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    Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States

    Torigoya

    150pts

    Serious yakitori, easy to book, late hours.

    Torigoya, Restaurant in Los Angeles

    About Torigoya

    Torigoya is Los Angeles's most recognized yakitori specialist, holding an Opinionated About Dining Casual North America ranking three years running — and improving each year. Chef Tomoki Sugaya's charcoal-grill kitchen in Little Tokyo runs until 10 pm six nights a week, making it one of the more practical late-dinner options for serious Japanese food in the city. Booking is relatively easy for its recognition level.

    Is Torigoya worth booking for a late dinner in Los Angeles?

    Yes — if you want serious yakitori in a city that has precious few spots doing it at this level. Torigoya, run by chef Tomoki Sugaya in Little Tokyo, has earned a ranked position on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list in both 2024 (#415) and 2025 (#340), a steady climb that signals a kitchen gaining confidence rather than coasting. For a focused, ingredient-driven dinner that runs until 10 pm every night except Sunday, it fills a genuine gap in Los Angeles's late-evening dining options. The short version: book it.

    What to expect

    Yakitori is a format that rewards patience and attention — skewers grilled over charcoal, served in sequence, with little room to hide poor sourcing or sloppy timing. Torigoya commits to that format without apology. The room sits inside a multi-unit building on Onizuka Street in the heart of Little Tokyo, which means the setting is utilitarian rather than theatrical. Don't come for the space; come for what comes off the grill. The atmosphere reads as focused and quiet in the earlier part of the evening, picking up as the room fills toward 9 pm. If you want a calm, conversation-friendly dinner, arriving at 6 pm on a weeknight gives you the leading of both , unhurried service and the full menu while the kitchen is fresh. For those who want the room at its most energized, Thursday or Friday closer to 8 pm is the window.

    The 6–10 pm window, Monday through Saturday, makes Torigoya one of the more useful late-night options in the Japanese dining category in Los Angeles. Most comparable Japanese restaurants in the city close their kitchens by 9 pm at the latest. The fact that Torigoya seats and serves until 10 pm gives it a practical advantage for anyone whose evening starts late , post-theatre, post-work, or simply running on a later schedule. If you're planning a night that includes drinks elsewhere in Little Tokyo beforehand, this is a format that accommodates that kind of evening without rushing you.

    Compared to yakitori in Japan , venues like Torisaki in Kyoto or Torisho Ishii in Osaka , Torigoya operates in a different context: the sourcing ecosystem is different, the competitive pressure is different, and the diner arriving here is not arriving in a city where yakitori is a daily dining category. That context actually works in Torigoya's favor. The OAD ranking puts it among the more serious casual restaurants in North America, and in Los Angeles specifically, there's no obvious peer doing this format at the same level of recognition. Nanbankan covers some adjacent ground, but Torigoya's recent upward trajectory on OAD suggests it's operating at a different level of intent.

    For a food-focused traveler already planning a Los Angeles itinerary , perhaps anchoring on Kato for New Taiwanese or Somni for a more progressive experience , Torigoya works well as the lower-key counterpoint: technically serious, format-specific, and accessible without the booking difficulty those two require. It doesn't share a category with Providence or Osteria Mozza, but for diners who rotate between formats across a multi-night trip, it earns a place in that rotation. You can find more ideas in our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, as well as guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in the city.

    Booking and logistics

    Booking difficulty is assessed as easy relative to comparably recognized restaurants in Los Angeles. That's notable given the OAD ranking: venues at this recognition level in other cities , think Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Smyth in Chicago , often require weeks of advance planning. Torigoya appears more accessible, which makes it a reasonable same-week or short-notice booking target. Aim for a week out to give yourself flexibility on night and time; weekends will fill faster than early-week slots. The venue is closed Sundays, so Monday through Saturday, 6–10 pm, is the full window. No website or phone is listed in current data, so check reservation platforms directly for current availability. Price range is not listed in available data; contact the venue or check current booking platforms for pricing before you go.

    Pearl ratings snapshot

    Google rating: 4.0 (155 reviews). OAD Casual North America: Ranked #340 (2025), up from #415 (2024) and Recommended (2023) , three consecutive years of recognition with clear upward movement. For context, that kind of steady OAD improvement is a more reliable signal of kitchen consistency than a single-year placement. Venues on longer winning streaks at this tier, like The French Laundry in Napa or Single Thread in Healdsburg, operate at a different price point and format entirely , Torigoya's value proposition is about format specificity and accessibility, not multi-course ceremony.

    The bottom line

    Book Torigoya if you want a format-focused, late-capable Japanese dinner in Los Angeles backed by consecutive OAD recognition. It is the kind of restaurant that rewards diners who know what yakitori is and want to eat it done properly. If you are undecided between this and a larger-format Japanese meal, consider Kato for more range or Somni for a fully composed tasting experience. But for the specific thing Torigoya does , charcoal-grilled skewers, late hours, Little Tokyo address , nothing in Los Angeles at this recognition level replicates it.

    Compare Torigoya

    Award Winners Like Torigoya
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    TorigoyaOpinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #340 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #415 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Recommended (2023)
    KatoMichelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    HayatoMichelin 2 Star$$$$
    VespertineMichelin 2 Star$$$$
    HolboxMichelin 1 Star$$
    Sushi KaneyoshiMichelin 1 Star$$$$

    What to weigh when choosing between Torigoya and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Torigoya?

    Dinner is your only option. Torigoya runs a single service window, Monday through Saturday from 6–10 pm, with no lunch service. Sunday is closed. Plan accordingly if you're building an itinerary around it.

    Is Torigoya good for solo dining?

    Yes, and arguably the best way to experience it. Yakitori is a counter-friendly format, and a solo seat lets you engage with the pace of the meal without managing a group. OAD has ranked Torigoya in Casual North America three consecutive years, which speaks to the consistency that makes solo visits low-risk.

    What should a first-timer know about Torigoya?

    Yakitori is a sequenced format built around charcoal-grilled skewers, so arrive hungry and don't rush it. Torigoya is run by chef Tomoki Sugaya in Little Tokyo at 123 Astronaut Ellison S Onizuka St, suite 203 — it's a second-floor address, so allow a moment to locate it. OAD's consecutive rankings from 2023 to 2025 confirm this is a serious operation, not a novelty.

    How far ahead should I book Torigoya?

    Booking difficulty is assessed as easy relative to comparably recognised restaurants in Los Angeles, which is unusual given three consecutive years of OAD Casual North America recognition. A week's notice is typically sufficient, though weekend slots closer to prime time will move faster. Check availability sooner if you're planning around a specific date.

    What are alternatives to Torigoya in Los Angeles?

    For high-end Japanese in LA, Hayato and Sushi Kaneyoshi operate in a more formal kaiseki or omakase format and carry stronger awards profiles, but at significantly higher price points and with harder-to-secure reservations. Kato offers Japanese-Taiwanese tasting menus with considerable critical momentum. Torigoya is the call if yakitori specifically is the format you want — there are very few spots in LA doing it at this level with this kind of access.

    Is Torigoya good for a special occasion?

    It works for a special occasion if the occasion suits a focused, relatively intimate dinner rather than a celebratory blowout. Yakitori is about craft and sequence, not spectacle. Torigoya's OAD Casual North America ranking — #340 in 2025, up from #415 in 2024 — gives it enough credibility to anchor a meaningful dinner. For a grander setting, Hayato or Vespertine would read as more occasion-forward.

    Does Torigoya handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary accommodation policy is documented for Torigoya. Yakitori is a protein-forward, charcoal-grill format built around chicken, and the menu has limited structural flexibility. check the venue's official channels before booking if dietary restrictions are a factor — the address is 123 Astronaut Ellison S Onizuka St #203, Los Angeles, CA 90012.

    Hours

    Monday
    6–10 pm
    Tuesday
    6–10 pm
    Wednesday
    6–10 pm
    Thursday
    6–10 pm
    Friday
    6–10 pm
    Saturday
    6–10 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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