Restaurant in Atlanta, United States
Two Michelin stars. Book weeks ahead.

Omakase Table holds two consecutive Michelin stars (2024–2025) and a 4.9 Google rating, making it the most credentialed Japanese dining room in Atlanta. Operating Wednesday through Sunday with late seatings until 11 PM, it suits special occasions and serious omakase diners willing to book well in advance. At $$$$ for a fixed chef-driven format, the price-to-credential ratio compares well against coastal equivalents.
Picture yourself at a counter seat on a Wednesday night in Buckhead, the kitchen illuminated just enough to watch each course take shape. That specific scenario — intimate, counter-forward, extending well past 10 PM on weekdays , is exactly what Omakase Table is built for. Two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) confirm what a 4.9 Google rating across 232 reviews already suggests: this is the most decorated Japanese dining experience in Atlanta, and one of the more serious omakase rooms in the American South. The question is whether it earns its $$$$ price tag for you, personally.
The short answer: yes, with caveats. At the $$$$ tier, Omakase Table sits alongside Bacchanalia and Atlas as Atlanta's top-end dining tier. But the format here is categorically different from those rooms. This is a fixed, chef-driven sequence , you are not choosing dishes, you are trusting a kitchen. If that format suits you, the Michelin recognition and near-perfect rating suggest it delivers at a level that justifies the spend. If you want flexibility or a la carte options, this is the wrong room.
Omakase Table operates out of a suite-style address in Buckhead , 3330 Piedmont Rd NE , which places it inside a mixed-use building rather than a standalone restaurant. That context matters for setting expectations: you will not find a grand entrance or a dining room designed to impress from the street. What the space delivers is intimacy at the counter level. The sensory experience here is deliberately small-scale and focused, which is standard for serious omakase rooms anywhere in the world. Think less Nobu, more the kind of counter format you would find at Myojaku in Tokyo or Azabu Kadowaki , where the room recedes and the food takes over.
The late-night angle is genuinely useful here. Wednesday through Saturday, service runs until 11 PM; Sunday closes at 10:30 PM. For Atlanta, where most fine dining rooms wrap by 10, that closing window is meaningful. If you are arriving after a work event, want a post-theatre dinner, or simply prefer the slower pace of a late seating, Omakase Table is one of the few $$$$ options in the city that accommodates it. Monday and Tuesday closures mean your available booking windows are Wednesday through Sunday only , factor that into your planning.
At the $$$$ price point, the honest framing is this: you are paying for two things , the Michelin-caliber execution of the omakase format, and the relative scarcity of that format in Atlanta. Comparable omakase experiences at this level outside of New York, Los Angeles, or San Francisco typically price significantly lower than coastal equivalents for the same credential weight. Atlanta is not Tokyo, and it is not New York, but Omakase Table has earned recognition that places it in conversation with rooms like Smyth in Chicago as a regional standard-bearer for serious tasting-menu dining.
For value-seekers specifically: the $$$$ designation covers the full omakase sequence, which means no supplemental ordering, no bill creep from sides, and a predictable total cost. That structure is actually easier to budget than a la carte rooms at the same price tier. If you are comparing spend to a night at Le Bernardin in New York or The French Laundry in Napa, the Omakase Table price will almost certainly feel like a better ratio of quality to cost , two Michelin stars for a Southern market price point is a real advantage.
This is where Omakase Table requires the most preparation. Booking is rated Hard. The combination of a counter-format room (inherently limited seats), two Michelin stars, and a 4.9 rating means demand consistently outpaces availability. Book as far in advance as the reservation system allows , do not attempt this as a last-minute or same-week booking. The address is 3330 Piedmont Rd NE, Suite 22A, Atlanta, GA 30305, in Buckhead. Parking in the building's lot is the most practical arrival option for drivers; the surrounding Buckhead corridor is also served by rideshare.
No phone number is listed publicly, which suggests reservations are managed through an online platform. Check the venue's current booking channel before planning, as omakase rooms at this level often use dedicated reservation tools rather than general platforms. Service runs Wednesday through Saturday 5:30 PM to 11 PM and Sunday 5 PM to 10:30 PM , no lunch service, no Monday or Tuesday seatings.
For context on what else Atlanta's dining scene offers at this level, see our full Atlanta restaurants guide. If you are planning a full trip, our Atlanta hotels guide, Atlanta bars guide, and Atlanta experiences guide cover the rest of the stay. For Japanese dining specifically, Hayakawa, O by Brush, and Ryokou are the comparison points to evaluate against Omakase Table within Atlanta. Outside the city, Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg represent the broader national tier this room aspires to sit within.
Book Omakase Table if: you want Atlanta's most credentialed Japanese dining experience, you are comfortable with a fixed chef-driven format, you prefer late dinner seatings, or you are planning a special occasion and want Michelin-backed confidence in the outcome. The 4.9 rating across 232 reviews , unusually high for a room this demanding in format , suggests consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance.
Skip it if: you want a la carte flexibility, you are bringing a large group that needs a private dining room (counter-format rooms are inherently limited in group capacity), or you cannot commit to advance planning. For a wider view of Atlanta's fine dining options, also consider regional comparisons further south or check our Atlanta wineries guide if wine-led experiences are the priority.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Omakase Table | $$$$ | — |
| Bacchanalia | $$$$ | — |
| Staplehouse | $$$$ | — |
| Lazy Betty | $$$$ | — |
| Atlas | $$$$ | — |
| Lyla Lila | $$$ | — |
How Omakase Table stacks up against the competition.
There is no ordering at Omakase Table — the format is chef-driven and fixed. You eat what the kitchen sends. That is the point of omakase, and at the $$$$ price point with a two-year Michelin Star track record (2024 and 2025), the kitchen has earned the trust required for that format. If a fixed menu feels restrictive, this is not the right venue for you.
Yes, and arguably it is the format that suits solo diners best. Counter seating means you are positioned to watch the kitchen directly rather than across a table from an empty chair. Atlanta has few restaurants where solo dining at the $$$$ tier feels intentional rather than awkward — Omakase Table is one of them.
Lazy Betty holds a Michelin Star and offers a tasting menu format at a comparable commitment level, making it the closest structural alternative. Staplehouse is the strongest option if you want serious cooking at a lower price point. Atlas suits guests who want fine dining with à la carte flexibility rather than a fixed chef-driven sequence.
At the $$$$ price point, the case for value rests on the Michelin Star, held consecutively in 2024 and 2025 — a credential that puts this among Atlanta's most reviewed fine dining rooms. If omakase is a format you enjoy and you are prepared to commit to a fixed progression, the credentialing justifies the spend. If you want menu choice or a more social dining structure, the price is harder to defend.
Omakase Table does not offer lunch service. Hours run Wednesday through Saturday from 5:30 PM and Sunday from 5 PM, closing by 10:30–11 PM. Dinner is the only option, so the question is really which evening works logistically. Wednesday and Thursday tend to be easier to book than the weekend.
The counter format places a hard ceiling on group size — omakase counters are typically intimate by design, and Omakase Table's suite-style address in Buckhead does not suggest a large secondary dining room. Groups of more than four should check the venue's official channels before assuming availability. For larger celebrations, Atlas or Lyla Lila offer more practical group configurations.
Yes, with two caveats. First, plan well ahead — this books hard and the window for a specific date is narrow. Second, the fixed format means the occasion is shaped by the kitchen's sequence, not your preferences. For guests who find that freeing rather than limiting, a Michelin-starred omakase counter in Atlanta is a strong special-occasion call. For guests who want to choose dishes, Bacchanalia offers fine dining with more guest control.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.