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    Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States

    Yong Su San

    210pts

    Michelin-recognised Korean worth booking twice.

    Yong Su San, Restaurant in Los Angeles

    About Yong Su San

    Yong Su San holds back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024–2025) and a 4.2 Google rating at the $$$ price tier — making it one of the stronger value propositions in Koreatown. For serious Korean cooking without committing to a $$$$-tier tasting menu, this is the booking to make. Reserve 1–2 weeks out for weekend sittings.

    Verdict: A Michelin-recognised Korean table in Koreatown worth booking if you care about value and cooking quality

    Yong Su San earns two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) and a 4.2 Google rating from 473 reviews — and at the $$$ price tier, it sits in a comfortable zone where the cooking quality outpaces the spend. If you are looking for serious Korean cooking in Los Angeles without committing to a $$$$-tier omakase, this is where to direct your booking energy. Book 1–2 weeks out for weekend sittings; weekday availability tends to be more forgiving given the Koreatown competition level.

    What Yong Su San Is

    Yong Su San is a Korean restaurant at 950 S Vermont Ave in Los Angeles's Koreatown — one of the most concentrated and competitive Korean dining corridors in the United States. The Michelin Plate designation, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, signals a kitchen that Michelin's inspectors consider worth a visit: technically sound, consistent, and above the baseline of the neighbourhood. That baseline, to be clear, is already high. Koreatown is home to dozens of credible Korean restaurants, which makes the Michelin recognition here a meaningful differentiator rather than a participation trophy.

    Korean cuisine at this level draws on a repertoire that shifts with the seasons. Traditional Korean cooking follows a calendar , spring brings lighter preparations built around young vegetables and fresher broths, summer leans into cold noodle dishes and cooling banchan, autumn favours fermented and preserved elements that have had time to develop depth, and winter centers richer, longer-cooked soups and stews. If you are visiting with a preference for particular flavour profiles, timing your reservation around these seasonal rhythms will shape what you encounter. At a Michelin Plate venue in this price range, the kitchen is likely to reflect those shifts in its daily and weekly rotations rather than running a static, year-round menu. For comparison, Seoul's [Mingles](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/mingles-seoul-restaurant) and [Kwonsooksoo](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/kwonsooksoo-seoul-restaurant) operate at the upper tier of Korean fine dining with explicit seasonal menus; Yong Su San operates closer to the ground, which means tighter prices and broader accessibility, with the same underlying logic of seasonal Korean cooking applied at a more approachable register.

    The $$$ price point places Yong Su San well below the $$$$-tier Korean and Asian-leaning restaurants in the Los Angeles market. For value-focused diners, the calculation is direct: two years of Michelin recognition at a mid-range price tier is a strong signal. If you are comparing this against nearby Koreatown options, [Hangari Kalguksu](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/hangari-kalguksu-los-angeles-restaurant) and [Hojokban](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/hojokban-los-angeles-restaurant) offer strong informal Korean cooking at lower price points, while [Danbi](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/danbi-los-angeles-restaurant) and [Dha Rae Oak](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/dha-rae-oak-los-angeles-restaurant) operate in a comparable register. [BCD Tofu House](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/bcd-tofu-house-los-angeles-restaurant) covers the late-night, everyday end of the Koreatown spectrum. Yong Su San's Michelin standing puts it a clear tier above the casual Koreatown crowd.

    For diners coming from outside Los Angeles or planning a city-wide itinerary, it is useful to place Yong Su San in broader context. The $$$ Korean fine dining category in the US is thin , most Korean restaurants with serious culinary ambition either stay casual or jump to omakase-style tasting formats at higher prices. Yong Su San represents a middle register that is relatively rare: formal enough to have earned Michelin attention, accessible enough that a dinner for two should not require the same planning horizon as, say, [The French Laundry in Napa](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/the-french-laundry) or [Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/single-thread). If you are building a Los Angeles dining itinerary and want a non-Japanese, non-tasting-menu option with credible kitchen credentials, Yong Su San belongs on the shortlist.

    The venue is located on S Vermont Ave, which puts it in the heart of Koreatown's main dining corridor. Parking in this part of Los Angeles follows the same general rules as the rest of the city: street parking is possible but competitive on weekend evenings, and nearby lots are the practical choice if you are arriving by car. If you are staying elsewhere in the city, check our [Los Angeles hotels guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/hotels/los-angeles) for proximity planning, and our [Los Angeles restaurants guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/los-angeles) for context on the full city dining picture. For post-dinner options, the [Los Angeles bars guide](https://www.joinpearl.co/bars/los-angeles) covers Koreatown and surrounding neighbourhoods.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Moderate booking difficulty , aim for 1–2 weeks ahead for weekends, shorter lead time on weekdays. Budget: $$$ price tier; mid-range for Los Angeles fine dining, strong value relative to Michelin Plate recognition. Dress: Not confirmed in available data; smart casual is a safe default for a Michelin Plate venue in this neighbourhood. Location: 950 S Vermont Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90006 , central Koreatown, accessible by Metro or car. Contact/Website: Not available in current data; check Google Maps or a reservation platform for current hours and booking options.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how Yong Su San sits against [Kato](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/kato), [Hayato](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/hayato), [Vespertine](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/vespertine), [Holbox](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/holbox), and [Sushi Kaneyoshi](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/sushi-kaneyoshi).

    Explore More in Los Angeles

    FAQs

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Yong Su San?

    There is no confirmed tasting menu format in the available data for Yong Su San. If the kitchen offers a set menu, the $$$ price tier and two consecutive Michelin Plate awards (2024–2025) suggest reasonable value relative to comparable Korean tasting formats. For a benchmarked tasting experience in Los Angeles, Kato and Hayato both operate at $$$$ and represent the upper tier of the city's set-menu category.

    Can I eat at the bar at Yong Su San?

    Seat configuration is not confirmed in the available data. Koreatown Korean restaurants at this tier typically offer table seating rather than a dedicated bar counter. Call ahead or check the current booking platform to confirm walk-in bar options before making the trip specifically for that format.

    What should I order at Yong Su San?

    Specific signature dishes are not confirmed in the available data, so Pearl cannot direct you to particular plates. What is known: the kitchen has held a Michelin Plate for two consecutive years, which suggests consistent execution across the menu. Korean cuisine at this level follows seasonal logic , what is on the menu in autumn (fermented, preserved, richer preparations) differs from what you will find in spring or summer. Ask the server what is fresh or in rotation when you arrive; that question will get you further than a fixed list at a kitchen that likely adjusts its offering through the year.

    Does Yong Su San handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary accommodation policy is available in the current data. Phone and website details are not listed. Contact the restaurant directly via Google Maps or a reservation platform before booking if dietary restrictions are a deciding factor. Traditional Korean menus can involve fermented and fish-based elements in banchan and sauces, so flagging restrictions in advance is especially useful here.

    Is Yong Su San worth the price?

    At $$$ in Koreatown, yes , two Michelin Plate awards in successive years and a 4.2 Google rating from 473 reviews make the value case clearly. You are paying mid-range prices for a kitchen that Michelin considers above the neighbourhood baseline. If you want to spend less, Hangari Kalguksu and BCD Tofu House cover the casual end. If you want to spend more and are open to non-Korean formats, Kato or Hayato are the $$$$ benchmarks in Los Angeles.

    Is Yong Su San good for solo dining?

    Korean dining formats at this tier typically work well for solo diners , table seating is common and the cuisine lends itself to ordering a smaller selection of dishes without the social pressure of a shared-table format. At $$$ per head, solo dining here is one of the more cost-effective ways to access Michelin-recognised Korean cooking in Los Angeles. For comparison, solo omakase at Sushi Kaneyoshi or Hayato costs considerably more per head.

    How far ahead should I book Yong Su San?

    Aim for 1–2 weeks out for weekend evenings; weekday tables are likely more available given Koreatown's density of options. The two consecutive Michelin Plate awards will attract some additional demand, particularly from out-of-town visitors. This is not in the same booking difficulty tier as Hayato or Lazy Bear in San Francisco, where lead times run 4–8 weeks, but leaving it to the day before on a Friday or Saturday is a risk not worth taking.

    Compare Yong Su San

    Is Yong Su San Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Yong Su San$$$Moderate
    Kato$$$$Unknown
    Hayato$$$$Unknown
    Vespertine$$$$Unknown
    Holbox$$Unknown
    Sushi Kaneyoshi$$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in Los Angeles for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Yong Su San?

    If you want structured Korean cooking with a clear quality signal, yes. Two consecutive Michelin Plate awards (2024 and 2025) suggest consistent execution at the $$$ price tier, which sits mid-range for LA Korean dining. If you prefer to graze or order freely, the format may feel too prescribed — in that case, a more casual Koreatown spot would serve you better.

    Can I eat at the bar at Yong Su San?

    Bar seating specifics are not confirmed in the venue data, so call ahead or check on arrival. Given the $$$ price tier and Michelin recognition, the room is likely set up for table dining rather than a bar-forward experience. If counter seating matters to you, confirm before booking.

    What should I order at Yong Su San?

    Specific menu items are not documented in the available venue data, so ordering recommendations would be guesswork. What the Michelin Plate recognition does signal is that the kitchen performs at a consistent level — trust the menu structure rather than hunting for a single standout dish.

    Does Yong Su San handle dietary restrictions?

    No dietary policy is confirmed in the venue data. At the $$$ tier with Michelin recognition, kitchens in this bracket typically accommodate common restrictions when notified in advance, but Korean cuisine often relies on ingredients like seafood, fermented soy, and shellfish-based stocks. check the venue's official channels before booking if restrictions are a factor.

    Is Yong Su San worth the price?

    At the $$$ tier, Yong Su San is priced in the mid-range for Koreatown and sits below LA's top-end tasting menu restaurants. Two Michelin Plate awards in consecutive years back up the value case — this is not a restaurant coasting on neighbourhood foot traffic. For the price, it compares well against ungarlanded Koreatown options and undercuts the city's Michelin-starred Korean alternatives.

    Is Yong Su San good for solo dining?

    The $$$ price point and Michelin Plate status suggest a sit-down format that works fine for solo diners who are there for the food rather than a group occasion. Koreatown's communal dining culture means some dishes scale better for two or more, so solo visitors should check whether smaller portions or single-serving options are available when booking.

    How far ahead should I book Yong Su San?

    Aim for 1–2 weeks ahead for weekend tables; weekdays have shorter lead times. Michelin Plate recognition two years running has raised the restaurant's profile, so don't assume walk-in availability on busy nights. Booking at least a week out is the safer approach if your schedule is fixed.

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