Restaurant in Lisbon, Portugal
YŌSO
650ptsTen seats, one menu, book early.

About YŌSO
YŌSO holds a Michelin star (2024) and seats just ten diners at its kaiseki-style omakase counter in Lisbon's Alcântara district. Brazilian chef Habner Gomes builds the single tasting menu around Portuguese coastal fish — seabream, eel, Azorean bonito — using classical Japanese technique. Book 4–6 weeks ahead minimum; this is one of the harder reservations in the city.
Ten seats, one menu, a Michelin star: YŌSO is Lisbon's most focused Japanese dining experience
The number that defines YŌSO before you even arrive is ten. There are exactly ten seats at the sushi counter — and with a Michelin star earned in 2024, those ten seats are among the hardest to secure in Lisbon. If you want kaiseki-style omakase in Portugal, this is the benchmark. If you want flexibility, choice, or a larger table, book elsewhere.
What YŌSO is
YŌSO sits on Rampa das Necessidades in the Alcântara district, slightly removed from the central Lisbon dining circuit. That geography matters: this is not a drop-in restaurant. The format is a single omakase tasting menu — one sitting, one chef-directed sequence, no substitutions. Brazilian chef Habner Gomes leads the kitchen, with José Balau directing the dining room and managing the wine programme. The combination of kaiseki structure with Portuguese coastal fish is the venue's defining proposition: seabream, Atlantic leerfish, eel, and Azorean bonito are recurring ingredients, each course named for its technique , Sakizuke (appetiser), Otsukuri (sliced raw fish), Niguirizushi (hand-formed sushi), Agemono (deep-fried dish) , so you always know exactly where you are in the sequence.
The menu runs beyond raw preparations into Japan's hot kitchen: broths and grilled dishes appear alongside the sushi, giving the progression more range than you would find at a direct sushi counter. For a food-focused traveller who wants to understand how Japanese technique interacts with Portuguese ingredient identity, YŌSO delivers that argument course by course.
Service and whether it earns the price
At €€€ per head , notable because YŌSO sits one price tier below most of its Michelin-starred Lisbon peers, who sit at €€€€ , the service model here is tight and attentive by design. A ten-seat counter means every diner is visible and reachable. José Balau's presence as both dining room director and sommelier means the wine pairing and the food narrative come from the same person, which creates a more coherent experience than venues where those roles are split across staff members who rarely brief each other.
For a special-occasion dinner, that level of personalised attention at a slightly lower price point than [Belcanto](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/belcanto-lisbon-restaurant) or [Loco](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/loco) represents real value. The format does mean that if counter dining is not your preference , if you want a conventional table, a relaxed back-and-forth ordering experience, or a group of more than two or three , YŌSO will feel constraining rather than generous. The service earns its position, but only for the diner who wants this particular format.
Timing: when to go
YŌSO is open Tuesday through Saturday, closed Sunday and Monday. Lunch (12:30 PM–3:00 PM) and dinner (8:00 PM–11:30 PM) run on identical days, which gives you a genuine choice between sittings. Lunch is worth considering: the kitchen delivers the same menu, the room is quieter, and afternoon light in Alcântara is easier than navigating there cold at night for a first visit. Dinner is the more atmospheric option if ambiance and the full counter-counter experience matter to you. For the strongest overall visit, dinner on a Thursday or Friday gives you the full week's rhythm without the compressed Saturday energy when restaurant tourists are more concentrated across the city.
For Lisbon specifically, late spring (May–June) and early autumn (September–October) are optimal periods. Summer can bring irregular staffing rhythms at smaller venues across the city, and YŌSO's ten-seat format means any variation in the kitchen has immediate impact. Booking during shoulder season gives you the most reliable experience.
Booking
Booking difficulty is hard. A Michelin star on a ten-seat counter means availability is limited by arithmetic as much as by demand. Plan to book at minimum four to six weeks ahead; for peak-season dates or weekends, eight weeks is more realistic. There is no walk-in culture here , the format does not support it. Check availability early and treat confirmation as non-negotiable before building your Lisbon itinerary around it.
If YŌSO is fully booked, the closest structural alternatives in Lisbon's Japanese category are [Omakase RI](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/omakase-ri-lisbon-restaurant) and [Kanazawa](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/kanazawa-lisbon-restaurant), both of which offer omakase or counter-format experiences. [Kabuki Lisboa](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/kabuki-lisboa-lisbon-restaurant) is the broader Japanese option if you want à la carte flexibility rather than a fixed menu.
Practical details
Reservations: Essential; book 4–8 weeks ahead minimum. Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, lunch 12:30 PM–3:00 PM, dinner 8:00 PM–11:30 PM; closed Sunday and Monday. Address: Rampa das Necessidades 6, Alcântara, Lisbon. Price tier: €€€ (one tier below most Michelin-starred Lisbon peers). Capacity: 10-seat sushi counter. Format: Single omakase tasting menu only; no à la carte. Dress: Not formally stated, but smart casual is appropriate given the format and price point. Group size: Counter format; parties of two are ideal; larger groups should note that the ten-seat total limits options. Google rating: 4.6 from 93 reviews.
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Japanese dining beyond Lisbon
- [Myojaku , Japanese in Tokyo](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/myojaku-tokyo-restaurant)
- [Azabu Kadowaki , Japanese in Tokyo](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/azabu-kadowaki-tokyo-restaurant)
Compare YŌSO
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at YŌSO?
There are no choices to make: YŌSO serves a single omakase tasting menu, kaiseki-style, and that is what every diner at the ten-seat counter receives. The menu works through named Japanese techniques — Sakizuke, Otsukuri, Niguirizushi, Agemono — and centres on fish from the Portuguese coast, including seabream, eel, Atlantic leerfish, and Azorean bonito. Come with no agenda and let the menu run its course.
Can YŌSO accommodate groups?
The counter seats exactly ten, so the practical ceiling for a group is the full counter. A party of four or five is manageable if you book well in advance, but YŌSO is not designed for large corporate dinners or celebrations requiring a private room. For groups larger than six, consider whether a venue with a more flexible floor plan — Belcanto or Feitoria, for example — suits your needs better.
How far ahead should I book YŌSO?
Book four to eight weeks ahead as a baseline; popular dinner slots on Friday and Saturday will fill faster after the 2024 Michelin star. A ten-seat counter means availability is constrained by arithmetic — there is no overflow seating. Check for cancellations if your preferred slot is gone, but do not count on them.
Is YŌSO good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. The format — a single counter, a single menu, attentive service from dining room director and sommelier José Balau — lends itself to milestone dinners for two. It is less suited to large-group celebrations where you want flexibility over the meal. At €€€, it sits a tier below most of its Michelin-starred Lisbon peers, which makes it a well-priced special-occasion option relative to alternatives like Belcanto or Feitoria.
Is YŌSO worth the price?
At €€€ — one price tier below most Michelin-starred Lisbon restaurants — YŌSO offers a credible value case for what you get: a kaiseki omakase with a 2024 Michelin star, Portuguese coastal fish treated with precision, and a counter format with attentive individual service. If omakase is your format, this is one of the stronger-value starred experiences in Lisbon. If you want à la carte or a more social, flexible setup, the price-to-format fit is weaker.
Is the tasting menu worth it at YŌSO?
The tasting menu is the only option at YŌSO, so the question is really whether the omakase format suits you. For diners who want a structured, chef-led progression through Portuguese-sourced fish treated with kaiseki technique, the Michelin star signals the execution is there. If you prefer to order selectively or avoid long set menus, this is not the right venue regardless of quality.
Is lunch or dinner better at YŌSO?
Both sessions run the same hours pattern Tuesday through Saturday — lunch 12:30 PM to 3:00 PM, dinner 8:00 PM to 11:30 PM — and there is no publicly documented difference in the menu offered at each. Lunch at a kaiseki counter tends to feel less formal in atmosphere, and with a ten-seat room the distinction between sessions is subtle. Dinner slots are likely to book faster, so if your schedule allows lunch, it is the lower-friction option.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 12:30 PM-3 PM 8 PM-11:30 PM
- Wednesday
- 12:30 PM-3 PM 8 PM-11:30 PM
- Thursday
- 12:30 PM-3 PM 8 PM-11:30 PM
- Friday
- 12:30 PM-3 PM 8 PM-11:30 PM
- Saturday
- 12:30 PM-3 PM 8 PM-11:30 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
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