Restaurant in San Diego, United States
Sushi Tadokoro
350ptsSan Diego's most credentialed sushi at $$$.

About Sushi Tadokoro
Sushi Tadokoro is San Diego's strongest case for serious sushi without the $$$$ price tag. A Michelin Plate holder and OAD-ranked in North America's top 400 for three consecutive years, it delivers national-level credentials at a mid-tier price point. Book for a special occasion or solo counter meal; plan two to three weeks ahead for weekend dinner.
Verdict
Sushi Tadokoro is the most credentialed sushi restaurant in San Diego for the price. A Michelin Plate holder in both 2024 and 2025, and ranked among the top 400 restaurants in North America by Opinionated About Dining three years running, it sits comfortably in the tier of restaurants worth planning a trip around — not just dropping into. At $$$, it costs less than comparable omakase rooms in Los Angeles or San Francisco while delivering the kind of recognition that typically commands a $$$$ price tag. If you are debating whether to book here or push the budget toward Soichi, the honest answer is this: Tadokoro gives you more accessible pricing with national-level credentials; Soichi is the splurge. For most occasions, Tadokoro is the smarter call.
Portrait
Imagine arriving at 2244 San Diego Ave on a Tuesday lunch service. The kitchen is already moving — the faint clean scent of rice vinegar and fresh fish cutting through the warm Old Town air before you even reach the door. That moment is a fair preview of what Tadokoro does: it runs with the quiet precision of a kitchen that knows exactly what it is doing, without the theatrics that inflate prices at flashier sushi rooms.
Chefs Takeaki Tadokoro and Tatsuro Tsuchiya lead the kitchen, and the consistency across their recognition record tells you something important. OAD's ranking climbed from a general recommendation in 2023 to #292 in 2024, then settled at #389 in 2025 , movement that reflects the natural calibration of a competitive list, not a drop in quality. The Michelin Plate has held firm across both years. That kind of sustained recognition over three consecutive years is what separates a restaurant having a moment from one that is genuinely operating at a high level.
For a special occasion, the format here matters. This is a sushi restaurant in the traditional sense: the experience is built around the fish, the rice, and the technique, not around a designed room or a cocktail program. If you are celebrating a birthday or anniversary and your guest values craft over atmosphere, Tadokoro is an excellent fit. If they need ambient drama to feel like the evening landed, you may want to weigh other options. That is not a criticism , it is practical guidance.
When to Go: Seasonal Considerations
The editorial angle that matters most for booking decisions here is timing. Sushi restaurants operating at this level are acutely seasonal , the fish on the menu in winter is not the fish on the menu in summer, and San Diego's access to both Pacific and Baja California sourcing means the seasonal rotation can be genuinely interesting. Winter months tend to bring fattier fish: richer cuts that reward the kind of focused, occasion-style dining Tadokoro suits well. Spring and early summer shift toward lighter, cleaner profiles. If you are visiting San Diego specifically to eat here, consider that winter and early spring represent the window when cold-water fish are at peak condition in the Pacific , a detail that affects what you will actually experience at the counter.
Lunch service runs Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday from 11:30 am to 1:40 pm, which is one of the more time-compressed windows in the city. Dinner runs Tuesday through Saturday from 5 to 10 pm, with Monday and Sunday closed. The lunch cutoff at 1:40 pm is firm , this is not a kitchen that runs late, and if you are arriving from elsewhere in San Diego, account for Old Town parking. The Thursday dinner-only format is worth noting if you are planning a mid-week trip: Thursday is dinner only, which makes it a natural fit for a business dinner or date night without the lunchtime crowd dynamic.
Booking difficulty sits at moderate. This is not the kind of table you will secure the night before for a Saturday dinner, but it is also not the months-out lottery of the hardest reservations in the country. Two to three weeks advance planning for weekend dinner should be sufficient in most seasons; same-week bookings may be possible for weekday lunch. If you are planning around a specific seasonal window , say, peak winter fish , book earlier rather than later.
For broader San Diego dining context, see our full San Diego restaurants guide. If you are building a full trip around the meal, our San Diego hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide round out the picture. Nationally, Tadokoro sits in the same conversation as counter-driven sushi rooms like Masa in New York City and Sushi Masaki Saito in Toronto , though at a significantly lower price point. For other West Coast tasting-format benchmarks, Single Thread in Healdsburg and Lazy Bear in San Francisco sit in the same nationally-recognised tier.
Ratings & Recognition
- Michelin Plate , 2024, 2025
- Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in North America , Recommended (2023), #292 (2024), #389 (2025)
- Google rating: 4.7 from 769 reviews
Booking
Booking difficulty: Moderate. Plan two to three weeks ahead for weekend dinner. Weekday lunch has more availability. The restaurant is closed Monday and Sunday. No booking method or direct contact is confirmed in our data , check current listings for reservation access.
Know Before You Go
- Address
- 2244 San Diego Ave, San Diego, CA 92110 (Old Town)
- Hours
- Tue–Wed: 11:30 am–1:40 pm, 5–10 pm | Thu: 5–10 pm only | Fri–Sat: 11:30 am–1:40 pm, 5–10 pm | Mon & Sun: Closed
- Price range
- $$$ (mid-to-upper tier; below comparable omakase rooms in LA and SF)
- Cuisine
- Sushi, Japanese
- Chefs
- Takeaki Tadokoro & Tatsuro Tsuchiya
- Booking difficulty
- Moderate , 2–3 weeks advance recommended for weekend dinner
- Leading for
- Date nights, special occasions, solo counter dining, serious sushi interest
- Closed
- Monday and Sunday
How It Compares
Pearl Picks: More San Diego & Beyond
- Addison , San Diego's flagship fine dining, French contemporary at $$$$
- Soichi , Japanese, the splurge-tier sushi option in San Diego at $$$$
- 1450 El Prado , San Diego dining
- 777 G St , San Diego dining
- 94th Aero Squadron , San Diego dining
- Le Bernardin , New York City, the benchmark for seafood-focused fine dining
- The French Laundry , Napa, for context on West Coast tasting-menu benchmarks
- Smyth , Chicago, nationally-recognised tasting format for comparison
- Emeril's , New Orleans, another OAD-recognised US destination
- Our full San Diego restaurants guide
- Our full San Diego wineries guide
Compare Sushi Tadokoro
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sushi Tadokoro | Sushi, Japanese | $$$ | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #389 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #292 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Recommended (2023) | Moderate | — |
| Addison | French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| Callie | Greek, Mediterranean Cuisine, Californian-Mediterranean | $$ | Unknown | — | |
| Trust | New American, American | $$$ | Unknown | — | |
| Soichi | Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Ciccia Osteria | Italian | $$ | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Sushi Tadokoro handle dietary restrictions?
Sushi Tadokoro operates as a traditional Japanese kitchen under chefs Takeaki Tadokoro and Tatsuro Tsuchiya, so the menu is fish-forward by design. Severe shellfish allergies or vegetarian requirements are difficult to accommodate in this format. check the venue's official channels before booking if you have specific needs — omakase-style services at this credential level (Michelin Plate, OAD Top 400 North America) are rarely built to deviate from the set progression.
Is Sushi Tadokoro good for solo dining?
Yes — solo dining suits this format well. Counter-style sushi restaurants at Tadokoro's level are built around direct kitchen interaction, which solo diners get more of than groups. At $$$, the spend per head is manageable for a solo meal, and weekday lunch slots (Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday 11:30am–1:40pm) are the easiest seats to secure on short notice.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Sushi Tadokoro?
At the $$$ price point, with a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 and an OAD North America ranking that improved from Recommended (2023) to #292 (2024) to #389 (2025) — wait, note the rank number rose but OAD lists are competitive — Tadokoro delivers credentials that justify the format. If structured tasting progression is not your preference, this is not the place to experiment with it; the kitchen is optimised for guests who commit to the full service.
Is Sushi Tadokoro worth the price?
For San Diego, yes. Tadokoro holds a Michelin Plate for two consecutive years (2024–2025) and ranked on OAD's Top Restaurants in North America, making it the most decorated sushi option in the city at the $$$ tier. Compared to omakase at equivalent credential levels in Los Angeles or New York, the price-to-recognition ratio here favours the diner.
Can Sushi Tadokoro accommodate groups?
Groups of four or more should book early and confirm capacity directly — sushi restaurants operating at this level typically run limited covers per service. The Tuesday and Wednesday dinner slots (5–10pm) offer the most flexibility for coordinating a group, but weekend dinners are the harder seats and need two to three weeks' lead time. Large parties are a poor fit for omakase formats in general; smaller groups of two to four will have a smoother experience.
Is lunch or dinner better at Sushi Tadokoro?
Lunch is easier to book and works well if you want the full experience at a lower-pressure service window — available Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday from 11:30am to 1:40pm. Dinner runs five days a week (Tuesday through Saturday, 5–10pm) and is the more considered choice for a destination meal. Thursday dinner-only service makes it a natural midweek option when weekend tables are full.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 11:30 am–1:40 pm, 5–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 11:30 am–1:40 pm, 5–10 pm
- Thursday
- 5–10 pm
- Friday
- 11:30 am–1:40 pm, 5–10 pm
- Saturday
- 11:30 am–1:40 pm, 5–10 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
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