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    Restaurant in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

    San Omakase

    450pts

    Two Michelin stars. Book well ahead.

    San Omakase, Restaurant in Rio de Janeiro

    About San Omakase

    San Omakase holds back-to-back Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) and a perfect Google rating across nearly 1,000 reviews, making it Rio de Janeiro's reference point for Japanese omakase. The Leblon counter is the hardest reservation in the city's Japanese dining category. Book at least four weeks ahead, commit to a full evening, and know that the $$$$ price is justified if this is your format.

    Verdict

    San Omakase is one of the hardest reservations in Rio de Janeiro, and it earns that status. Back-to-back Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025 confirm what regular diners already know: this is the reference point for Japanese omakase in the city. If you are visiting Leblon and want a single high-stakes dinner, this is the booking to chase. The difficulty of getting a table is real, the price is at the leading of Rio's dining tier, and the format demands a full evening commitment. All of that is worth it, provided Japanese counter dining is your format. If you want modern Brazilian at the same price point, Oteque or Lasai are strong alternatives. But for precision Japanese cuisine in Rio, nothing else is close.

    The Counter Experience

    The omakase counter is the reason to book San Omakase, not just the format it uses. Sitting directly in front of chef Laurent Cherchi, you get a real-time view of every cut, every placement, every decision. This is not the kind of dining where food arrives from a kitchen you will never see. The visual rhythm of an omakase counter, watching a piece of fish being prepared centimetres away, is part of the meal's value. If you have already been once and sat at the counter, you already know this. What changes on a return visit is that you stop being distracted by the novelty and start paying attention to the sequencing, the pacing between courses, and the way the menu builds.

    For repeat visitors, the counter seat remains the right call. Avoid requesting any table away from the chef's line of sight if alternatives exist. The whole point of an omakase format at this level is the proximity. Compare this to counter experiences at Myojaku or Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo, where the counter is equally central to the experience. San Omakase operates in that same register, which makes it notable within Brazil and genuinely competitive by international standards for the format.

    Portrait

    San Omakase sits on Rua Conde de Bernadotte in Leblon, one of Rio's most concentrated blocks of serious dining. The address puts it in easy reach of the neighbourhood's hotels and the broader Zona Sul, though getting here is direct compared to getting a table. The restaurant holds a 5.0 Google rating across 956 reviews, which is a meaningful signal at that volume. A handful of five-star averages built on fewer than a hundred reviews can be gamed; 956 reviews at a perfect score is a different kind of data point.

    Chef Laurent Cherchi leads the kitchen. The cuisine is Japanese, the format is omakase, and the price range sits at the leading of Rio's market. Two consecutive Michelin stars, the first awarded in 2024 and confirmed again in 2025, establish San Omakase within Brazil's most decorated dining tier. For context on how rare that consistency is in Brazil, the country's Michelin-starred restaurants are concentrated heavily in São Paulo, with venues like D.O.M. setting the benchmark. Rio's Michelin presence is smaller, making San Omakase's consecutive recognition more significant, not less.

    Leblon as a neighbourhood adds practical value for a dinner of this kind. You will find accommodation options, bars for a pre-dinner drink, and Ipanema adjacent if you want to extend the evening. See our full Rio de Janeiro hotels guide and our full Rio de Janeiro bars guide for options near the restaurant. The broader dining context in Rio is covered in our full Rio de Janeiro restaurants guide.

    For those exploring beyond Rio, the Michelin-starred tier across Brazil includes standouts in Salvador and Campos do Jordão, and regional cooking worth the detour in Belo Horizonte and Itacaré. Closer to Rio's Japanese dining category, Sushi Leblon and Haru Sushi Bar are the accessible alternatives for Japanese in the same neighbourhood, at lower price points and with considerably easier booking windows.

    Booking

    Getting into San Omakase requires planning well ahead of your visit. With consecutive Michelin stars and a perfect Google rating at high volume, demand reliably exceeds capacity. Omakase formats by design run limited covers per service, which compresses availability further. If you are visiting Rio with a specific date in mind, treat this as the first reservation you make, not the last. Book at least three to four weeks out as a starting assumption. For peak travel periods around Carnival or the summer high season (December to February in Brazil), extend that window significantly. Walk-in availability is unlikely at a venue of this profile and format. Booking difficulty is rated Hard.

    Practical Details

    DetailSan OmakaseOtequeLasai
    CuisineJapanese (Omakase)Modern BrazilianRegional Brazilian
    Price range$$$$$$$$$$$$
    AwardsMichelin 1 Star (2024, 2025)Michelin starredMichelin starred
    Booking difficultyHardHardHard
    FormatCounter omakaseTasting menuTasting menu
    NeighbourhoodLeblonBotafogoSanta Teresa

    For a broader view of Rio's dining, experiences, and wine options, see our full Rio de Janeiro experiences guide and our full Rio de Janeiro wineries guide. If you are also researching regional Brazilian cooking as part of a wider Brazil trip, the contrast with San Omakase's Japanese format illustrates how far Rio's serious dining spans stylistically.

    FAQ

    • Is San Omakase good for a special occasion? Yes, and it is one of the better choices in Rio for a high-stakes dinner. Two consecutive Michelin stars, a counter-format setting that focuses attention on every course, and a price point that signals the occasion is serious all make this work for anniversaries, milestone meals, or a significant business dinner. It is not suited to large groups given the omakase counter format. For two people celebrating something meaningful, it is the right room.
    • How far ahead should I book San Omakase? Book three to four weeks out as a baseline. During Rio's high season (December to February) or Carnival period, push that to six weeks or more. This is a Michelin-starred omakase restaurant with limited covers per service. Leaving this to the week before your trip is a genuine risk of missing out entirely.
    • Is San Omakase worth the price? At $$$$ pricing, it sits at the leading of Rio's market alongside Oteque and Lasai. The difference is format: you are paying for counter omakase, which means a more intimate, chef-led experience than a standard tasting menu. Two Michelin stars across consecutive years back the quality claim. If omakase is the format you want in Brazil, this is the place to spend the money. If you want modern Brazilian cuisine at the same price, Oteque or Lasai may deliver more relevant value.
    • What are alternatives to San Omakase in Rio de Janeiro? For Japanese in Leblon at lower price points, Sushi Leblon and Haru Sushi Bar are the accessible options. For $$$$ tasting menus with a different culinary focus, Oteque (modern Brazilian) and Lasai (regional Brazilian) are Rio's other Michelin-recognised flagships. Oro is a strong option if you want contemporary cooking with Italian and Brazilian influences.
    • Can I eat at the bar at San Omakase? The omakase counter is the primary format at San Omakase. Specific bar seating details are not confirmed in available data, but the counter itself functions as the equivalent: an intimate, chef-facing position where the meal unfolds in front of you. This is how the format is designed. Request counter seating directly when booking rather than leaving it to chance.
    • What should I order at San Omakase? Omakase means the chef decides. You do not order individually. The menu is set by chef Laurent Cherchi and runs as a sequential progression. For return visitors, the focus shifts from what arrives to how the meal builds. Any dietary restrictions should be flagged at the time of booking, not on arrival.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at San Omakase? The omakase format here is the menu. At $$$$ pricing with back-to-back Michelin recognition, the value case rests on whether counter omakase is your preferred format and whether you are comfortable committing a full evening to a chef-led sequence. If you have been once, a return visit at the same price is easier to justify because you know what the pacing and structure ask of you as a diner.
    • What should I wear to San Omakase? Smart casual is the practical standard for a Michelin-starred restaurant of this profile in Rio. No specific dress code is published, but the price point and format make it sensible to dress up modestly. Avoid beachwear or overly casual clothing given the context. Rio's dining culture at this tier is generally less formal than Tokyo equivalents, but a baseline of smart dressing is appropriate.

    Compare San Omakase

    Value Check: San Omakase and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    San Omakase$$$$Hard
    Oteque$$$$Unknown
    Lasai$$$$Unknown
    Oro$$$$Unknown
    Lilia$$Unknown
    Mee$$$$Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is San Omakase good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases for it in Rio. Back-to-back Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025, a counter format with direct chef interaction, and a $$$$ price point all signal that this is a destination dinner, not a casual outing. The omakase structure also removes decision fatigue, which suits occasions where the meal itself is the event.

    How far ahead should I book San Omakase?

    Plan on booking at least four to six weeks in advance, possibly longer if your dates are fixed. Consecutive Michelin star recognition in 2024 and 2025 has pushed demand well beyond what a small omakase counter can absorb. Flexibility on date and time of week gives you a better shot, but last-minute availability is unlikely.

    Is San Omakase worth the price?

    At $$$$ in a Brazilian dining market where that tier is rare, the bar is high — and the back-to-back Michelin stars (2024, 2025) suggest it clears it. The counter format under chef Laurent Cherchi justifies the spend if omakase is the experience you want. If you're after à la carte Japanese or a shorter meal, the price-to-format fit is less obvious.

    What are alternatives to San Omakase in Rio de Janeiro?

    Oteque and Lasai are the strongest local alternatives for serious tasting-menu dining, both with their own Michelin recognition. Oro sits in the same high-end bracket and offers a different take on fine dining in Rio. None of the three replicates the omakase counter format, so if that format is what you're after, San Omakase has no direct equivalent in the city.

    Can I eat at the bar at San Omakase?

    The counter IS the experience at San Omakase — omakase by definition places you directly in front of the chef, so the counter format is the standard booking, not an upgrade or walk-in option. There is no separate bar seating or à la carte menu noted in available records.

    What should I order at San Omakase?

    Omakase means the kitchen decides, so there is no ordering involved. Chef Laurent Cherchi sets the progression for all guests. At $$$$ with two Michelin stars behind the format, the menu is the product — arrive without a fixed agenda and let the sequence run.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at San Omakase?

    Given the back-to-back Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) and the counter-focused omakase format, the tasting menu is the entire reason to book. There is no other format on offer. At the $$$$ price range, it competes with the top tier of Rio fine dining, and the Michelin consistency over two consecutive years supports the value case.

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