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    Restaurant in Nara, Japan

    akordu

    1,490pts

    Tasting menu worth booking ahead for.

    akordu, Restaurant in Nara

    About akordu

    Two Michelin stars in Nara, built around Spanish-innovative technique and local ingredients. Lunch (JPY 10,000–14,999) is the smartest entry point: full tasting format, serious wine program, and done by mid-afternoon. Reservation-only with 26 seats and six consecutive years of Tabelog awards — book at least a month out.

    Should You Book akordu?

    Lunch at akordu runs JPY 10,000–14,999 per head (JPY 30,000–39,999 at dinner based on reviewer averages, including the 10% service charge and a 15% surcharge if you take the private room). For that, you get a two-Michelin-starred Spanish-innovative tasting menu in a house restaurant in Nara — a combination that has no direct equivalent in this city. If you are already planning a Nara day trip and want to build a meal worth the journey, the lunch service is the most efficient way to experience what chef Hiroshi Kawashima does without committing to the full dinner budget. If fine dining in Japan is the point of the trip, book dinner and plan around it.

    The Lunch Service: What to Know Before You Book

    akordu's lunch format runs Tuesday through Sunday, noon to 3:30 PM, with last orders at 1:00 PM. That tight last-order window matters: arrive close to noon if you want to settle in without feeling rushed. The dining room holds 20 seats, and the six-seat private room is available at a 15% service surcharge. With only 26 total covers, the room fills — and because reservations are the only way in (no walk-ins), you need to plan well ahead. Tabelog lists akordu as a consistent award winner every year since 2020, alternating between Silver and Bronze, with a 4.29 score and selection for the Tabelog Innovative/Creative Cuisine Top 100 in 2025. Demand is not theoretical.

    Monday is the one day the kitchen goes dark. If your Nara itinerary is fixed to a Monday, pivot to one of the alternatives below. For everyone else, a Tuesday or Wednesday lunch booking is your most likely opening if you are not planning far enough in advance , weekends close out first. That said, "far enough in advance" at a two-Michelin-starred, 26-seat reservation-only restaurant in Japan realistically means weeks, not days. For the clearest picture of current availability, go directly to the venue website at akordu.com.

    What akordu Is Actually Doing

    The cuisine is catalogued as Spanish and Innovative, but that shorthand undersells the specificity of the project. Chef Kawashima uses the techniques and sensibility of modern Spanish gastronomy as a framework, then fills it with the ingredients and cultural memory of Nara. The restaurant name itself means "memories" in Basque. Each guest receives a small box at the table containing cards describing the menu in a poetic register , not the usual ingredient list. It is a considered detail that signals how seriously the kitchen takes context and storytelling, and it sets the tone for what follows: food that is technically grounded in contemporary European technique but anchored in place.

    The venue is described as a house restaurant with a beautiful view, and the setting carries the kind of quiet that Nara's older neighbourhoods naturally produce. There is no loud soundtrack, no theatrical open kitchen, no performative service. The dress code is enforced , T-shirts, shorts, and sandals are explicitly excluded , and the space is non-smoking throughout. Wi-Fi is available and parking is on site, which matters in Nara where the historic centre is walkable but restaurant-to-restaurant distances can add up. From Kintetsu Nara Station, allow about ten minutes on foot.

    Wine is a stated priority. The restaurant describes itself as "particular about wine" and the beverage program is designed to complement the Franco-Iberian-Japanese register of the food. Credit cards are accepted (VISA, Mastercard, JCB, AMEX, Diners); electronic money and QR code payments are not. Factor that in if you are travelling with a preference for cashless. Children of junior high school age and older are welcome , younger children are not accommodated, which is relevant if you are travelling with family.

    Awards and Standing

    akordu has held Michelin two-star status as of 2025 and has appeared on La Liste's global ranking with 84.5 points in 2025 and 83 points in 2026. Opinionated About Dining ranked it 473rd in Japan in 2024 and 519th in 2025 , a shift that reflects the density of competition in Japan's fine dining field, not any decline in quality. The Tabelog Award track record (Silver in 2021, 2022, and 2025; Bronze in 2020, 2023, 2024, and 2026) over six consecutive years is a more useful signal for day-to-day reliability than any single year's ranking. A restaurant that keeps collecting consistent recognition at this level over six years is doing something durable.

    For a sense of where akordu sits within Japan's broader innovative-dining tier, consider how it compares to venues like HAJIME in Osaka or Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, which operate in larger cities with deeper tourist infrastructure and correspondingly harder reservations. akordu benefits from Nara's relative quiet: fewer inbound diners competing for the same 26 seats than you would face in Kyoto or Osaka for a comparable two-star table. That is a practical advantage worth noting when you are assessing booking difficulty.

    Who This Is Right For

    Book akordu if you want a Spanish-innovative tasting menu with a genuine sense of place, at a price point that is meaningful but not the upper ceiling of Japan's fine dining market. The lunch format at JPY 10,000–14,999 is the clearest value argument: two Michelin stars, a full tasting experience, and you are finished by mid-afternoon with the rest of Nara's historic sites available. If you have already visited and are returning, the dinner service is the natural progression , more time, larger spend, full wine program engagement, and the private room option for groups of four to six.

    If you are building a multi-city Japan itinerary and want to compare options, akordu belongs in the same conversation as Goh in Fukuoka, Harutaka in Tokyo, or internationally, alongside two-star experiences like Atomix in New York City , venues where the format is tasting-menu-only, the technique is serious, and the sense of place is built into the food rather than bolted on as décor. For more Nara options at the same price tier, see NARA NIKON or Oryori Hanagaki, and browse our full Nara restaurants guide for the wider picture. If you are planning time in the area beyond meals, our Nara hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.

    Compare akordu

    Getting a Table: akordu and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    akorduSpanish, Innovative¥¥¥Near Impossible
    Wa YamamuraKaiseki, Japanese¥¥¥Unknown
    ArakiSushi, Japanese¥¥¥Unknown
    TamaOkinawan, French¥¥¥Unknown
    NARA NIKONJapanese¥¥¥Unknown
    Chugokusai Naramachi KukoChinese¥¥¥Unknown

    A quick look at how akordu measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can akordu accommodate groups?

    Yes, up to 26 people for full venue hire. The dining room seats 20, with a private room available for 4 or 6 guests at a 15% service charge surcharge (on top of the standard 10%). For groups of 20 or more, private hire is an option. Children must be junior high school age or older.

    What should I order at akordu?

    akordu is reservation-only and operates a tasting menu format, so there is no à la carte selection. The kitchen's focus, per the venue's own description, leans on fish and a wine programme the restaurant treats as central to the experience. Let the menu come to you — that is the format here.

    How far ahead should I book akordu?

    Book as early as possible. akordu is reservation-only with 26 seats total and Michelin two-star status as of 2025, which means availability moves quickly, especially for dinner. For weekend slots, several weeks' lead time is a practical minimum. Mondays are closed.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at akordu?

    At lunch (JPY 10,000–14,999 per head), yes, if the Spanish-innovative format suits you — it is one of the more price-accessible Michelin two-star lunches in Japan. Dinner averages JPY 30,000–39,999 based on reviewer spending, which is in line with restaurants at this level. The concept has a defined point of view: Chef Kawashima connects Spanish technique to Nara's ingredients and history, which gives the meal more specificity than a generalist tasting menu.

    Is akordu worth the price?

    At the lunch price point, akordu represents genuine value for a Michelin two-star experience — JPY 10,000–14,999 is low for this tier in Japan. Dinner at JPY 30,000–39,999 is a serious spend, but the restaurant holds Tabelog Silver (2025), La Liste recognition, and a place on Opinionated About Dining's Japan list, all of which confirm it is operating at a level consistent with that price. If you are already visiting Nara, the premium over a standard meal is easier to justify here than at a comparable Tokyo address.

    Is lunch or dinner better at akordu?

    Lunch is the practical choice for most visitors: lower cost (JPY 10,000–14,999 versus JPY 30,000–39,999 at dinner), easier to fit around a Nara day trip, and the last order is 1:00 PM so you need to arrive promptly. Dinner makes sense if you want a longer, more deliberate evening and are already based in or near Nara — the dinner last order is 6:30 PM with service running to 9:30 PM.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    12–3:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Wednesday
    12–3:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Thursday
    12–3:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Friday
    12–3:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Saturday
    12–3:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Sunday
    12–3:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm

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