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    Bar in Tokyo, Japan

    KURAND SAKE MARKET

    100Pearl Points

    All-you-can-drink sake, no bartender required.

    KURAND SAKE MARKET, Bar in Tokyo

    About KURAND SAKE MARKET

    KURAND SAKE MARKET in Ikebukuro offers all-you-can-drink access to hundreds of sake labels at a flat entry price — a self-service format built for curious groups rather than intimate evenings. It is the broadest sake exposure you can get in one session in Tokyo, but there is no bartender guidance and no craft cocktail program. Book it for discovery, not for atmosphere.

    Verdict

    KURAND SAKE MARKET is not a sake bar in the conventional sense — there is no bartender crafting small pours and no curated list to decode. It is an all-you-can-drink sake format where you serve yourself from several hundred bottles arranged around the room. For first-timers expecting something like Bar High Five or a polished Ginza cocktail experience, reset that expectation immediately. What you get here is access, volume, and discovery at a flat entry price. If that format suits you, it is a genuinely good deal in Tokyo. If you want guidance, craft, or atmosphere, look elsewhere.

    The Space and the Format

    The venue sits on the fourth floor of a building in Nishiikebukuro, Toshima City. The layout is functional rather than atmospheric: bottles are the architecture here, arranged so guests can browse and pour freely. There are no menus to study and no staff recommending specific expressions. The spatial experience is communal and informal, which works well for groups wanting to experiment but poorly for anyone after a quiet, intimate evening. Seating is shared, the room fills up, and the energy skews casual. Think tasting event, not date night.

    The program's ambition is breadth rather than depth. Hundreds of sake labels means genuine range across regions, styles, and producers — the kind of access that would cost significantly more if you were ordering individual glasses elsewhere in the city. For a first-timer to sake, this format has real educational value: you can compare junmai, ginjo, and nigori side by side without committing to a full bottle. That is the strongest argument for booking. The absence of a trained guide is the tradeoff.

    Who Should Book

    Groups of three or more get the most from this format. It suits friends who want to explore sake without a structured tasting, colleagues looking for a low-cost social night in Ikebukuro, or curious visitors who want broad exposure to Japanese sake styles in a single session. Solo drinkers and couples on a date will find the atmosphere less conducive. If you are already knowledgeable about sake, the lack of rare or premium-tier bottles may leave you wanting more than the format can offer.

    For broader context on Tokyo's drinking scene, see our full Tokyo bars guide, or explore Bar Libre and Bar Orchard Ginza for more craft-led alternatives. Planning the wider trip? Check our Tokyo restaurants guide, Tokyo hotels guide, Tokyo wineries guide, and Tokyo experiences guide. If you are travelling beyond Tokyo, Bar Nayuta in Osaka, The Sailing Bar in Nara, and Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu are worth adding to your list.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Walk-ins are generally possible; booking difficulty is low. Location: 4F, 3-27-3 Nishiikebukuro, Toshima City, Tokyo. Format: All-you-can-drink sake, self-service. Leading for: Groups, curious first-timers, casual evenings. Note: Specific pricing, hours, and current bottle count are not confirmed in our data, check directly with the venue before visiting.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Do I need a reservation at KURAND SAKE MARKET?

    Walk-ins are generally fine — booking difficulty here is low compared to most Tokyo bars. That said, groups of four or more are better off reserving ahead to secure enough space. The venue is on the 4th floor at 3-27-3 Nishiikebukuro, Toshima City, so showing up without a booking on a Friday evening carries some risk.

    Is KURAND SAKE MARKET good for groups?

    Yes, and it is probably the format where KURAND performs best. The flat-rate all-you-can-drink structure removes the back-and-forth of ordering rounds, which makes groups of three or more the core use case. Colleagues or friends who want to work through a range of sake without committing to a structured tasting will get the most value here.

    Does KURAND SAKE MARKET have happy hour deals?

    The all-you-can-drink flat-rate format is the deal — there is no separate happy hour layered on top because the pricing model already functions as a fixed-cost session. Check current entry rates directly with the venue, as price details are not confirmed in available data.

    Is KURAND SAKE MARKET good for a date?

    Only if your date finds self-service sake exploration more fun than atmosphere. The layout is functional rather than intimate — bottles are the focal point, not the setting. For a date with more considered surroundings, Star Bar Ginza or The Bellwood in Tokyo offer a different register entirely. KURAND works better as a casual, exploratory outing than a night designed to impress.

    Is the food good at KURAND SAKE MARKET?

    Food is not the draw here — this is a sake-first venue, and the format prioritises volume and variety of sake over kitchen ambition. Treat any food offering as accompaniment rather than a reason to visit. If a meal is central to your plans, pair KURAND with dinner elsewhere in Ikebukuro before or after your session.

    Location

    Japan, 〒171-0021 Tokyo, Toshima City, Nishiikebukuro, 3 Chome−27−3 s&kビル 4F

    Tokyo, Japan

    Compare KURAND SAKE MARKET

    KURAND SAKE MARKET Side-by-Side
    VenueAwardsBooking Difficulty
    KURAND SAKE MARKETEasy
    Bar BenfiddichWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    Bulgari Ginza BarWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    Star Bar GinzaWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    The BellwoodWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    Tender BarUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between KURAND SAKE MARKET and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    • Bar Benfiddich, Notable alternative
    • Bulgari Ginza Bar, Notable alternative
    • Star Bar Ginza, Notable alternative
    • The Bellwood, Notable alternative
    • Tender Bar, Notable alternative

    KURAND SAKE MARKET sits in a completely different category from Tokyo's serious cocktail bars, and it is worth being clear about that before drawing comparisons. Bar Benfiddich and Star Bar Ginza are craft-driven, bartender-led experiences where the whole point is skilled preparation and a curated selection. KURAND is the opposite: volume, self-service, and a flat price. These are not competing for the same occasion.

    If value is the priority, KURAND wins easily against Bulgari Ginza Bar or Tender Bar, both of which carry premium pricing in line with their Ginza addresses. For a group wanting a low-cost social night with broad sake access, KURAND is the most cost-efficient option in this peer set. The Bellwood sits closer in spirit, relaxed, accessible, but still operates as a conventional bar with individual ordering.

    The honest summary: if you want craft, guidance, or a refined atmosphere, book Bar Benfiddich or Star Bar Ginza. If you want to try as many sake styles as possible in one evening without a large bill, KURAND is the right call. The two use cases rarely overlap, so the decision usually makes itself.

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