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    Restaurant in Zagreb, Croatia

    Tekka

    210pts

    Zagreb's best-value Japanese call.

    Tekka, Restaurant in Zagreb

    About Tekka

    Tekka is Zagreb's most credible mid-range Japanese restaurant: a Michelin Plate holder with a 4.7 rating from over 1,200 reviews, covering nigiri, sashimi, uramaki, tempura and teppanyaki at €€ prices. The open-view kitchen makes it a practical first-timer choice. Easy to book, calm atmosphere, and honest value for the category.

    Tekka, Zagreb: The Verdict

    If you want Japanese food in Zagreb and you want it done properly, Tekka is the right call. It holds a Michelin Plate for 2024, carries a 4.7 rating across more than 1,200 Google reviews, and sits at the €€ price point — meaning you get a credible nigiri-and-sashimi operation without the bill that usually comes with Michelin recognition. For a first-timer, the open-view kitchen removes any guesswork about what you're ordering: you can watch the work before you commit.

    What Tekka Is

    Tekka is a compact Japanese restaurant on Radnička cesta, one of Zagreb's busier commercial arteries. The format is direct: a modern room, an open kitchen, and a menu that covers the core Japanese canon — nigiri, uramaki, hosomaki, sashimi, tempura, and teppanyaki , alongside a broader selection of Asian dishes including stir-fries. It is not a specialist omakase counter, and it does not try to be. What it offers is consistent Japanese technique executed in a setting that feels considered rather than casual, at a price that keeps it accessible for repeat visits rather than occasion-only dining.

    The atmosphere reads as calm and deliberate rather than high-energy. The open kitchen is the room's focal point, giving the space a sense of active precision without tipping into theatre. Noise levels are moderate: you can hold a conversation at the table without strain, which makes it functional for business dinners and dates alike, not just quick solo meals. Compared to the louder, more social energy you might find at Zagreb's broader dining scene on a Friday evening, Tekka sits on the quieter, more composed end of the register.

    Drinks at Tekka

    The venue database does not specify a dedicated cocktail or sake program, so claims about specific drinks offerings would go beyond what's verified. What the €€ price tier and Japanese positioning suggest is a drinks list that complements the food rather than anchoring the experience independently , think modest sake selection, Japanese beer, and standard spirits rather than a bar program worth visiting on its own terms. If a strong cocktail program is the priority for your evening, Zagreb's bar scene has dedicated options; see our full Zagreb bars guide for alternatives. At Tekka, drinks are supporting cast. The food is the reason to book.

    Booking and Timing

    Booking difficulty is rated easy. Tekka is not the kind of reservation that requires weeks of advance planning , walk-in availability exists, though booking ahead for weekend evenings is sensible given the 4.7 rating and the consistent volume of reviews that suggests steady demand. If you're visiting Zagreb and want to lock in a reliable Japanese dinner mid-week, you likely have more flexibility than at Zagreb's top-tier fine dining options. The €€ price point also means there's less pressure to orchestrate a special-occasion visit around a single night.

    For first-timers, arriving at the counter or open kitchen-adjacent seating is worth requesting if available , you get the full benefit of the kitchen-view format that distinguishes Tekka from a standard restaurant room. Come before 8 PM if a quieter atmosphere matters to you; later sittings are likely to be fuller and marginally more animated.

    Is Tekka Worth It?

    At €€ with a Michelin Plate and a 4.7 score from over 1,200 reviewers, the answer is yes for most profiles. The Michelin Plate , which denotes good cooking rather than the starred tier , signals that inspectors found the kitchen technically sound. That's meaningful validation for a Japanese restaurant outside Japan, where the category is more susceptible to inconsistency. The breadth of the menu (nigiri through teppanyaki) means the kitchen is managing several techniques simultaneously, which can dilute focus at less capable venues. The sustained rating score suggests Tekka holds its standard across formats.

    The comparison that matters most: if you're choosing between Tekka and a cheaper, unrecognised Japanese option in Zagreb, Tekka's Michelin acknowledgement is a genuine differentiator. If you're weighing Tekka against Izakaya, which operates at the € tier with a Japanese contemporary format, the question is whether the additional spend and the more composed setting matter to you. For a first visit to Japanese food in Zagreb, Tekka is the more reliable starting point.

    For context on what serious Japanese cooking looks like at the leading of the category, Myojaku in Tokyo and Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo represent the standard the cuisine is benchmarked against globally. Tekka is not operating at that level, but it is operating at the level you should reasonably expect from a creditable European city Japanese restaurant , and in Zagreb, that puts it ahead of most of its local competition.

    How It Compares

    Pearl Picks: More Zagreb Dining

    • Noel , Zagreb's most ambitious modern cuisine tasting menu, at €€€€
    • Dubravkin Put , Mediterranean cooking in a parkside setting, €€€
    • Balon , Mediterranean option for a more relaxed evening
    • Takenoko , another Japanese option worth considering in Zagreb
    • Izakaya , Japanese contemporary at the € tier for a lower-spend alternative

    Beyond Zagreb

    If you're extending your Croatia trip, Michelin-recognised options worth the detour include Agli Amici Rovinj in Rovinj, Nebo by Deni Srdoč in Rijeka, Krug in Split, Restaurant 360 in Dubrovnik, Alfred Keller in Mali Lošinj, and Korak in Jastrebarsko. For a full picture of what Zagreb offers across categories, see our full Zagreb restaurants guide, hotels guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    Quick reference: Tekka, Radnička cesta 37b, Zagreb. €€ Japanese. Michelin Plate 2024. 4.7/5 (1,220 reviews). Easy to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Tekka?

    • Tekka's format is not primarily an omakase or tasting-menu operation , the menu covers nigiri, sashimi, uramaki, tempura, and teppanyaki ordered individually rather than as a set progression. If you want a structured chef's-menu format, Noel is Zagreb's stronger choice at €€€€. At Tekka, the value is in building your own order across formats at €€ prices, with Michelin Plate validation that the kitchen is technically sound.

    Is Tekka good for solo dining?

    • Yes. The open-view kitchen seating makes solo dining particularly well-suited here , you have something to engage with, the atmosphere is calm rather than loud, and the €€ price point keeps a solo meal from feeling like an event you need to justify. Zagreb's Japanese options at the € tier, like Izakaya, are also worth considering if budget is the priority, but for a first solo Japanese experience in the city, Tekka is the more reliable option.

    Is Tekka worth the price?

    • At €€ with a Michelin Plate and a 4.7 from over 1,200 reviews, yes. The Plate signals genuine cooking quality rather than just a popular local spot. For comparison, you'd spend more at Dubravkin Put (€€€) for Mediterranean food, and significantly more at Noel (€€€€) for the city's leading tasting-menu experience. Tekka sits in a sensible middle ground: better value than most of Zagreb's Michelin-recognised options, more credentialed than the cheaper Japanese alternatives in the city.

    What should I order at Tekka?

    • The Michelin Plate recognition and the format of the restaurant point toward the core Japanese items as the kitchen's primary competence: nigiri, sashimi, and uramaki. Tempura and teppanyaki are on the menu and add variety, but the sushi-oriented dishes are where the open-view kitchen format makes most sense , you can watch the preparation directly. Stir-fries and broader Asian options are available for those who want range, but if you're coming for the first time, focus on the Japanese fundamentals the restaurant is recognised for.

    What should I wear to Tekka?

    • No dress code is specified, and at €€ in a modern but not formal room, smart casual is the right call. You don't need to dress for a fine dining occasion , Tekka is Michelin Plate rather than starred, and the setting is contemporary without being stiff. What you'd wear to a good neighbourhood restaurant in any European city is appropriate here.

    Is Tekka good for a special occasion?

    • It works for a low-key special occasion , an anniversary dinner where you want quality without the formality of a tasting-menu restaurant, or a birthday where the group wants to order across formats rather than commit to a set menu. For a genuinely high-stakes celebration where the occasion itself demands the most ambitious cooking in Zagreb, Noel at €€€€ is the stronger answer. Tekka is the right call when the food needs to be good and the evening needs to feel considered, but not when the restaurant itself needs to be the centrepiece of the occasion.

    What are alternatives to Tekka in Zagreb?

    • Izakaya (€) is the obvious lower-spend Japanese alternative. Takenoko is another Zagreb Japanese option worth considering. For non-Japanese alternatives at a comparable or higher spend, Dubravkin Put (€€€, Mediterranean) and Balon (Mediterranean) give you different cuisine profiles. The full comparison is covered in our Zagreb restaurants guide.

    Can I eat at the bar at Tekka?

    • The venue has an open-view kitchen format, which typically includes counter or bar-adjacent seating where you can watch preparation directly. Whether a dedicated bar counter is available for walk-in eating is not confirmed in available data , call ahead or arrive early if counter seating is your preference. The open-kitchen format does suggest the space is designed with some counter interaction in mind, making it more likely than at a standard restaurant room, but booking ahead and requesting counter seating is the safer approach.

    Compare Tekka

    The Complete Picture: Tekka and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    TekkaJapaneseA small Japanese restaurant with a modern feel and an open-view kitchen that allows guests to watch the chefs at work. Traditional Japanese specialities such as nigiri, uramaki, hosomaki and sashimi are to the fore, as well as tempura and teppanyaki and other Asian options including stir-fries.; Michelin Plate (2024)Easy
    NoelModern CuisineMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Dubravkin PutMediterranean CuisineMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    IzakayaJapanese ContemporaryWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    ManO2CroatianUnknown
    NavCreativeUnknown

    How Tekka stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Tekka?

    The venue database does not confirm a dedicated tasting menu format at Tekka. What is confirmed is an open-view kitchen and a menu built around nigiri, sashimi, uramaki, hosomaki, tempura, and teppanyaki. If a structured multi-course format matters to you, confirm availability directly before booking.

    Is Tekka good for solo dining?

    Yes. The open-view kitchen counter format at Tekka is well-suited to solo diners — you get a direct sightline to the chefs, which makes the experience self-contained without needing company to carry it. At €€, there is no financial penalty for eating alone, and the compact room keeps things focused rather than isolating.

    Is Tekka worth the price?

    At €€ with a 2024 Michelin Plate and a 4.7 rating from over 1,200 reviewers, Tekka delivers strong value relative to its price point. For Michelin-recognised Japanese in a central European city where the format is rare, the pricing is fair. If you want a cheaper casual sushi fix, you will find it elsewhere in Zagreb, but the quality gap will show.

    What should I order at Tekka?

    The core menu covers nigiri, sashimi, uramaki, hosomaki, tempura, and teppanyaki, alongside stir-fry options. Stick to the traditional Japanese side of the menu rather than the broader Asian options — the Michelin Plate recognition is tied to that core offering. Specific dish recommendations beyond what is in the venue record would be speculation.

    What should I wear to Tekka?

    Tekka is described as a modern restaurant with a relaxed open-kitchen format, priced at €€. That points to neat casual — tidy clothes you would wear to a mid-range dinner, not a suit. Nothing in the venue record suggests a formal dress code.

    Is Tekka good for a special occasion?

    It works for a low-key celebration rather than a big-event dinner. The Michelin Plate adds credibility for a date or small group marking something, and the open-kitchen format gives the meal some theatre. For a grander occasion in Zagreb, a larger or more formal venue would be a better fit — Tekka's compact format is not built around occasion dining.

    What are alternatives to Tekka in Zagreb?

    For a different cuisine and a more formal atmosphere, Dubravkin Put offers Croatian cooking in a garden setting with stronger occasion credentials. Noel is the choice if you want the highest-end dining in Zagreb. If you want to stay in the Japanese or Asian space, Izakaya is the closest direct alternative to compare on format and price.

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