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    Bar in Los Angeles, United States

    Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant

    100Pearl Points

    Hollywood sushi that earns a date-night booking.

    Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant, Bar in Los Angeles

    About Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant

    Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant in Hollywood offers a flexible Japanese menu — sushi alongside broader dishes — that works well for date nights and group celebrations where not everyone wants a fixed tasting format. Booking is easier than most competitive Japanese venues in LA. Confirm hours and pricing directly before going, as details are limited in the public record.

    Is Shintaro Worth Booking for a Special Occasion in Los Angeles?

    If you're looking for a Japanese restaurant in Hollywood that can carry the weight of a date night or a celebratory dinner, Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant at 1900 Highland Ave is on the shortlist. The venue sits in a part of Hollywood that rewards those who seek it out rather than stumble across it, and the format — sushi and broader Japanese cooking under one roof — gives it flexibility that pure omakase counters lack. For special occasions where not everyone at the table wants a locked-in tasting format, that flexibility matters.

    The address puts Shintaro close to the activity of Hollywood without being swallowed by it, which shapes the evening atmosphere more than most diners anticipate. Earlier in the evening the room tends to run at a pace that works for conversation-forward meals. As the night deepens, the surrounding neighbourhood energy filters in, and the atmosphere shifts accordingly. If the goal is a quieter, more controlled environment for a significant dinner, arriving before 8 PM is the practical move. Later sittings will have more ambient noise and a livelier room, which suits some occasions better than others.

    One honest caveat: the public record on Shintaro's current pricing, hours, and specific menu format is thin. Confirming those details directly before booking is the right call, particularly if you're planning around a fixed budget or need to know whether omakase or à la carte is on offer on your chosen night. What the venue's position in Hollywood does confirm is that it operates in a competitive tier, Los Angeles has no shortage of serious Japanese restaurants, and venues at this address have to earn their place.

    For the special-occasion framing specifically, Shintaro's dual-format approach (sushi alongside broader Japanese dishes) gives it an edge over single-focus counters when the group has mixed preferences. A date night where one person wants sashimi and another wants something more substantial from the kitchen is a real use case, and Shintaro is structured to handle it. That said, if the priority is a technically rigorous omakase experience above all else, Los Angeles has dedicated counters that are purpose-built for that format.

    Booking looks to be on the easier side relative to the most in-demand Japanese venues in the city, which is a genuine advantage for last-minute celebrations or when you need a reliable reservation without a weeks-long wait. Explore more of what Los Angeles has on offer with our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, full Los Angeles bars guide, and full Los Angeles hotels guide. If you're planning a wider trip, our full Los Angeles experiences guide and full Los Angeles wineries guide are worth a look too.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 1900 Highland Ave #5, Los Angeles, CA 90068
    • Leading timing: Arrive before 8 PM for a quieter room suited to conversation; later sittings run livelier
    • Format: Sushi and broader Japanese dishes, flexible for mixed-preference groups
    • Booking difficulty: Easy relative to LA's most competitive Japanese venues
    • Confirm before you go: Hours, pricing, and current menu format not publicly confirmed, call ahead for special-occasion planning
    • Occasion fit: Date nights and small group celebrations; less suited to a pure omakase-focused evening

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant known for?

    Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant is primarily known for its core concept and execution in Los Angeles.

    Where is Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant located?

    Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant is located in Los Angeles, at 1900 Highland Ave #5, Los Angeles, CA 90068.

    How can I contact Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant?

    You can reach Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant via the venue's official channels.

    Location

    1900 Highland Ave #5, Los Angeles, CA 90068

    Los Angeles, United States

    Compare Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant

    How Easy to Book: Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant vs. Peers
    VenueBooking Difficulty
    Shintaro Sushi and Japanese RestaurantEasy
    MirateUnknown
    Redbird BarUnknown
    Bar Next DoorUnknown
    Death & Co (Los Angeles)Unknown
    Standard BarUnknown

    A quick look at how Shintaro Sushi and Japanese Restaurant measures up.

    Also Consider

    • Mirate, Notable alternative
    • Redbird Bar, Notable alternative
    • Bar Next Door, Notable alternative
    • Death & Co (Los Angeles), Notable alternative
    • Standard Bar, Notable alternative

    How Shintaro Compares to Other Los Angeles Venues

    If your evening is likely to run late and you want somewhere that holds up as the night progresses, the cocktail bar category offers strong alternatives in LA. Death & Co (Los Angeles) and Mirate are both purpose-built for late-night viability in a way that a sushi restaurant typically is not, kitchens close, the energy changes, and the format shifts. For a celebration where drinks and atmosphere matter as much as food, those venues carry the evening more consistently than a restaurant setting.

    For something with more conversational intimacy late in the evening, Bar Next Door delivers a lower-noise environment that works for meaningful conversation, while Standard Bar leans into a livelier room better suited to groups that want energy over quiet. Shintaro's advantage over all of these is the kitchen, if the occasion genuinely requires a full Japanese meal rather than drinks and small plates, a restaurant wins by format alone.

    The practical comparison comes down to what the occasion actually demands. If food is the centrepiece and the group has mixed preferences, Shintaro's flexible menu structure is its strongest argument. If the evening is more about atmosphere and the night running long, venues like Mirate or Death & Co are better built for that arc. For inspiration from the broader cocktail bar category across the US, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston represent the kind of programme-led bars worth benchmarking against when you're deciding how much the drinks list should factor into your booking decision.

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