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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    SaSa Japanese Restaurant

    250pts

    Japantown sushi without the reservation battle.

    SaSa Japanese Restaurant, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About SaSa Japanese Restaurant

    SaSa is a Pearl Recommended Japanese sushi restaurant in San Francisco's Japantown, led by chef Scott Kim and rated 4.4 across 323 Google reviews. Booking is easy compared to the city's harder-to-access tasting menu destinations, making it a practical choice for a special occasion sushi meal without the reservation friction. A well-considered option for two.

    Should You Book SaSa Japanese Restaurant?

    Getting a table at SaSa is not the ordeal you face at Benu or Atelier Crenn, and that accessibility is part of its appeal. Booking difficulty is rated easy, which in a city where omakase seats disappear weeks in advance is itself a signal worth noting. If you have been circling the idea of a serious Japanese sushi meal in San Francisco and keep bouncing off the booking friction elsewhere, SaSa is the answer. It holds a Pearl Recommended Restaurant designation for 2025 and a 4.4 Google rating across 323 reviews, which together suggest consistent delivery rather than a one-off spike in quality.

    The SaSa Experience

    SaSa sits at 22 Peace Plaza, Suite 530 in Japantown, a neighborhood that gives the meal context beyond the plate. Chef Scott Kim leads the kitchen, and the sushi here is the kind of work that rewards attention. A well-constructed sushi progression rewards the diner who pays attention to sequence: lighter, cleaner flavors early, building toward richer, fattier cuts, with rice temperature and seasoning acting as the connective thread throughout. That architecture, when executed with care, is what separates a genuinely considered sushi meal from a plate of good fish. SaSa has earned enough consistent praise to suggest the progression holds.

    For a special occasion dinner, the Japantown setting adds a layer that downtown restaurant rows cannot replicate. Peace Plaza is quiet by San Francisco standards, which means the meal does not compete with street noise or the ambient buzz of a packed SoMa dining room. If you are planning a celebration or an occasion that benefits from atmosphere as much as food, the location works in your favor. Compare this to Lazy Bear or Quince, where the room itself is part of the performance. SaSa is lower-key, but that restraint suits the format.

    Timing your visit matters. Coming in the current season means you are eating in a period when Japanese sushi menus traditionally shift toward whatever is peaking in quality from Pacific and imported fish supply. Autumn and winter tend to favor fatty fish in good condition. If you are visiting now, ask about what is currently featured on the menu — seasonal availability drives the quality ceiling at any sushi counter, and SaSa's Pearl designation suggests the kitchen is responding to what is good rather than running a static list year-round.

    On the practical side, SaSa is located in Japantown's Peace Plaza complex, which has parking nearby and is reachable by public transit via the 38 Geary corridor. For visitors staying in the city and looking to pair dinner with other plans, our San Francisco hotels guide and San Francisco bars guide are worth checking alongside this. For broader dining context, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide.

    If you are comparing SaSa to sushi options outside San Francisco, the reference points worth knowing are Ginza Sushiko in Los Angeles, which operates at a significantly higher price and formality level, and other serious Japanese counters across the West Coast. SaSa sits at an accessible point in that spectrum — serious enough to satisfy a genuine interest in the form, approachable enough that you do not need to treat the reservation like a project.

    Pearl Rating

    • Pearl Status: Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025)
    • Google Rating: 4.4 / 5 (323 reviews)
    • Cuisine: Japanese Sushi
    • Booking Difficulty: Easy

    Practical Details

    • Address: 22 Peace Plaza, Suite 530, San Francisco, CA 94115
    • Neighborhood: Japantown
    • Chef: Scott Kim
    • Price Range: Not listed , confirm on booking
    • Reservations: Easy to secure; no advance marathon required

    How It Compares

    FAQ

    Is SaSa Japanese Restaurant good for solo dining?

    • Yes. Sushi counters are one of the formats where solo dining works well, and SaSa is suited to it. You get direct access to the progression of the meal without the logistics of coordinating a group order. If solo dining at a counter is your preference, SaSa is a more relaxed entry point than the heavily booked omakase counters elsewhere in San Francisco.

    What should I wear to SaSa Japanese Restaurant?

    • Smart casual is the appropriate call. SaSa is not operating at the black-tie register of Quince or the creative-formal tone of Atelier Crenn. Japantown dining generally skews relaxed, but a sushi restaurant with a Pearl Recommended designation warrants putting effort in. Avoid overpowering fragrances, which interfere with the subtleties of a sushi meal.

    What should I order at SaSa Japanese Restaurant?

    • No specific menu data is available in Pearl's verified records, so naming dishes would be speculation. What can be said is that at a chef-led sushi counter, following the chef's selection rather than ordering à la carte is generally the smarter approach , it lets the kitchen show you the progression as intended. Ask what is currently featured and let the seasonal availability guide the decision. Chef Scott Kim runs the kitchen, and deferring to the chef's current focus is standard practice at this level.

    Does SaSa Japanese Restaurant handle dietary restrictions?

    • Contact the restaurant directly before your visit if restrictions are a factor. Pearl does not have verified booking policy or dietary accommodation data for SaSa. At a sushi counter, some restrictions (shellfish, certain fish) can be worked around, while others (full pescatarian requirements, for example) are more structural. Call or email ahead , do not assume the counter can flex on the night.

    Can SaSa Japanese Restaurant accommodate groups?

    • Seat count data is not available in Pearl's verified records for SaSa. Sushi restaurants in this format typically work better for smaller parties , two to four people is the sweet spot for a counter experience. Larger groups can complicate pacing and seating. If you are planning a group of six or more for a special occasion, call ahead and confirm capacity. For large-group celebration dining in San Francisco with confirmed private options, Lazy Bear or Saison may be better structured for that format.

    Pearl Picks , Also Consider

    • Benu , French-Chinese, San Francisco , For a tasting menu format with more ceremony and a higher price ceiling
    • Lazy Bear , Progressive American, San Francisco , For a communal, theatrical dinner-party format
    • Ginza Sushiko , Japanese Sushi, Los Angeles , For a comparison point at the upper end of West Coast omakase
    • The French Laundry , Napa , For a special-occasion tasting menu with a different register entirely
    • Single Thread Farm , Healdsburg , For Japanese-influenced precision in a Wine Country setting
    • San Francisco experiences guide , For what to do around your meal
    • San Francisco wineries guide , For pre- or post-dinner wine options

    Compare SaSa Japanese Restaurant

    Comparing SaSa Japanese Restaurant to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    SaSa Japanese RestaurantJapanese SushiPearl Recommended Restaurant (2025)Easy
    Lazy BearProgressive American, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Atelier CrennModern French, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    BenuFrench - Chinese, Asian$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    QuinceItalian, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 StarUnknown
    SaisonProgressive American, Californian$$$$Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is SaSa Japanese Restaurant good for solo dining?

    Yes, SaSa is a solid solo option. The Japantown location and sushi-focused format suit counter-style dining, which tends to work better for solo guests than large table-service rooms. Booking difficulty is lower than peers like Benu or Atelier Crenn, so you won't need to plan weeks ahead to secure a spot.

    What should I wear to SaSa Japanese Restaurant?

    Treat it as a relaxed but considered neighbourhood restaurant rather than a formal dining event. The Japantown setting and mid-tier booking accessibility suggest a casual-to-neat register — think clean jeans and a collared shirt rather than a suit. Nothing in SaSa's Pearl 2025 recognition signals a formal dress requirement.

    What should I order at SaSa Japanese Restaurant?

    SaSa is a Japanese sushi restaurant under Chef Scott Kim, so the core of your order should be sushi-forward. Beyond that, specific menu items are not documented in Pearl's current record, so check with the restaurant directly for current offerings and any chef's selection options.

    Does SaSa Japanese Restaurant handle dietary restrictions?

    Japanese sushi kitchens can typically accommodate pescatarian and gluten-aware diners with advance notice, though raw fish is central to the format. Pearl's data does not include SaSa's specific dietary policy, so contact the restaurant before booking if restrictions are a deciding factor.

    Can SaSa Japanese Restaurant accommodate groups?

    SaSa is located in a suite setting at Peace Plaza, which tends to favour smaller parties over large group reservations. For groups of four or more, check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity. If a private dining room or guaranteed group format is a requirement, Quince or Saison offer more documented group infrastructure.

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