Guide · Late-night × Kita-Senju
Late-Night Kita-Senju
My shitamachi night circuit — kissaten in the afternoon, eel at dusk, a mahjong-parlor izakaya into the night
My Kita-Senju shitamachi night circuit: a Showa kissaten in the afternoon, 150-year eel at dusk, a mahjong-hall izakaya past 11pm. Four spots I keep returning to.
Kita-Senju is the ward I drift to when central Tokyo gets loud. It still runs on shitamachi rhythms — the kissaten crowds are regulars, the eel queue is orderly, the izakaya upstairs from the mahjong hall is genuinely cozy. Visitors who pass through on the Joban Line usually keep walking, and that is how I like it.
My late-afternoon anchor is Mocha, a kissaten operating since the Showa 30s — mid-1950s — tucked behind a white noren on Senju Motocho. Napolitana, cream soda, retro wood interior unchanged. It closes at 10:30pm, dine-in only, no takeout. The opening time is not posted, so I arrive in the afternoon and play it by ear.
For early dinner I turn to Unagi Obana, a 150-year-old eel specialist in Minamisenju. Every visit makes me proud of this place — the flavoring is genuinely one-of-a-kind, 150-plus years of refinement, and you can taste it in every bite. Walk-in only, served in arrival order. Dinner service runs 4pm–7:30pm Wednesday through Sunday; for lunch I get in line by 9am. Three hours of waiting? It's worth it. I'm always in that queue.
The night move is Jan Sō Ataru, upstairs from an actual mahjong parlor — a jansō, a term that might be uniquely Japanese — on the second floor of the Ueno Building, one minute from Senju station. The reno kept the atmosphere: feels like it should be a smoking spot, but it isn't. As a smoker, that's the only letdown. You have to order the shumai and the fries. Open weekdays 5pm–11:30pm, weekends 4pm–11:30pm.
For a late finish I lean on Futago Sushi, a 70-year-old counter on Senjutatsutacho, 14 minutes from the station on foot. Cash only, no sign, no online presence — easy to miss, which is part of the charm. Seafood bowls run ¥850–¥2,200; the regular at ¥850 is absurdly cheap. Hours run until 7pm officially (some sources say 6pm — I confirm before heading over); I go early in the evening if I am closing the route here.
The spots
- ✦ On the radar
Kita-Senju · kissaten
Mocha
モカ
Mocha is a vintage Kita-Senju kissaten operating since the Showa 30s (mid-1950s), beloved for its unchanged character—white noren, retro wood interior, and simple menu of napolitana and cream soda. The poster, a hundreds-kissaten explorer, calls it a cultural landmark.
Read the editor's full guide → - ✓ Visited
Kita-Senju · restaurant
Unagi Obana
Every visit makes me proud of this place. The flavoring is genuinely one-of-a-kind — 150+ years of refinement, and you can taste it in every bite. No reservations, walk-in only, served in the order you arrive. That's the rub, but it's fair: show up, queue, and you'll always get in. For lunch on a weekday, get in line by 9am and you're set. Three hours of waiting? It's worth it. I'm always in that queue.
Unagi Obana in Minamisenju draws crowds from opening—expect a queue. Known for grilled eel bowls and liver soup. Arrive early or settle in for a wait.
⚠️ Expect consistent queues, especially at lunch. Closed Mondays and Tuesdays.
Read the editor's full guide → - ✓ 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 and may have shifted—confirm on visit or via their website.
Read the editor's full guide → - ✦ On the radar
Kita-Senju · restaurant
Futago Sushi
双子鮨
Seventy-year-old sushi counter in Kita-Senju that doesn't look like much but serves sushi and seafood bowls at genuinely cheap prices. Known locally, picked up by Tabelog's "Kitana Shuran" list. Cash only, 14 minutes from the station.
⚠️ Cash only—no cards. Hours in caption (15:00–18:00 evening close) differ slightly from Google Places (closes 19:00); confirm before visiting.
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Notes
Last trains: the Joban (rapid and local), Hibiya, Chiyoda, and Tobu Skytree Lines all converge at Kita-Senju, so I rarely worry about missing the last one. Jan Sō Ataru runs until 11:30pm; Mocha closes at 10:30pm; Futago Sushi closes around 7pm, so sequence matters: kissaten in the afternoon, eel at 4–5pm, izakaya from 7–11pm, then I decide whether Futago Sushi fits the loop or gets saved for a lunch visit instead.