Bar in Lincoln, United States
Blue Sushi Sake Grill
100Pearl PointsSolid sushi and sake in the Haymarket.

About Blue Sushi Sake Grill
Blue Sushi Sake Grill delivers reliable Japanese-American cooking and a considered sake and cocktails program in Lincoln's Haymarket district. The bar food is worth ordering seriously, not just as an afterthought to drinks. Booking is easy, pricing sits comfortably mid-range, and it outperforms most Lincoln peers on the drinks side.
Worth Booking in Lincoln's Sushi Scene
Blue Sushi Sake Grill is a reliable call for sushi and Japanese-inflected bar food in Lincoln, sitting in the Haymarket district at 808 R St. If you've been once and stuck to the basics, go back and treat the food menu more seriously — this is a place where the kitchen rewards attention.
The room reads contemporary: clean lines, warm lighting, and a bar setup that makes it genuinely comfortable to eat solo at the counter or anchor a group dinner. Visually, it's a step above the average Nebraska chain experience, and the sake selection backs that up with enough breadth to make ordering interesting rather than obligatory.
On the food side, Blue Sushi positions itself as bar-and-kitchen rather than a purist sushi destination. That framing matters. If you arrive expecting the precision of a dedicated omakase counter, you'll be calibrating against the wrong standard. Arrive expecting thoughtful, accessible Japanese-American cooking with a serious drinks program alongside it, and the kitchen holds up well. The bar food here is worth ordering beyond the obvious rolls — shareable plates and starters tend to show more care than the format might suggest.
Booking is easy. Lincoln is not a city where prime tables disappear days in advance, and Blue Sushi's size means you have options. Weekends at peak dinner hours are the one exception worth planning around, a same-day or next-day reservation is usually sufficient for most nights. For context on what serious cocktail programs look like at this tier nationally, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston set a useful benchmark, Blue Sushi doesn't compete at that level, but it outperforms most of its Lincoln peers on drinks quality.
Price-tier positioning sits in the mid-range for Lincoln. You're unlikely to leave surprised by the bill, and the value holds well against comparable sit-down options in the Haymarket area. See our full Lincoln restaurants guide for broader context, or browse our full Lincoln bars guide if drinks are your primary focus.
Quick reference: Haymarket location, easy booking, mid-range pricing, leading for groups or a casual date night with a serious sake order.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the signature drink at Blue Sushi Sake Grill?
The sake list is the main draw here — it's the reason 'sake' is in the name. Blue Sushi Sake Grill at 808 R St positions itself as a sake destination alongside its Japanese bar food, so expect a wider sake selection than you'd find at a typical sushi spot in Lincoln. If sake isn't your thing, the cocktail program leans Japanese-inflected.
What's the crowd like at Blue Sushi Sake Grill?
Expect a mix of after-work Haymarket regulars, date-night couples, and small groups looking for something more interesting than a standard bar. The 808 R St location puts it in one of Lincoln's more active dining corridors, so it draws a social, mid-20s-to-40s crowd most evenings. It's not a quiet dinner spot.
Is Blue Sushi Sake Grill good for groups?
Yes, it works for groups, especially in the four-to-eight range. The Japanese bar food format — shareable plates, sushi rolls, sake rounds — suits a group better than a tasting-menu restaurant would. For larger parties, call ahead rather than walking in, especially on weekends in the Haymarket.
Is the food good at Blue Sushi Sake Grill?
It's reliable rather than revelatory. Blue Sushi delivers competent Japanese-inflected sushi and bar food in a market where the competition is limited — compared to Kasumi Sushi or Japon Bistro in Lincoln, it trades some authenticity for a broader, more accessible menu. If you want sharp, focused omakase-style sushi, look elsewhere; if you want a solid roll and a sake in a lively room, it delivers.
Is Blue Sushi Sake Grill good for a date?
It's a reasonable date call in Lincoln, particularly for a first or second date where you want energy in the room without it being a full occasion-dining commitment. The Haymarket location at 808 R St is easy to reach and the format — sake, shareable plates, casual rolls — keeps the evening relaxed. For a more serious dinner date, DISH Restaurant is a stronger option.
Does Blue Sushi Sake Grill have happy hour deals?
Blue Sushi Sake Grill is known for happy hour as part of its broader bar-focused positioning — discounted sake and Japanese small plates deals are common at this chain's locations. Specific current pricing isn't confirmed in our data, so verify directly with the restaurant before making it your primary reason to visit.
Location
808 R St, Lincoln, NE 68508
Lincoln, United States
Compare Blue Sushi Sake Grill
| Venue | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|
| Blue Sushi Sake Grill | Easy |
| White Horse | Unknown |
| Japon Bistro | Unknown |
| Cultiva Downtown | Unknown |
| DISH Restaurant | Unknown |
| Kasumi Sushi | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Blue Sushi Sake Grill and alternatives.
Also Consider
- White Horse, Notable alternative
- Japon Bistro, Notable alternative
- Cultiva Downtown, Notable alternative
- DISH Restaurant, Notable alternative
- Kasumi Sushi, Notable alternative
How Blue Sushi Sake Grill Compares in Lincoln
If Japanese food is your priority, the sharpest comparison is between Blue Sushi and Kasumi Sushi. Kasumi skews more traditional and is worth choosing if you want focused, purer sushi execution without the bar program. Blue Sushi makes more sense when you want Japanese food and a proper drinks order in the same sitting, the sake and cocktail side of the menu is a genuine reason to be there, not an afterthought. If someone in your group is indifferent to sushi, Blue Sushi's broader menu gives them better options than Kasumi will.
Against Japon Bistro, Blue Sushi is the easier, more casual pick, Japon Bistro leans into a bistro format that suits slower, more deliberate meals. For a group that wants to move at their own pace and keep ordering rounds, Blue Sushi's setup works better. If you're deciding between a full dinner experience and a lively hybrid bar-kitchen night, Japon Bistro is the former, Blue Sushi is the latter.
For nights when food is secondary and atmosphere is the point, Cultiva Downtown and the DISH Restaurant offer different angles, Cultiva for a coffee-to-cocktail crowd, DISH for a more polished dinner-out feel. Blue Sushi sits between those two: more substantial on food than a straight bar, more relaxed than a formal dinner destination. For most groups in Lincoln looking for a dependable, mid-range evening that covers both food and drinks without requiring much planning, Blue Sushi is the practical default. Check our full Lincoln experiences guide and our full Lincoln hotels guide if you're building a fuller itinerary around the visit.
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