Bar in Seattle, United States
Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya
100ptsLow-stakes Belltown sushi, limited public detail.

About Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya
Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya on 2nd Ave in Belltown suits a low-stakes group dinner in izakaya format — easy to book, practical location, and no waitlist pressure. That said, limited public data on pricing and hours means you should confirm details before visiting. Better-documented Seattle alternatives exist if you want pre-trip certainty on what a round will cost.
Quick Take: Should You Book Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya?
If you're looking for a sushi and izakaya spot on 2nd Ave in Belltown, Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya sits at a convenient address but comes with limited publicly available data on pricing, hours, and what's currently on the menu — which itself tells you something useful before you commit. For a first-timer in Seattle's sushi scene, there are better-documented alternatives where you know exactly what a round will cost you before you walk in. If you've been once and are deciding whether to return, the answer depends heavily on what you found on that first visit, because there's no published price range or awards record to help set expectations independently.
What to Know Before You Go
Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya operates out of 2311 2nd Ave in Seattle's Belltown neighbourhood, a stretch that tends to draw a mix of pre-theatre diners, after-work groups, and weekend regulars. The izakaya format — small plates, shared ordering, drinks running alongside food , generally makes it easier to control spend per round than a fixed omakase, but without a published price range it's harder to benchmark a typical evening here against comparable spots. As a returning guest, the format does reward repeat visits: izakaya menus typically allow you to build toward favourites rather than working through a set progression. The venue is easy to book by Seattle standards, so you're not racing a waitlist.
On the practical side: no phone number, website, or hours are listed in Pearl's current database for this venue. Before visiting, confirm hours directly. The address at 2nd Ave puts it within walking distance of several Belltown bars, which makes it a reasonable anchor for an evening that continues elsewhere. If you're planning to pair dinner here with drinks after, Canon and Roquette are both within the neighbourhood and easier to evaluate in advance given their fuller public profiles.
Value Per Round
Without a confirmed price range, assessing value per round at Wasabi requires some extrapolation. Izakaya dining in Seattle's Belltown corridor typically runs $30–$60 per person with drinks, depending on how many rounds of small plates you order. If Wasabi sits within that band, it's competitive. If it prices above it without a corresponding credential , a named award, a well-reviewed programme, a chef with a verifiable track record , then venues like The Doctor's Office or the broader options in our full Seattle restaurants guide offer clearer value guarantees upfront. The izakaya format is naturally suited to mid-spend evenings: you can exit at two rounds or push to five, which gives you more cost control than a tasting menu. That flexibility is the strongest structural argument for the format, regardless of venue.
Who It's For
Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya makes most sense for a returning guest who already knows what they're getting, or for a low-stakes group dinner where the shared-plates format matters more than destination credentials. It's easy to book, the Belltown location is practical, and izakaya dining suits groups of three or four who want to graze rather than commit to a structured meal. Solo diners or couples looking for a counter-style sushi experience with documented precision would be better served consulting our full Seattle bars guide or restaurants guide for venues with published ratings and menus.
For reference, if you're open to travelling beyond Seattle for a comparable format, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu and Jewel of the South in New Orleans represent izakaya-adjacent bar-dining experiences with stronger documented track records , useful comparators if you want to calibrate expectations for the format at its leading.
Practical Details
- Address: 2311 2nd Ave, Seattle, WA 98121
- Booking difficulty: Easy , no waitlist pressure reported
- Price range: Not publicly listed; confirm before visiting
- Hours: Not listed; verify directly before going
- Format: Sushi and izakaya small plates, suited to groups of 2–5
- Nearby: Canon, Roquette, The Doctor's Office for post-dinner drinks
For broader planning, see our guides to Seattle hotels, Seattle wineries, and Seattle experiences. And if you're curious how Belltown's bar scene fits into a wider evening, 2963 4th Ave S and Julep in Houston offer useful format comparisons for what a well-run small-plates bar programme looks like at a documented level.
Compare Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya | Easy | — | |
| Canon | Unknown | — | |
| Bar Miriam | Unknown | — | |
| Rob Roy | Unknown | — | |
| Roquette | Unknown | — | |
| The Doctor's Office | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya known for?
Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya is primarily known for its core concept and execution in Seattle.
Where is Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya located?
Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya is located in Seattle, at 2311 2nd Ave, Seattle, WA 98121.
How can I contact Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya?
You can reach Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya via the venue's official channels.
More bars in Seattle
- 2963 4th Ave S2963 4th Ave S is a SoDo address with limited public information, making it best suited as a local exploratory stop rather than a planned destination. Booking is easy, and the neighborhood skews casual and accessible. For a structured cocktail evening in Seattle, venues like Canon or Roquette offer more certainty before you commit the trip.
- A Pizza MartA Pizza Mart on Stewart St is a walk-in, no-reservation pizza option in the heart of downtown Seattle. Easy to access, casual in feel, and suited to spontaneous stops rather than planned evenings out. Best for solo diners or small groups who want a low-friction meal close to Pike Place and Capitol Hill.
- a/stira/stir sits on Capitol Hill's E Pike corridor in Seattle, in one of the city's most walkable and late-night-friendly bar stretches. Booking is easy and walk-ins are realistic, making it a low-friction option for a flexible evening. Key details like price range and hours are not publicly confirmed, so verify before you go.
- Add-A-BallAdd-A-Ball is a pinball and arcade bar in Seattle's Fremont neighborhood that works best for groups of four or more looking for a low-pressure, high-energy night out. Walk-ins are easy, the format rewards a crowd, and the atmosphere is deliberately loud and social. Not the right call for a quiet date or serious cocktail focus — but a reliable group pick.
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Wasabi Sushi & Izakaya on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
