Restaurant in New York City, United States
Shion 69 Leonard Street
900Pearl PointsEight seats. Book early or miss out.

About Shion 69 Leonard Street
An eight-seat omakase counter in Tribeca with a Michelin star, a top-25 OAD North America ranking, and seafood sourced directly from Japanese fishermen — including Chef Shion Uino's hometown of Amakusa. The seasonal menu shifts meaningfully across the year, making return visits worthwhile. Booking is genuinely hard; plan weeks ahead and treat availability as limited.
Verdict: One of New York's Hardest Tables — and One That Earns It
Getting into Shion 69 Leonard Street takes real effort. Eight seats, no walk-in culture, and a repeat-customer base that fills those spots fast mean you should plan weeks out at minimum. Whether that effort is worth it: yes, conditionally. If you are looking for precise, sourcing-obsessed nigiri in a quiet room where nothing distracts from the fish, this is among the clearest arguments New York has to offer. If you want a more accessible entry point to high-end omakase, Joji or Bar Masa are easier to book and still deliver at a serious level. But for the particular experience Chef Shion Uino has built at 69 Leonard Street in Tribeca, there is no direct substitute in the city.
What This Place Actually Is
Shion 69 Leonard Street runs six nights a week, Monday through Saturday from 6 PM to 11 PM, closed Sundays. The format is omakase at an eight-seat counter — that is the full offer. There is no à la carte option, no second-seating side room, no lounge to wait in. You book the counter, you show up, and the meal proceeds on Chef Uino's terms. That format rewards guests who already understand omakase pacing and protocol; if this is your first experience with the format, go in knowing that conversation is quiet, the progression is set, and the chef's attention to each piece is the point.
The sourcing is the defining characteristic of the restaurant. Much of the seafood comes directly from Japan, with a notable portion sourced from fishermen in Uino's hometown of Amakusa. That direct-from-fisherman pipeline shows up on the plate in a specific way: every piece is cut from whole product. The fish is never pre-portioned from a fillet that's been sitting. That distinction is not decoration , it affects texture and temperature, and regulars notice it immediately on a return visit. The Opinionated About Dining entry for this restaurant (which ranked it #22 in North America for 2025) specifically calls out that the product looks whole and intact every time it is served.
The Seasonal Angle: Why Timing Your Visit Matters
Because the sourcing is tied directly to Japanese fishing seasons and what Uino's Amakusa contacts are pulling from the water, what arrives on your plate shifts meaningfully across the year. Hairy crab dressed with Japanese black vinegar is one of his documented signature preparations, and that is a cold-weather dish , hairy crab season in Japan peaks through autumn and into early winter. If you are a returning guest choosing when to rebook, the late autumn window is worth targeting specifically for that course. The tamago, which OAD's entry describes as tasting as perfect as it looks, is a constant across seasons and represents a reliable benchmark from visit to visit. But the nigiri selection itself will reflect what is prime in Japanese waters at the time of your booking, which means a May visit and a November visit will feel like materially different meals. For a second or third visit, that seasonal rotation is a reason to return rather than a reason to hesitate.
For context on how this compares internationally, the sourcing-first, season-driven approach is what separates sushi-ya at this level from more fixed-program restaurants. If you have visited Harutaka in Tokyo or Sushi Shikon in Hong Kong, Shion 69 Leonard Street operates in that register: the product drives the menu, not the other way around.
Returning Guest Guidance
If you have been once and are deciding whether to rebook, the answer depends on what you took from the first visit. The tamago and the Amakusa-sourced nigiri are consistent anchors, but the surrounding sequence will shift with the season. Regulars at Shion 69 Leonard Street are known to receive special pieces throughout the evening , pieces that do not necessarily appear for first-timers , which means returning guests are not experiencing a repeat of visit one. That is a meaningful distinction at this price tier. For comparison, venues like Sushi Sho operate on a similar philosophy of rewarding returning guests with additional courses and trust-built latitude. At Shion, that relationship with regulars appears to be a genuine operating principle rather than a marketing claim, given how consistently it appears in credible coverage.
Awards and Recognition
The credentials here are direct: Michelin one star (2024), Pearl Recommended (2025), and Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in North America ranked #22 for 2025, up from #31 in 2024 and #25 in 2023. That upward trajectory across three consecutive OAD rankings is notable , it indicates the restaurant is getting stronger, not plateauing. OAD rankings are generated from a large pool of frequent-diner votes weighted toward serious eaters, which makes them a meaningful proxy for how the restaurant lands with people who eat at this level regularly. Google reviews sit at 4.5 across 226 ratings, which for an eight-seat omakase is a sizable sample and suggests consistent execution rather than occasional peaks.
Practical Details
The restaurant is at 69 Leonard Street in Tribeca, operating Monday through Saturday evenings only. Price range is $$$$ , specific per-head pricing is not publicly listed, but at this format and credential level, you should budget at the higher end of New York omakase pricing. For reference, Joji and Bar Masa offer price benchmarks in the same tier. Booking should be treated as a hard challenge: eight seats and a strong regular customer base mean you are competing for limited availability. Contact the restaurant directly and plan well ahead , last-minute availability is unlikely. For groups larger than two, confirm whether the full eight-seat counter can be privatised; at this size, a party of four already occupies half the room.
For more options across the city, see our full New York City restaurants guide. If you are building a full trip around a meal here, our New York City hotels guide and bars guide cover the rest of the evening. For comparable destination-dining experiences elsewhere in the US, The French Laundry in Napa, Alinea in Chicago, and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg operate at a similar commitment level in terms of booking effort and price. If you are specifically tracking the leading sushi outside Japan, Blue Ribbon Sushi and Bond Street offer lower-friction alternatives in New York when the occasion does not call for full omakase. For serious diners comparing notes across cities, Providence in Los Angeles, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, and Emeril's in New Orleans represent the same tier of intentional dining in their respective markets.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Shion 69 Leonard Street accommodate groups?
No. With only eight seats at the counter, this is not a group dining option. Parties larger than two or three will almost certainly not be seated together, and even pairs need to book well in advance. For group occasions of four or more, Atomix or Eleven Madison Park offer formats that handle larger parties without compromising the experience.
Is Shion 69 Leonard Street good for solo dining?
Yes, and arguably this is where the format works best. An eight-seat counter run by a chef who personally sources seafood from Amakusa fishermen is designed for focused, one-on-one attention. Solo diners should expect engagement with the chef and the advantage of being easier to seat — competition for a single spot is still fierce, but easier than a pair.
What should I wear to Shion 69 Leonard Street?
The venue data does not specify a dress code, but the format — eight seats, $$$$ pricing, Michelin-starred omakase — signals that guests dress accordingly. Business casual at minimum; most diners at this price point arrive in smart attire. Avoid anything that would disrupt a quiet, intimate counter setting.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Shion 69 Leonard Street?
At $$$$ and with Michelin one-star recognition plus a top-25 ranking from Opinionated About Dining in both 2023 and 2025, the case for value is credible. The sourcing — whole fish pulled directly from Japanese fishermen in Amakusa — is a meaningful differentiator at this price point. If omakase is your format and you want seafood-forward precision over theatrical production, this justifies the spend. If you want more variety of course styles, Atomix at a comparable price covers more ground.
Is Shion 69 Leonard Street good for a special occasion?
Yes, provided the occasion suits an intimate, quiet counter. The eight-seat format means no ambient crowd energy or celebratory room atmosphere — it is focused and personal. Anniversaries or milestone dinners for two work well here. For a celebratory occasion that benefits from a grander room and more theatrical pacing, Per Se or Eleven Madison Park are better fits.
Is Shion 69 Leonard Street worth the price?
For omakase specifically, yes. Michelin one-star status, a #22 ranking on Opinionated About Dining's North America list (2025), and direct-from-fisherman sourcing from Amakusa all support the $$$$ price tag. The benchmark comparison is Masa, which carries a significantly higher price and a two-star rating — Shion 69 Leonard represents a more accessible entry point into New York's top-tier sushi without the full Masa premium.
What are alternatives to Shion 69 Leonard Street in New York City?
For comparable omakase at the top of the NYC market, Masa is the higher-priced ceiling option with a two-star Michelin pedigree. Atomix offers a Korean tasting menu format at a similar $$$$ tier with more course variety. Le Bernardin is the reference point for French seafood at the same price level and is easier to book. Per Se and Eleven Madison Park cover high-end tasting menus if the omakase format is not essential to your decision.
Location
69 Leonard St, New York, NY 10013
New York City, United States
Compare Shion 69 Leonard Street
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shion 69 Leonard Street | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #22 (2025); There are just eight seats and a distinctive Japanese charm at Chef Shion Uino's quiet sushi-ya, which features prized, beautiful seafood sourced primarily from Japan (including impressive amount directly from fishermen in his hometown of Amakusa). Never, at any point, does it look like the chef is cutting from a filet he’s already sliced. The product is whole and luscious every time, which is all the more reason why the nigiri sees little beyond a dot of wasabi or a dab of nikiri. Regulars, of which there are many, are treated to special pieces throughout the evening and will recognize some of his signature dishes, like hairy crab dressed with Japanese black vinegar, as well as his unrivaled tamago, which tastes as perfect as it looks.; Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #31 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #25 (2023) | $$$$ | — |
| Le Bernardin | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Atomix | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Eleven Madison Park | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Masa | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Per Se | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
How Shion 69 Leonard Street stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Le Bernardin — French, Seafood, $$$$
- Atomix — Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$
- Eleven Madison Park — French, Vegan, $$$$
- Masa — Sushi, Japanese, $$$$
- Per Se — French, Contemporary, $$$$
How Shion 69 Leonard Street Compares
Among New York's $$$$-tier tasting menu options, Shion 69 Leonard Street has the tightest focus. Masa is the natural direct comparison — both are Japanese omakase at the top of the market — but Masa operates on a larger scale with a more theatrical atmosphere and a price point widely reported as the highest of any restaurant in the US. Shion delivers a more intimate and less produced experience. If you want the finest sushi New York offers and your priority is sourcing precision and quiet counter craft over spectacle, Shion is the clearer choice. If you want the full luxury performance and are less concerned about the bill, Masa fits that profile better.
Le Bernardin and Per Se are both three-Michelin-star French restaurants that offer a different format entirely — multi-course tasting menus with tableside service in formal dining rooms. They are easier to book than Shion and offer more flexibility on group size. If your occasion calls for a larger party or you want a room that accommodates conversation more naturally, either is a better fit. Eleven Madison Park occupies its own category as a plant-based tasting menu; it is not a direct alternative for a sushi dinner but competes for the same special-occasion budget.
Atomix is worth considering if you want a counter-format tasting menu with serious culinary credentials at a similar price tier — it holds two Michelin stars and runs a progression-based menu with strong sourcing. It books hard but is arguably more accessible than Shion and offers more complexity in the overall dining program (beverage pairings, detailed course notes). The honest comparison: Atomix gives you more structure and narrative around the meal; Shion gives you more of the fish itself. Which one fits your evening depends entirely on what you are there for.
Hours
- Monday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Tuesday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Wednesday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Thursday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Friday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Saturday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
Explore New York City
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