Category
Izakaya
Tokyo izakaya — small wooden counters, hot sake, charcoal grills. The shitamachi neighborhoods (Kita-Senju, Asakusa) hold the densest survivors.
Counters, charcoal, hot sake.
Kita-Senju
1 spotOld-school izakaya, sento, working-class shitamachi
- ✓ Visited
Kita-Senju · izakaya
Jan Sō Ataru
ジャンソーアタル
Ever heard of a jansō? A mahjong parlor — I think it might be uniquely Japanese. This place is a renovated jansō turned into a beautifully designed bar — and the food and drinks are excellent. You have to order the shumai and the fries. The atmosphere feels like it should be a smoking spot, but it isn't. As a smoker, that's the only letdown.
Neo-izakaya in Kita-Senju housed in a renovated mahjong parlor. Small plates blend Japanese classics with unexpected flavors—think chicken tataki with cinnamon soy, somtam with spring onions, beef uni shumai. Popular spot for dates and casual group drinks.
⚠️ Prices in caption are tax-excluded (税抜き) and may have shifted—confirm on visit or via their website.
Read the editor's full guide →
Asakusa & Kuramae
3 spotsShitamachi craft district — temples, jazz kissa, leather & paper workshops
- ✓ Visited
Asakusa & Kuramae · izakaya
Onoya
十味小野屋
It's the kind of spot in Asakusa that even locals don't know about. Always quiet when I go, but the food is made with real care—you can tell the owner knows what he's doing. Service is slow, which works fine if you're in the mood to nurse a beer and soak it in. Fair warning though: no English here, so bring someone who speaks Japanese if you don't. If you can appreciate a place like this, you're a real shitamachi person.
Onoya is a quietly refined izakaya in Asakusa serving fresh fish dishes and seasonal fare. The counter and small raised seating offer an intimate atmosphere steps from Hoppy-dori, with a welcoming owner and loyal locals.
⚠️ Small space with limited seating; arrive early or be prepared to wait during peak hours.
Read the editor's full guide → - ✓ Visited
Asakusa & Kuramae · izakaya
Enshūya Honten Takao
遠州屋本店 高尾
Set in a part of Tokyo that has nothing to do with tourism — a serious local favorite. They take standard izakaya menu items and elevate them with absurd precision and care. Not stiff at all: a renovated machiya, exactly what "Tokyo style" should mean. Show up around 8pm and you'll usually get a seat. If you're staying anywhere nearby, please go. I make the trip from far away to drink here.
Long-standing izakaya near Minami-Senjū specializing in firefly squid (hotaru ika)—sashimi with two flavor preparations and a rarely-seen tempura version. Deep into the back alleys of old Asakusa.
⚠️ Closed Tuesday and Wednesday. Call ahead for hotaru ika seasonal availability.
Read the editor's full guide → - ✓ Visited
Asakusa & Kuramae · izakaya
Asakusa Micro
浅草ミクロ
The owner is a designer who welcomes everyone — she'll happily point you to other places in the neighborhood worth checking out. Every snack on the menu is handmade and almost suspiciously cheap. The drinks list is full of things you won't find at other bars, which is half the fun.
Asakusa Micro is a tachinomi (standing-bar) and event space in 'Kannon-ura' — the back-alley district behind Sensoji that locals know but tourists rarely find. Casual menu, ¥400 cover, regular DJ and POP-UP nights, antiques + vintage records on the wall. The kind of bar Asakusa creatives actually drink at.
⚠️ Asakusa Micro is an event space — opening days vary (DJ nights, pop-ups, Friday 'Kin'ya Shokudo'). Check the official Instagram @asakusa_micro before visiting.
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Tokyo Core
5 spotsShibuya, Shinjuku, Ginza, Roppongi — the parts you already know
- ✓ Visited
Tokyo Core · izakaya
Umaebisu
日本のお酒と馬肉料理 うまえびす
I don't think many people from overseas have eaten horse meat, right? I'm really into it though. There aren't many good horse meat spots in Tokyo, but this place is different. The meat here is seriously excellent. Whether you grill it or eat it raw, you're getting top-quality stuff. They've got a solid selection of drinks too, and the neighborhood's got plenty of thoughtful spots around it.
Ebisu izakaya focused on horse meat and Japanese sake. Horse harami grilled with miso is their signature; they also run daytime weekend service (noon–3pm) for lunch drinkers. Small neighborhood spot with serious sake pairings.
⚠️ English menu not confirmed; call ahead if you need English-language guidance on the menu or cuts.
Read the editor's full guide → - ✦ On the radar
Tokyo Core · izakaya
Himawari [Sei]
牛タンと馬肉とクリスピー餃子 ひまわり[精]
Ningyocho izakaya specializing in thick-cut beef tongue, horse meat, and ultra-crispy dumplings (0.1mm skin). Opened June 2025. Low-temp beef tongue cooked tableside, with horse sashimi as ochazuke. Good value for groups.
⚠️ Opened June 2025—very new venue, so availability and exact policies may still be settling. Verify via Instagram or direct contact before visiting.
Read the editor's full guide → - ✦ On the radar
Tokyo Core · izakaya
Kaisen Izakaya Sanchoku Ichiba Robata Shibuya Yoyogi Hachimanoten
海鮮居酒屋 産直市場 ろばた 渋谷代々木八幡店
Seafood-focused izakaya in Yoyogi Hachiman (one-minute walk from station) with charcoal grill, tabletop clay cooker for rice, and rotisserie-style skewered chicken. Recently expanded from Kansai—clean execution across sashimi, grilled vegetables, and fresh local catch.
⚠️ This is a recent Kansai expansion; double-check hours during low-season or holidays before traveling.
Read the editor's full guide → - ✦ On the radar
Tokyo Core · izakaya
Motsukichi Shibuya
もつ吉 渋谷店
Motsukichi is a small organ-meat (motsu) izakaya 5 minutes from Shibuya Hachiko exit — the kind of place that does raw heart, raw liver, and 'aglio olio liver' at a level that justifies a serious sake order. ¥5,000-6,000 per person. Smoke-free, card-friendly, walk-in OK. Solo-drinker friendly counter.
Read the editor's full guide → - ✦ On the radar
Tokyo Core · izakaya
Tomihachi
トミハチ
Tomihachi opened mid-April 2026 in Shimbashi — a Kagawa-prefecture creative izakaya around an irori (hearth) where seasonal vegetables and fish grill in front of you. The closer is a Sanuki udon, finished firmer than the Tokyo standard. Owner from Kagawa, ingredients flown in. 5 min from Shimbashi, ¥4,000-7,000.
Read the editor's full guide →
Sangenjaya
1 spotCoffee, izakaya alleys, Setagaya residential cool
- ✦ On the radar
Sangenjaya · izakaya
Kotora
狐虎
Kotora is a Setagaya tuna-specialist izakaya in Ikejiri-Ohashi, 7 minutes from the station. Google rating 4.7/296. Signature is raw bluefin tuna sashimi platter (¥1,380), tuna-leek skewers, tuna-tail steak. Late hours until 4 AM Fri-Sat. ¥5,000-6,000 per person. Reservation recommended.
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Shinagawa & Gotanda
1 spotQuiet south Tokyo — old Tokaido inn town, hidden izakaya pockets
- ✦ On the radar
Shinagawa & Gotanda · izakaya
Waguya
和ぐや
Small counter-style izakaya near Gotanda serving fresh seafood from Toyosu. Known for live hotaru-ika (firefly squid) shabu-shabu in season and rare tai-dashi oden. Intimate, unpretentious, sake-forward.
⚠️ Hotaru-ika shabu-shabu availability is seasonal (post suggests now/early season only). Confirm current menu and hours before visiting.
Read the editor's full guide →
Ota & Kamata
1 spotSento capital, working-class izakaya, Haneda gateway
- ✦ On the radar
Ota & Kamata · izakaya
Sakaba 55 Kamata Higashiguchi
酒場五五 蒲田東口店
Sakaba 55 opened May 2026 by Kamata's east exit — a polished modern take on Kamata's working-class drinking tradition. Signature is 'drinkable' dashimaki (rolled omelette) topped with mentaiko and ikura, plus a 3-cut nikuzashi (liver, tongue, heart) plate. Open until 2 AM, walk-in friendly, ¥3,000-5,000.
Read the editor's full guide →
FAQ
What is a Tokyo izakaya, exactly?
A Japanese pub built around small dishes and drinks — wooden counters, hot sake, charcoal-grilled skewers, simmered offal, raw fish. Tokyo izakaya range from late-night standing bars to slow-paced sit-down counters. The shitamachi neighborhoods (Kita-Senju, Asakusa) hold the densest survivors.
Where do Tokyo locals go for izakaya?
Kita-Senju and Asakusa for the old shitamachi style; Sangenjaya's Sankaku Chitai for the densest post-war alley; Gotanda for hidden serious counters. Tokyo Unseen tracks the survivors with original interiors and regulars, not the chain izakaya around major stations.
Do I need a reservation at a Tokyo izakaya?
Most small izakaya are walk-in, but the popular shitamachi spots fill up by 6pm on weekends. Counter seats turn over fastest. Standing bars (tachinomi) and the Sangenjaya alley spots are always walk-in. Each Tokyo Unseen spot page lists the reservation policy explicitly.