Restaurant in Kyoto, Japan
shiro
610Pearl PointsEight seats, no substitutions, book early.

About shiro
shiro is an eight-seat counter in Nakagyo Ward serving a fixed chef's-choice course that blends Italian technique with ingredients sourced from Shimane Prefecture. A Tabelog Award Bronze, Michelin Plate, and Tabelog 100 listing in its first year make it the most credentialled new Italian-influenced restaurant in Kyoto. Book via TableCheck; no substitutions, no walk-ins.
Eight seats. Reservation only. No substitutions.
shiro opened in Nakagyo Ward on 14 August 2024, and within its first full year of operation it collected a Tabelog Award 2026 Bronze, a Michelin Plate (2024), and a spot on the Tabelog Italian WEST "Tabelog 100" list for 2025. For a restaurant that has been trading for less than 18 months, that credential stack is serious. If you are weighing whether to commit to a JPY 20,000–29,999 per head course here, the short answer is yes — provided you understand the format before you walk in.
The format is non-negotiable: a single chef's-choice course, all guests seated simultaneously, no ingredient substitutions. The restaurant seats eight at a counter. That is not a soft cap — it is the entire room. This is a cooking experience built around concentration and control, and the rules exist to protect that. If your group needs flexibility (allergies, strong dislikes, a member who wants to pace differently), shiro is the wrong booking. If you can commit to the format, the scarcity and the discipline are exactly what justify the price.
What you are actually paying for
The concept sits at the intersection of Italian technique and Japanese ingredient sourcing, with a particular focus on seafood and produce from Hamada, Shimane Prefecture , the chef's home region. Kyoto spring water features in the cooking. The result is a style that Tabelog categorises as both Italian and Innovative, which is accurate: this is not a pasta restaurant with Japanese garnishes, nor is it a kaiseki course with olive oil. The white interior is spare and considered; the counter seats put every plate in direct visual focus. There is nothing decorative about the room , the attention is on the food.
At JPY 20,000–29,999 before the 10% service charge, shiro sits in the same price band as cenci, Kyoto's other serious Italian-leaning counter, and well below the ¥¥¥¥ tier occupied by kaiseki institutions. You are not overpaying for the neighbourhood or the design budget. You are paying for a tightly controlled tasting experience with a clear ingredient philosophy and a two-year credential record that is unusually strong for a venue this new.
On the question of delivery and off-premise dining
This is a question worth answering directly: shiro does not travel. The format , a single simultaneous course for eight guests, paced over approximately two hours at a counter , is entirely dependent on the in-room experience. No takeout, no delivery, no casual drop-in. If you are looking for a Kyoto Italian kitchen whose food you can enjoy at your hotel or on a picnic by the Kamo River, this is not it. The cuisine here is constructed around the moment of service. Missing the start of service means missing dishes. Arriving at the counter is the whole point. Plan your evening accordingly, and do not book this as part of a night with hard time constraints later.
Booking shiro
Reservations are via TableCheck (the restaurant's own recommendation). There is no phone booking line listed. The venue is closed Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday through Friday it opens for dinner only (18:00–21:00); Saturday and Sunday it runs both lunch (12:00–14:30) and dinner (18:00–21:00). Booking difficulty is currently rated Easy by Pearl , which, given the Tabelog recognition and the eight-seat limit, should be treated as a time-sensitive condition rather than a permanent state. Book via the website at ido-kyoto.com/shiro.
The restaurant is a three-minute walk from Karasuma Oike Station, on the second floor of the IDO building at Takoyakushicho 287. No parking on site; coin parking is available nearby. The venue is wheelchair accessible.
Children are welcome but reservations are only accepted for guests aged 13 and over. The dress code prohibits extremely casual attire and asks guests to refrain from wearing perfume. Credit cards accepted (Visa, Mastercard, JCB, Amex); electronic money and QR code payments are not.
For a special occasion
shiro is well-suited to a dinner for two or a small group marking something specific. The counter format means you are not tucked into a corner table , you are the room, with seven other people who are equally committed to the same meal. That shared focus works well for a significant dinner. Private rooms are not available, but the entire venue can be reserved for private use for up to 20 people. If you are planning a group occasion and want full exclusivity, that option is worth exploring directly through the website.
For context on how shiro fits within a broader Kyoto dining trip: it pairs well with a more traditional kaiseki experience at another point in the itinerary, since the formats are complementary rather than overlapping. See our full Kyoto restaurants guide for a wider set of options. If you are also planning accommodation, our Kyoto hotels guide covers the full range. For drinks before or after, our Kyoto bars guide has practical options near the Karasuma Oike area.
How it compares in Kyoto's innovative dining scene
Other venues working in a similar creative register in Kyoto include MASHIRO, COPPIE, middle, Raiz, and TOKI. For those travelling across Japan, comparable counter-format contemporary experiences include HAJIME in Osaka, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, 6 in Okinawa, and Harutaka in Tokyo. For international reference points in the contemporary counter-course format, César in New York City and Jungsik in Seoul operate in a similar price tier with comparable levels of creative intent. Explore our Kyoto wineries guide and Kyoto experiences guide to build out the rest of your trip.
Know Before You Go
- Price: JPY 20,000–29,999 per person (both lunch and dinner) + 10% service charge
- Format: Chef's-choice course only. No substitutions. All guests start simultaneously.
- Seats: 8 counter seats total
- Hours: Wed–Fri dinner 18:00–21:00 | Sat–Sun lunch 12:00–14:30, dinner 18:00–21:00 | Mon–Tue closed
- Booking: Reservation only via TableCheck. No walk-ins.
- Getting there: 3-minute walk from Karasuma Oike Station. Second floor, IDO building.
- Dress code: No extremely casual attire. No perfume.
- Age minimum: 13 and over
- Private hire: Available for up to 20 people
- Payment: Credit cards (Visa, Mastercard, JCB, Amex). No electronic money or QR payments.
- Awards: Tabelog Award 2026 Bronze | Tabelog Italian WEST "Tabelog 100" 2025 | Michelin Plate 2024
- Opened: 14 August 2024
FAQs
- Is the tasting menu worth it at shiro? Yes, at JPY 20,000–29,999 per head, the value is competitive for this format. shiro has earned a Tabelog Award Bronze, a Michelin Plate, and a Tabelog 100 listing , all within its first year. That credential pace is faster than most comparable Italian-influenced counter restaurants in Kyoto. The caveat: the no-substitution policy is firm, and the course is fixed. If you need menu flexibility, look at cenci instead, which operates in the same price tier with a slightly different approach.
- How far ahead should I book shiro? Pearl rates booking difficulty as Easy currently, but that should be read as a window, not a guarantee. An eight-seat counter with growing Tabelog recognition will not stay easy to book indefinitely. Book two to three weeks ahead to be safe, particularly for weekend slots. Reservations go through TableCheck via the restaurant website.
- Can shiro accommodate groups? The dining room holds eight at the counter and cannot be reconfigured. For parties larger than eight, private hire of the full venue is available for up to 20 people. Contact the restaurant through the website to discuss. There is no phone line listed for direct enquiries.
- What should I wear to shiro? The dress code prohibits extremely casual attire , so no sportswear, flip-flops, or very casual streetwear. Beyond that, smart casual is the practical target. The room is described as stylish and relaxing; overdressing is not necessary. One firm rule: no perfume or strong fragrances. This is a counter format where other guests are seated close by, and the kitchen's aromas are part of the experience.
- Is shiro good for a special occasion? Yes, with the right expectations. The eight-seat counter, the fixed simultaneous course, and the Shimane-sourced ingredient philosophy make for a focused, considered dinner that marks an occasion without theatrical excess. It works well for a significant dinner for two or a small group. There are no private rooms within the dining space, but full venue hire for up to 20 people is available if exclusivity is the priority. At JPY 20,000–29,999 per head plus service, budget accordingly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at shiro?
At JPY 20,000–29,999 per head (plus a 10% service charge), shiro delivers a focused case for the price: a Tabelog Award 2026 Bronze, a Michelin Plate, and a concept built around direct-sourced seafood and produce from Hamada, Shimane. The format is a fixed chef's course with no ingredient substitutions — if you need flexibility, this is not the right room. For guests who can commit to the format, the value proposition holds up against comparable Kyoto counters at similar price points.
How far ahead should I book shiro?
Book as early as possible: shiro opened in August 2024 and already holds a Tabelog Bronze, which means demand at an 8-seat counter outpaces availability quickly. Reservations are made through TableCheck (the restaurant's own recommendation); there is no phone booking line. The venue is closed Monday and Tuesday, and weekend lunch slots (Saturday and Sunday, 12:00–14:30) are the shortest availability window.
Can shiro accommodate groups?
The dining room seats 8 at a counter with no private rooms, but private hire is available for up to 20 people — making it a workable option for a corporate dinner or celebration if you can take the whole space. For a standard reservation, groups larger than 8 cannot be seated together in a single service. Note that all guests start simultaneously, so late arrivals risk missing courses.
What should I wear to shiro?
The venue explicitly prohibits extremely casual attire and asks guests to refrain from wearing perfume or fragrance. Smart casual is the practical baseline: no sportswear or beachwear, but a formal dress code is not stated. The no-fragrance rule is firm — the kitchen's focus on ingredient integrity makes this a genuine request, not a formality.
Is shiro good for a special occasion?
Yes, with caveats. The 8-seat counter format, simultaneous-start service, and award-recognised cooking (Tabelog Bronze 2026, Michelin Plate) make it a credible choice for a dinner marking something specific. Guests aged 13 and over only are accepted, and the no-substitution policy means it works best for a party where everyone eats the same things. For a couple or a small group of four who can align on that, shiro fits the occasion well.
Location
Japan, 〒604-0021 Kyoto, Nakagyo Ward, Takoyakushicho, 287IDO2F
Kyoto, Japan
Compare shiro
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| shiro | Contemporary | ¥¥¥ | Easy |
| Gion Sasaki | Kaiseki, Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| cenci | Italian | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Ifuki | Kaiseki | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Kyokaiseki Kichisen | Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Kyo Seika | Chinese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between shiro and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Gion Sasaki — Kaiseki, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
- cenci — Italian, ¥¥¥
- Ifuki — Kaiseki, ¥¥¥¥
- Kyokaiseki Kichisen — Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
- Kyo Seika — Chinese, ¥¥¥
At the ¥¥¥ price point, cenci is shiro's most direct peer: both run Italian-influenced counter courses in Kyoto at comparable spend. cenci has a longer track record and more established Michelin recognition; shiro has built its credentials faster and offers a more regionally specific ingredient story (Shimane sourcing versus a broader European larder). If you want the safer bet with a known quantity, cenci. If you want the more focused, newer experience with serious early momentum, shiro.
At the ¥¥¥¥ level, Gion Sasaki, Ifuki, and Kyokaiseki Kichisen operate in kaiseki formats that are categorically different from shiro's Italian-Japanese hybrid. Spending more at those venues buys you deeper kaiseki tradition and more elaborate service — not a better version of what shiro does. If your priority is kaiseki, book one of them. If your priority is contemporary Italian-influenced cooking with Japanese ingredients at a counter, shiro is the right call at the lower price point.
Kyo Seika (Chinese, ¥¥¥) operates in a different cuisine register entirely and is not a useful comparison for this decision. The practical recommendation: shiro and cenci are the two serious options for innovative, non-kaiseki counter dining in Kyoto at ¥¥¥. shiro is the harder booking to justify on paper without the visit, but the awards data makes the case.
Recognized By
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