Bar in Urban Honolulu, United States
Imanas Tei Restaurant
100Pearl PointsLow-profile izakaya regulars quietly claim first.

About Imanas Tei Restaurant
Imanas Tei is a low-key Honolulu izakaya on South King Street that regulars return to for its considered sake and Japanese whisky selection alongside small plates. It's the right call for an unhurried evening where drinks and food work together — quieter and more consistent than the louder alternatives nearby. Book ahead; it fills quickly for its size.
The Verdict
Seats at Imanas Tei go quietly — this is a small, low-profile izakaya on South King Street that regulars treat as a standing reservation rather than a discovery. If you've been once, you already know the draw: an unpretentious room, a tight menu, and a drinks list that punches above what the exterior suggests. Book early in the week if you can; weekend availability shrinks fast for a place this compact.
What to Expect
Imanas Tei sits in the Moiliili neighbourhood at 2626 S King St, a stretch that rewards those who look past the strip-mall storefronts. As an izakaya, its drinks program is structural, not decorative — Japanese whisky, cold sake, and draft beer are the throughline, and the selection is considered enough to drive repeat visits on its own. For a returning guest, the move is to work through the sake range rather than default to beer. Izakaya formats reward deliberate drinking: small plates arrive in rounds, which means your glass should keep pace. The cocktail ambition here is quieter than what you'd find at Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, that room is purpose-built for craft cocktails with a serious program, but Imanas Tei isn't trying to compete on that axis. It's trying to be the right place for a long, unhurried evening with food in the mix.
The izakaya category in Honolulu has a reliable local benchmark in Tokkuri Tei, which is louder and more theatrical. Imanas Tei skews quieter and more consistent, a better call if conversation is the point. For those who want to understand the broader drinking culture across Honolulu, the full Urban Honolulu bars guide covers the range from casual to serious.
Practical Details
Reservations: Recommended; walk-ins possible early in the week but risky on weekends given the limited seat count. Dress: Casual, no formality expected or required. Budget: Price range not confirmed in available data; izakaya format typically means moderate spend with drinks. Getting There: On South King Street in Moiliili, accessible by car or TheBus. Street parking is available but variable. Good For: Groups of 2–4 looking for a long, food-paired drinking session; returning visitors who want somewhere that doesn't feel tourist-facing.
For broader planning in the area, see our full Urban Honolulu restaurants guide, our full Urban Honolulu hotels guide, and our full Urban Honolulu experiences guide. If you're comparing cocktail-forward bars nationally, Jewel of the South in New Orleans and Julep in Houston set a useful benchmark for what a genuinely ambitious drinks program looks like.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you need a reservation at Imanas Tei?
Yes, book ahead. Walk-ins are possible early in the week, but the seat count is small enough that weekends fill without much warning. This is a neighbourhood spot where regulars return on a schedule, so available seats can disappear faster than the low profile suggests. If you're visiting on a Friday or Saturday, treat a reservation as non-negotiable.
What kind of food does Imanas Tei serve?
Imanas Tei operates as an izakaya — the Japanese format built around shared plates and drinks rather than a single-course progression. It sits on South King Street in Moiliili, Honolulu, and functions more like a local regular's spot than a tourist destination. If you're looking for ramen specifically, AGU Ramen at Ward Centre is a more direct fit. Imanas Tei suits a longer, sharing-focused evening.
What's the dress code at Imanas Tei?
Casual. Imanas Tei is a strip-mall izakaya on South King Street — no formality is expected or required. Dress as you would for any relaxed neighbourhood dinner.
How does Imanas Tei compare to Tokkuri Tei?
Tokkuri Tei has a higher profile and a broader menu, which makes it the easier recommendation for first-time izakaya visitors in Honolulu. Imanas Tei is quieter and more local-facing — if you want to eat where Moiliili regulars actually return week after week, it wins on that basis. For a livelier, more menu-extensive izakaya experience, Tokkuri Tei is the stronger call.
Is Imanas Tei good for groups?
Small groups work better here than large ones. The seat count is limited, so parties of four or more should call ahead and confirm availability rather than assuming space exists. For a large group dinner with more layout flexibility, Beachhouse at the Moana accommodates bigger parties, though at a significantly different price point and atmosphere.
Location
2626 S King St #1, Honolulu, HI 96826
Urban Honolulu, United States
Compare Imanas Tei Restaurant
| Venue | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|
| Imanas Tei Restaurant | Easy |
| 9th Ave Rock House | Unknown |
| Tokkuri Tei | Unknown |
| AGU Ramen - Ward Centre | Unknown |
| Andy's Sandwiches & Smoothies | Unknown |
| Beachhouse at the Moana | Unknown |
A quick look at how Imanas Tei Restaurant measures up.
Also Consider
- 9th Ave Rock House, Notable alternative
- Tokkuri Tei, Notable alternative
- AGU Ramen - Ward Centre, Notable alternative
- Andy's Sandwiches & Smoothies, Notable alternative
- Beachhouse at the Moana, Notable alternative
Against the Urban Honolulu peer set, Imanas Tei occupies a specific and useful position: it's the izakaya for people who want to drink deliberately rather than just eat. Beachhouse at the Moana is the obvious choice if setting and occasion matter, ocean views, higher price point, and a drinks list oriented around tropical cocktails. Imanas Tei is the opposite of that: no view, no theatre, but a more consistent food-and-drink pairing experience for the money.
AGU Ramen - Ward Centre is easier to book and lower commitment, fine for a quick solo meal, but not a drinking destination. Andy's Sandwiches & Smoothies and 9th Ave Rock House serve different functions entirely: daytime fuel and a live-music bar respectively. Neither competes with Imanas Tei on the izakaya format. If your evening is built around sake, small plates, and a room that doesn't rush you, Imanas Tei is the clearest option in this comparison set. Check our full Urban Honolulu wineries guide if you want to extend the evening with a different drinks category.
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