Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
Akira
290Pearl PointsRobata grill, Michelin Plate, reasonable booking.

About Akira
A Michelin Plate-recognised Japanese restaurant above Japan House on Kensington High Street, Akira offers an accessible à la carte menu anchored by a robata charcoal grill. The breadth of the menu suits first-timers, and the open kitchen adds atmosphere. At the £££ price point, it delivers consistent, well-run cooking — lunch is the sharpest value entry point.
Akira, Kensington: The Verdict
At the £££ price point, Akira at Japan House on Kensington High Street earns its place as a reliable, well-positioned Japanese restaurant for first-timers who want range without the commitment of an omakase format. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 signals consistent cooking rather than brilliance, and a Google rating of 4.2 from over 600 reviews confirms that most diners leave satisfied. If you want serious sushi-only precision, Umu or Chisou will serve you better. But if you want an accessible, broad Japanese menu in a polished setting with a theatrical open kitchen, Akira is a sound choice for the neighbourhood.
What to Expect as a First-Timer
Akira sits above Japan House, the cultural centre that promotes Japanese arts, food, and design on Kensington High Street. The room is built around an open kitchen, which gives the space energy and lets you track the action at the robata charcoal grill. Counter seating is available if you want to watch the kitchen directly; tables suit groups or those who prefer more separation. The format is à la carte across a wide menu: sushi, small plates, and skewers from the robata grill, which is where the kitchen earns its Michelin attention. Think asparagus wrapped in bacon or chicken and shiso meatballs — the kind of grill work that carries charcoal fragrance into the dining room and gives the whole meal a warmth that straight sushi rarely provides.
The breadth of the menu is both a strength and a consideration. For a first visit, the robata skewers are the anchor: they represent the kitchen's clearest point of difference and are consistently highlighted by the Michelin guide notes for this venue. The sushi selection is described as extensive, so it covers the bases, but if raw fish in exacting Japanese style is your primary objective, venues like Humble Chicken or Ginza St James's have tighter focus. At Akira, the full picture is the point.
Lunch vs Dinner: Where the Value Sits
This is the question worth thinking through before you book. Dinner at Akira carries the full experience: the open kitchen at volume, the robata grill running at capacity, and the broader Japanese cultural context of being one floor above Japan House's curated retail and events space. The atmosphere at dinner is described as lively, which the original Michelin notes frame as a feature. If noise level matters to you, bear that in mind.
Lunch is the stronger value case. Japanese restaurants at this price tier in London frequently offer condensed set menus at midday that deliver the kitchen's core strengths at lower spend. While Akira's specific lunch pricing is not confirmed in our data, the £££ bracket and the menu format make this a credible option for a business lunch or a first exploratory visit where you want to assess the kitchen before committing to a full dinner spend. Lunch also tends to be quieter, which improves the counter experience if you want to engage with the kitchen. For a first-timer on the fence, a lunch visit is the lower-risk entry point.
Dinner works well for occasions. The open kitchen creates a natural focal point, the robata grill adds theatre, and the Japan House address gives the evening a cultural framing that a standalone restaurant would not. For a mid-week dinner with two or three people, this is a comfortable choice at the £££ tier. Weekend dinner will be busier, which suits some diners and frustrates others.
Booking and Logistics
Booking difficulty is rated moderate. The 624+ Google reviews suggest a well-trafficked venue, and the Kensington High Street location draws both local regulars and visitors to the area. Book a week to ten days ahead for weekday dinner; aim for two weeks for weekend evening tables. Counter seats may have more flexibility, but do not rely on walk-ins for prime-time slots. The address at 101–111 Kensington High Street is direct to reach: Kensington High Street station (District and Circle lines) is moments away.
Phone and website details are not confirmed in our current data. Check Japan House London's main site directly to reach Akira's reservations. For context on what else the area offers, see our full London restaurants guide, our full London hotels guide, and our full London bars guide.
Pearl Picks Nearby
If Akira does not match your brief, London's Japanese dining scene offers clear alternatives at different price points and formats. Umu goes deeper on Kyoto-style kaiseki at a higher price. Chisou is a more focused sushi-led option. Hannah offers a different register entirely if your group wants modern cooking with Japanese influence. For Japanese dining benchmarks further afield, Myojaku and Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo set a useful reference point for what the cuisine can do at its highest level. Beyond London, the UK's most destination-worthy dining rooms include Waterside Inn in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, and Moor Hall in Aughton. Also worth considering in the broader UK context: Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood. See also our full London wineries guide and our full London experiences guide.
Quick reference: Akira, 101–111 Kensington High St, London W8 5SA. Price range: £££. Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Google: 4.2 (624 reviews). Booking: moderate difficulty, 7–14 days ahead recommended.
FAQ: Akira, London
- Is Akira good for a special occasion? It works for a mid-scale occasion — a birthday dinner or a work celebration where you want a polished setting without the formality of a tasting-menu-only room. The open kitchen and robata grill add atmosphere, and the Japan House location gives the evening a distinctive address. For a truly landmark occasion, the £££ tier means Akira sits below the ceiling: if the occasion demands the highest level, consider a £££ £ venue with Michelin stars. But for a relaxed, well-executed special dinner, Akira is a confident pick in its bracket.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Akira? Akira's current menu format is à la carte rather than a dedicated tasting menu, based on available data. The robata skewers and sushi are ordered individually, which gives you control over spend. This works in your favour: you can build the meal around the grill items that Michelin highlights without committing to a fixed sequence. If a structured tasting menu is what you want, Umu offers that format at a higher price point.
- Is Akira worth the price? At £££, yes , on the condition that you focus the order on the robata grill. The Michelin Plate in 2024 and 2025, combined with a 4.2 from 624 Google reviews, indicates consistent quality rather than occasional brilliance. You are not paying for a single transformative dish; you are paying for a well-run kitchen in a considered setting. If you want more technical ambition for a similar or lower spend, Chisou and Humble Chicken are worth comparing.
- What should a first-timer know about Akira? Prioritise the robata skewers , they are the reason the kitchen holds Michelin recognition. Counter seating gives you a better view of the open kitchen and suits solo diners or pairs; table seating is more comfortable for groups. Lunch is the lower-risk first visit: quieter, easier to book, and likely better value. Book at least a week ahead for weekday dinner, two weeks for weekends. Kensington High Street station makes access simple.
- What are alternatives to Akira in London? For Japanese dining at a higher level of technical precision, Umu is the clearest step up. For sushi-focused dining in a more intimate room, try Chisou. Ginza St James's is worth considering if you want a different Japanese regional lens. Humble Chicken offers a more casual yakitori-led format at a lower price point. The right alternative depends on what you want most: if it is robata grill quality in a cultural setting, Akira is the one to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Akira good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key celebration rather than a milestone dinner. The open kitchen and counter seating create a lively, engaged atmosphere, and the Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025 signals consistent quality. For something more formal or intimate, Umu in Mayfair offers a higher-ceremony Japanese experience at a steeper price point.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Akira?
The venue database does not confirm a tasting menu format at Akira, so this is not a reliable booking assumption. What is documented is an extensive selection across sushi and robata skewers, suggesting an à la carte or sharing-plates structure. If a structured multi-course format is your priority, check directly with the restaurant before booking.
Is Akira worth the price?
At £££, Akira sits in the mid-to-upper tier of London Japanese dining and holds two consecutive Michelin Plates, which indicates a kitchen operating above the baseline for the neighbourhood. The robata grill is the documented highlight, so the value calculation tilts toward yes if charcoal-grilled skewers and quality sushi are what you are booking for. If you want the precision of omakase counter dining, the price-to-format ratio elsewhere may serve you better.
What should a first-timer know about Akira?
Akira sits above Japan House at 101–111 Kensington High Street, so factor in the building's cultural centre context when planning. The room offers both counter and table seating around an open kitchen — counter is the better choice if you want to watch the robata grill in action. The selection is broad, spanning sushi and charcoal skewers, so the menu suits guests who want range rather than a single-track format.
What are alternatives to Akira in London?
For more serious Japanese dining at a higher price point, Umu in Mayfair goes deeper on Kyoto-style kaiseki. If you want a livelier, more accessible Japanese experience with a similar counter format, options in Soho and Fitzrovia offer comparable ranges at lower spend. Akira's specific positioning — above a Japanese cultural centre, robata-led, Michelin Plate standard — is fairly distinct within Kensington itself, where direct competition is limited.
Location
101-111 Kensington High St, London W8 5SA, United Kingdom
London, United Kingdom
Compare Akira
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Akira | £££ | |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
| The Ledbury | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
How Akira stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, Contemporary European, French, ££££
- CORE by Clare Smyth, Modern British, ££££
- The Ledbury, Modern European, Modern Cuisine, ££££
- Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, Modern French, ££££
- Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, Modern British, Traditional British, ££££
Akira at £££ occupies a different tier from most of the restaurants it shares a postcode with. Compared to Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, CORE by Clare Smyth, The Ledbury, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, all at ££££, Akira costs meaningfully less and asks considerably less of you in terms of booking difficulty and format commitment. Those venues require advance planning of weeks or months, tasting-menu formats, and a willingness to spend at the top of the London market. Akira is bookable with a week's notice and lets you order freely from an à la carte menu.
The trade-off is ambition. The ££££ venues above are operating at starred or near-starred Michelin levels; Akira holds a Michelin Plate, which signals quality cooking without the same degree of technical distinction. If you are deciding between Akira and a Michelin-starred splurge, the question is whether the cuisine type matters more than the ceiling of achievement: Akira offers something none of the comparison venues do, which is a Japanese robata grill menu in a cultural institution setting. That is a genuine point of difference, not just a category default.
For diners whose primary brief is Japanese cuisine rather than high-end European cooking, the direct comparison sits with Umu and Chisou. Umu is the step up in ambition and price; Chisou is the tighter, more sushi-focused alternative. Akira sits between them in spirit: broader than Chisou, less formal than Umu, and easier to book than either on a given week. For first-timers to London's Japanese dining scene or those who want a well-rounded meal rather than a single-format deep cut, Akira is the most accessible entry point.
Recognized By
Explore London
Save or rate Akira on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
