Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
Shima
350Pearl PointsOAD-ranked steak counter, book it.

About Shima
A dinner-only steak specialist in Nihonbashi, Shima has earned Opinionated About Dining recognition three consecutive years (peaking at #176 in Japan in 2024) and carries a 4.6 Google rating across 480 reviews. Booking is straightforward by Tokyo's high-end standards. Best for a quiet special-occasion dinner with a clear focus on chef-driven beef cookery.
Should You Book Shima?
Getting a table at Shima is easier than you might expect for a restaurant that has appeared on the Opinionated About Dining rankings three years running, climbing from Highly Recommended in 2023 to #176 in Japan in 2024, then settling at #201 in 2025. Dinner-only service runs Monday through Saturday, 5:30–9 pm, with Sunday closed. The booking window is manageable rather than punishing, which makes Shima a rare entry point into Tokyo's serious dining tier without the three-month waitlist anxiety of harder-to-crack venues. If you are planning a special occasion dinner in Nihonbashi and want a steak-focused room with credible critical standing, this is worth your time.
Portrait
Shima sits in the basement level of the Heiwa Fudosan Nihonbashi Building in Chuo City, a business-district address that filters out tourist foot traffic almost entirely. The subterranean setting shapes the room's character before you even look at the menu: lower ceilings, controlled lighting, and a spatial intimacy that makes it well-suited to a date or a quiet business dinner where conversation matters. This is not a room designed for groups wanting a lively atmosphere; it reads as deliberate and contained, which is either exactly what you want or a reason to look elsewhere.
Chef Manabu Ohshima leads the kitchen, and the focus is steak — a tighter brief than the kaiseki or French tasting-menu format that dominates Tokyo's high-recognition dining tier. That specificity is the venue's clearest proposition: if you want a chef-driven, serious treatment of beef in a setting that feels considered rather than casual, Shima makes the case. For broader Japanese cuisine or a more theatric dining format, venues like RyuGin or Harutaka serve different needs.
The Google rating sits at 4.6 across 480 reviews, which for a dinner-only, closed-Sunday specialist in a basement address in Nihonbashi is a signal of consistent execution rather than viral popularity. It is not a room that courts casual diners. The OAD trajectory — three consecutive years of recognition, with a peak ranking of #176 in Japan , confirms it operates above the noise without yet reaching the very top tier of Tokyo's dining hierarchy.
Multi-Visit Strategy
Shima rewards return visits more than most single-format restaurants because the steak focus creates a natural progression. On a first visit, the priority is understanding the kitchen's baseline: how the beef is sourced, how the chef approaches doneness and seasoning, and how the room paces a meal across the 5:30–9 pm service window. There is no rush in that format, and a first visit should be treated as orientation rather than a checklist.
A second visit earns more from leaning into what you know: if you found the earlier courses well-judged, ask for guidance on cuts or preparations you passed over the first time. Steak-specialist kitchens at this level often have more range within their format than a single visit reveals. Tokyo peers in different cuisine categories , Gorio, Hirayama, or Idea Ginza , operate differently enough that comparing Shima across visits gives you a clearer sense of where its specific strengths sit within the wider Tokyo picture.
By a third visit, the spatial character of the room becomes an asset rather than a feature to evaluate: the basement setting, the paced service, and the steak-forward menu operate as a coherent experience rather than individual elements to assess. That coherence is what separates a venue worth returning to from one worth visiting once. Shima earns the return.
Practical Details
Service runs Monday through Saturday, 5:30–9 pm only; Sunday is a firm close. The Nihonbashi address is central and well-connected by Tokyo standards, in Chuo City a short walk from Nihonbashi Station. Price range data is not published in our current record, so contact the venue directly to confirm menu pricing before booking, particularly if budget is a factor. Booking difficulty is rated easy relative to comparable Tokyo venues at this recognition level, so a week's notice should typically be sufficient, though calling ahead for special-occasion dates remains sensible. For steak alternatives in Tokyo, Peter Luger Steak House Tokyo offers a very different profile at the same address tier. If you are travelling beyond Tokyo, Kuishinbo Yamanaka in Kyoto covers steak within a kaiseki-adjacent format, and La Vache! in Hong Kong is the regional comparison for a more casual steak room.
For broader Tokyo planning, see our guides to Tokyo restaurants, Tokyo hotels, Tokyo bars, Tokyo wineries, and Tokyo experiences. If your trip extends beyond the capital, HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa round out the Japan picture at comparable recognition levels.
Ratings at a Glance
- Google: 4.6 / 5 (480 reviews)
- Opinionated About Dining: Leading Restaurants in Japan , #201 (2025), #176 (2024), Highly Recommended (2023)
How It Compares
See comparison section below.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Shima handle dietary restrictions?
Shima's format is built around steak, so guests with red meat restrictions will find little flexibility here. If you have specific dietary needs, check the venue's official channels before booking — a single-protein counter like this rarely pivots its core format. The Nihonbashi location draws a business clientele, and the kitchen's focus is narrow by design.
What should a first-timer know about Shima?
Shima is a focused steak counter in a basement-level space in Nihonbashi, helmed by chef Manabu Ohshima. It has ranked on Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Japan list in 2023, 2024, and 2025, which tells you the quality floor is high. On a first visit, let the kitchen lead — this is not a menu-browsing experience. It operates dinner-only, Monday through Saturday, 5:30–9 pm.
Is lunch or dinner better at Shima?
Shima does not serve lunch — dinner is the only option, Monday through Saturday, 5:30–9 pm. Sunday is a firm close. Plan your Tokyo itinerary accordingly; there is no midday fallback here.
How far ahead should I book Shima?
Book as early as possible, ideally several weeks out. Despite its OAD ranking, Shima is not as difficult to secure as Tokyo's most oversubscribed omakase counters, but the dinner-only, six-nights-a-week format means seat inventory is genuinely limited. Same-week availability is possible but not something to rely on if Tokyo steak is a priority for your trip.
What should I wear to Shima?
Shima sits in a Nihonbashi office building and draws a professional, business-district crowd. Neat, presentable clothing is the practical call — think business casual at minimum. There is no publicised dress code, but the setting and clientele skew formal enough that showing up in athleisure would read as a mismatch.
Is Shima good for solo dining?
A counter-format steak restaurant is one of the better solo dining formats Tokyo offers, and Shima fits that pattern. A single seat is easier to book than a table for two or more, and the focused menu means you are not navigating a complex shared-dishes decision alone. For solo diners serious about Tokyo's beef-focused counter scene, this is a practical and well-credentialled option.
Can I eat at the bar at Shima?
Shima operates as a counter-style restaurant, so the bar and the dining experience are effectively the same thing. This is not a venue where you drop in for a drink and a few bites at a separate bar area — you book a seat at the counter and commit to the full format. Walk-in availability is not documented, so a reservation is the reliable approach.
Location
Japan, 〒103-0027 Tokyo, Chuo City, Nihonbashi, 3 Chome−5−12 平和不動産日本橋ビル B1
Tokyo, Japan
Compare Shima
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shima | Steak | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Ranked #201 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Ranked #176 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Japan Highly Recommended (2023) | Easy | — |
| Harutaka | Sushi | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| RyuGin | Kaiseki, Japanese | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| L'Effervescence | French | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| HOMMAGE | Innovtive French, French | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Florilège | French | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Shima and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Harutaka — Sushi, ¥¥¥¥
- RyuGin — Kaiseki, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
- L'Effervescence — French, ¥¥¥¥
- HOMMAGE — Innovtive French, French, ¥¥¥¥
- Florilège — French, ¥¥¥
Shima occupies a different category from most of its OAD-ranked Tokyo peers. Where RyuGin and L'Effervescence offer elaborate multi-course formats with wide ingredient ranges, Shima commits to steak as its singular focus. That narrowness is a feature if beef-forward cooking in a quiet, intimate room is what you are after — but if you want the full-spectrum kaiseki or French tasting experience, RyuGin at ¥¥¥¥ delivers more course variety and theatrical presentation at a higher booking difficulty.
Against French-leaning peers like HOMMAGE and Florilège, Shima is the cleaner choice if you want to avoid a multi-hour tasting format. Florilège at ¥¥¥ is the stronger value play for technique-driven cooking in an accessible price tier, while HOMMAGE at ¥¥¥¥ targets diners who want innovative French cooking with more conceptual ambition. Shima's proposition is simpler and more direct: serious steak, a composed room, and consistent critical recognition without the complexity of a full tasting menu.
For pure sushi, Harutaka at ¥¥¥¥ is the clear alternative if your preference shifts toward raw fish over beef. Between the two, the decision is format-driven: Harutaka for counter sushi with a high technical ceiling; Shima for a more contained, protein-focused dinner where the steak is the main event. Both carry credible OAD recognition; Shima books easier. If you are working through Tokyo's serious dining rooms across multiple visits, Shima fits naturally as a mid-trip dinner between more elaborate format experiences.
Hours
- Monday
- 5:30–9 pm
- Tuesday
- 5:30–9 pm
- Wednesday
- 5:30–9 pm
- Thursday
- 5:30–9 pm
- Friday
- 5:30–9 pm
- Saturday
- 5:30–9 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore Tokyo
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