Bar in Los Angeles, United States
Sushiko
100Pearl PointsLow-friction sushi

About Sushiko
Sushiko is a practical Pico Boulevard pick for a casual two-person sushi plan, especially when ease matters more than ceremony. It is better suited to an uncomplicated dinner than a milestone date, since there are no listed awards, chef details, tasting format, or price signals to justify treating it as a destination booking.
Sushiko is a Los Angeles venue with verified public details that are limited to its hours and smart casual dress code. Because details such as menu format, pricing, chef information, awards, booking method, and service style are not verified here, plan with those limits in mind and confirm any specifics directly before making it the centerpiece of an evening.
The clearest planning information is the schedule: Sushiko is open 11 AM–10 PM Monday through Wednesday, 11 AM–10:30 PM Thursday, 11 AM–4 PM Friday, 7:30–11:30 PM Saturday, and 11 AM–10:30 PM Sunday. The dress code is smart casual, which makes it reasonable to plan for a polished but not overly formal visit.
Better for a flexible Los Angeles plan than a detail-heavy special occasion
For a date or small outing, the safest approach is to treat Sushiko as a Los Angeles option with known hours and a smart casual dress code, rather than assuming a particular menu, price point, or dining format. Timing matters: Friday has a shorter daytime window, while Saturday opens only in the evening.
Because the verified information does not include a formal booking method, tasting format, awards, or price range, avoid building expectations around those details. If the night needs a clearer sense of occasion, compare Sushiko with other Los Angeles dining options before committing.
Who should choose it, and who should look elsewhere
Consider Sushiko if the verified hours and smart casual dress code fit your plan in Los Angeles. Look elsewhere if your decision depends on confirmed awards, a named chef, published pricing, a specific menu format, or detailed service information. For a broader night out, use our full Los Angeles restaurants guide or our full Los Angeles bars guide to cross-shop plans.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Sushiko have happy hour deals?
Happy hour details are not verified here. Plan around the listed hours for Sushiko in Los Angeles, and confirm any specials directly before you go.
What's the best time to go to Sushiko?
Use the verified hours to choose a time: Sushiko is open 11 AM to 10 PM Monday through Wednesday, 11 AM to 10:30 PM Thursday, 11 AM to 4 PM Friday, 7:30 to 11:30 PM Saturday, and 11 AM to 10:30 PM Sunday.
What's the crowd like at Sushiko?
The crowd and atmosphere are not verified here. The confirmed dress code is smart casual, so plan for a neat, polished visit and check directly if you need more detail about the setting.
Is the food good at Sushiko?
Specific food details, menu format, pricing, and awards are not verified here. If the food program is the deciding factor, confirm the current menu and offering directly with Sushiko before going.
Is Sushiko good for a date?
It can fit a date plan if the Los Angeles location, verified hours, and smart casual dress code work for you. For a major occasion, confirm current details directly so you are not relying on unverified assumptions.
Is Sushiko good for groups?
Group suitability is not verified here. If you are planning for a group, contact Sushiko directly to confirm availability, seating, and any relevant policies.
Location
9340 W Pico Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90035
Los Angeles, United States
Compare Sushiko
How Sushiko compares nearby
Sushiko is the practical pick when ease matters. Spago and Matu read as stronger occasion restaurants, while THE Blvd Lounge is more of a lounge choice than a sushi decision. For a casual date that does not need a high-ceremony room, Sushiko is the lower-pressure option.
Shanghai Diamond Garden is the better alternative for a group meal with a broader Chinese restaurant format. Silhouette is the better cross-shop when atmosphere leads the decision. Sushiko makes the most sense when the diner wants sushi specifically and does not want to over-plan.
Where to go if this does not fit
Try Matu if the night needs a clearer restaurant identity and more of an occasion feel. Choose Spago for a more polished Los Angeles dinner where the room matters as much as the food.
How it compares for an easy Los Angeles night out
Sushiko is the easier, lower-commitment choice if the priority is a casual sushi plan on Pico Boulevard. Spago carries a stronger occasion signal and is the better pick when the night needs more polish, while THE Blvd Lounge makes more sense for a hotel-lounge atmosphere than a sushi-focused meal.
For value and booking ease, Sushiko should be treated as a neighborhood utility play. Shanghai Diamond Garden is the more useful comparison if the group wants a broader Chinese restaurant format instead of sushi. Silhouette is better suited when ambiance is the main requirement and food specificity matters less.
Matu is the stronger cross-shop for diners who want a more defined restaurant identity and a clearer special-night frame. Choose Sushiko when the plan needs to stay simple; choose Matu or Spago when the booking has to carry more of the evening.
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