigiri in Asakusa across three generations. Priced at ¥ with walk-in access, it's the most practical high-credibility food stop in the neighbourhood. The specialist fillings — herring roe, preserved shrimp — are the reason to go beyond a first visit.

    Tokyo's Oldest Onigiri Shop Earns Its Michelin Bib Gourmand — and Your Visit

    The most limited thing at Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku isn't a seasonal special or a private room allocation — it's the moment your onigiri is made. Each piece is formed to order, by hand, in front of you. When the shop is full, you wait. That's the deal, and it's worth accepting.

    Yadoroku holds the Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) and a Google rating of 4.2 from over 930 reviews, which for a single-item, low-price counter in Asakusa represents a strong signal of consistent quality. This is a three-generation family operation, and the format has not drifted: ingredients displayed behind glass like a sushi counter, onigiri assembled on request, prices that stay firmly in the ¥ tier. If you've been once and ordered the salmon or the dried plum, you've seen only the entry point. The more interesting territory lies in the rarer fillings , herring roe pickled in sake lees, opossum shrimp preserved and simmered in sweetened soy sauce , which are the reason to return.

    What You're Actually Booking

    Yadoroku is not a group dining destination in the conventional sense. There is no private room, no tasting menu structure, no booking system built around corporate entertaining. What it does offer a group is something harder to engineer: a shared, unhurried moment around a genuinely old Tokyo institution. For a pair or a solo traveller, it's close to ideal , the counter format makes solo dining natural, the pace is quick enough that you won't feel pressured to leave, and the price point means ordering multiple pieces to work through the menu is financially painless.

    For larger groups, the practical math gets harder. The shop is small, seating is limited, and there is no confirmation from available data that group reservations or private arrangements exist. If you're travelling with four or more people, plan for a possible wait, arrive early in the service, and treat it as a neighbourhood stop rather than a set-piece dinner.

    The Experience, Honestly Framed

    The glass case display is the sensory centrepiece here , the visual logic of a sushi bar applied to rice and nori. The kitchen is compact and open enough that the smell of warm rice and toasted seaweed reaches you before you sit down. That aroma is the reliable constant; the fillings are where the range opens up.

    The standard fillings , salmon, dried plum , are benchmarks worth trying if this is your first visit, but they're also available at convenience stores across Japan. The reason Yadoroku holds a Michelin distinction is the depth of the filling list, specifically those rarer, preserved items that require sourcing and preparation far beyond a combini's range. If you're returning, skip the familiar and go directly to the specialist fillings. That's where the three-generation knowledge base actually shows.

    Neighbourhood context matters here too. Asakusa was historically dense with bars and late-night pubs, and Yadoroku's original customer base was people stopping in after a night out to settle their stomachs. That heritage explains the filling range: items calibrated for restorative eating, not performance dining. The shop sits at 3 Chome-9-10, Asakusa, Taito City , easy to reach and direct to fold into a broader Asakusa visit alongside the temples and the covered shopping streets.

    How to Book and When to Go

    Booking difficulty is low. Yadoroku does not require weeks of advance planning in the way Tokyo's omakase counters do. That said, arriving at peak tourist hours in Asakusa means a potential wait, and the shop's small size means it fills quickly when tour groups pass through. Early morning or mid-afternoon visits are the more comfortable window. No phone number or website is listed in available data, so checking hours directly before visiting is worth the effort , walk-in appears to be the standard access method.

    If you're building a Tokyo itinerary around food, Yadoroku fits cleanly as a low-cost, high-interest morning or afternoon stop rather than a main event. Pair it with a walk through Asakusa and you have a half-day that doesn't require a reservation strategy. For the serious end of Tokyo dining , the counters, the kaiseki, the tasting menus , see our full Tokyo restaurants guide, and explore further afield with guides to HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, and akordu in Nara.

    Pearl Ratings Summary

    • Value: High , Bib Gourmand pricing with Michelin-level sourcing
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-in standard, no complex reservation system
    • Solo suitability: Excellent , counter format, quick service, no minimum spend pressure
    • Group suitability: Limited , small space, no confirmed group arrangements
    • Repeat visit case: Strong , rarer fillings justify return visits beyond the first

    Practical Details

    DetailOnigiri Asakusa YadorokuTypical Tokyo Omakase CounterTokyo Convenience Store Onigiri
    Price tier¥¥¥¥¥¥
    Booking requiredNo (walk-in)Yes (weeks ahead)No
    Michelin recognitionBib Gourmand 2024Stars common at top tierNone
    Made-to-orderYesYesNo
    Specialist fillingsYes (herring roe, shrimp)Varies by formatStandard range only
    Solo diningEasyEasy (counter)Easy

    Pearl Picks , Tokyo and Beyond

    Compare Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku

    Booking Options Near Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Onigiri Asakusa YadorokuOnigiri¥Easy
    HarutakaSushi¥¥¥¥Unknown
    L'EffervescenceFrench¥¥¥¥Unknown
    RyuGinKaiseki, Japanese¥¥¥¥Unknown
    HOMMAGEInnovtive French, French¥¥¥¥Unknown
    CronyInnovative, French¥¥¥¥Unknown

    A quick look at how Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku?

    This is a counter-service onigiri shop in Asakusa that has been run by the same family for three generations and holds a 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand. You walk in, choose your fillings from a glass case display, and your onigiri is made fresh on the spot. The price range is ¥ — expect to eat well for very little. Come with an open mind about less familiar fillings like herring roe pickled in sake lees or opossum shrimp in soy.

    Is Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku good for solo dining?

    It's one of the better solo dining options in Asakusa. The counter format means there's no awkward table-for-one dynamic, and the per-piece ordering structure lets you try multiple fillings without committing to a set menu. For solo diners looking for something more elaborate, L'Effervescence or RyuGin serve that purpose — but at many times the price.

    How far ahead should I book Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku?

    No advance booking is needed. Yadoroku operates as a walk-in counter, not a reservation-driven destination. Arriving early or outside peak tourist hours in Asakusa will keep any wait short. This is a meaningful contrast to Tokyo's omakase counters, where waits of weeks or months are standard.

    What should I wear to Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku?

    No dress code applies. This is a casual neighbourhood counter in Asakusa — wear whatever you're already exploring the city in. The atmosphere is functional and unpretentious, consistent with a spot that started serving late-night bar-goers looking for a quick, restorative bite.

    Does Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu spans a range of fillings from salmon and dried plum to preserved seafood, so there are options across the spectrum. That said, detailed allergen or dietary accommodation information isn't documented in the venue record, and communication may require Japanese language support or a translation app. If you have serious dietary restrictions, confirm specifics on arrival.

    Can Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku accommodate groups?

    Small groups of two to four can eat comfortably at the counter, but this isn't a venue designed around group dining. There's no private room and no set menu structure to anchor a group experience. For a group meal with more ceremony in Tokyo, HOMMAGE or RyuGin are better fits — though at significantly higher cost.

    What should I order at Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku?

    The database highlights the full glass-case display as the point of interaction, with a range from straightforward salmon and dried plum through to rarer fillings like herring roe pickled in sake lees and opossum shrimp simmered in sweetened soy. The rarer items are what separate Yadoroku from a convenience-store onigiri — those are worth prioritising on a first visit.

    Recognized By

    More restaurants in Tokyo

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Onigiri Asakusa Yadoroku on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.