Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
HASUO
365Pearl PointsMichelin-recognised Korean at a fair price.

About HASUO
HASUO in Tokyo's Hiroo neighbourhood holds Michelin Plates for 2024 and 2025, delivering New Korean cooking — including a 16-dish banchan spread and technically precise signatures like Ganjang-gejang — at a ¥¥ price point that makes it one of the most accessible serious Korean restaurants in the city. Book the counter for the full experience. Easy to reserve relative to Tokyo's starred competition.
A Michelin-recognised Korean restaurant in Hiroo at the ¥¥ price point — and one of the most focused value plays in Tokyo right now
At ¥¥ pricing, it sits comfortably below the four-symbol tier that dominates Tokyo's serious dining conversation, which makes it one of the more interesting reservations in the city if you want genuine culinary ambition without the full-scale financial commitment of a RyuGin or Harutaka evening.
What HASUO Is
The cooking at HASUO is described officially as New Korean: traditional Korean techniques and ingredients refracted through a Western culinary education. The result is a menu where banchan, the rotating set of side dishes that anchors Korean communal eating, arrives as a 16-dish spread that reads less like a supporting act and more like the point of the meal itself. If you have eaten banchan in the context of a casual Korean meal, the version here will recalibrate your expectations for the category.
Two dishes have become reference points for understanding what HASUO is doing. The Imperial Crepe follows the Korean aesthetic principle of obangsaek, five colours and five flavours, and arrives as a visually precise, layered preparation. Ganjang-gejang, the sauce-marinated blue crab that is one of the most technically demanding dishes in the Korean larder, is prepared here with a lighter marinade calibrated to a modern palate. Neither of these is a casual flourish. Both signal a kitchen that has thought carefully about the distance between tradition and current taste.
The Atmosphere and What to Expect at the Counter
Hiroo is a quieter, residential pocket of Shibuya, the kind of neighbourhood that rewards restaurant-seekers willing to move away from the better-known dining corridors around Ginza or Minami-Aoyama. The energy at HASUO reflects the area: composed, considered, without the ambient noise pressure that comes with larger destination restaurants. If you are looking for a room that lets conversation carry, this is a better option than many of the more talked-about spots in the city's central dining belt.
The editorial angle that matters most here is the counter. Counter seating at a restaurant like HASUO changes the meal in a specific way: the gap between kitchen and table collapses, and the structure of the dishes, particularly the banchan progression and the more technically involved preparations, becomes something you can follow in real time rather than simply receive. For a food-focused traveller, this is the seat to request. You are not just eating the food; you are watching how it is assembled, which at a restaurant that is explicitly trying to redefine a cuisine, is part of the value. Counter dining also makes HASUO a natural fit for solo travellers, who are well-served here in a way that many larger group-format restaurants are not.
The atmosphere is calm rather than hushed, precise rather than theatrical. This is not a room designed for celebrations that need noise and momentum. It works well for two people who want to eat attentively, for a solo diner who wants to engage with the cooking, or for a small group that has a genuine interest in what is on the plate. If you are planning a larger party or need the energy of a more social room, manage expectations accordingly.
How HASUO Fits the Tokyo Calendar Now
Korean cuisine in Tokyo has been gaining serious critical traction over the past several years, but the Michelin Plate recognitions for 2024 and 2025 place HASUO in a specific position: acknowledged by the guide's inspectors as worth seeking out, but not yet at the starred level. For travellers who find that threshold useful, it functions as a signal that the cooking is consistent and the kitchen has a point of view, without the booking difficulty or price premium that starred venues carry. If you are visiting Tokyo and want one Korean meal that goes beyond what you would find at a casual restaurant, HASUO is the most direct recommendation in the city at this price tier. For comparison, if you want to explore what New Korean cooking looks like at the highest level in the region, Mingles and Kwonsooksoo in Seoul represent the benchmark, but HASUO is a credible Tokyo equivalent at a significantly more accessible price point.
Practical Details
Reservations: Easy to book relative to Tokyo's starred tier, plan ahead but last-minute availability is more likely here than at Michelin-starred peers. Location: 5 Chome-10-3 Hiroo, Shibuya, Tokyo 150-0012, accessible from Hiroo Station on the Hibiya Line. Budget: ¥¥ pricing makes this one of the more accessible serious restaurants in the city; exact per-head costs are not published, but expect a meaningful step below the ¥¥¥–¥¥¥¥ tier. Dress: No dress code is published; smart casual is appropriate given the neighbourhood and format. Leading for: Solo diners, counter-seat enthusiasts, food-focused travellers who want Korean cooking with genuine technical ambition. Group size: Works well for 1–4; larger groups should confirm availability in advance given the likely counter-focused layout. Dietary restrictions: Contact the restaurant directly, no dietary accommodation information is published.
For a broader view of where HASUO fits in Tokyo's dining picture, see our full Tokyo restaurants guide. If you are building a wider Japan itinerary, relevant comparisons include HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa. Tokyo hotel, bar, winery, and experience recommendations are available through our hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at HASUO?
Counter or bar seating is not confirmed in available venue data for HASUO. Given its Hiroo neighbourhood profile and ¥¥ positioning, the format likely suits table dining for two rather than a dedicated bar experience. check the venue's official channels or check via a reservation platform to confirm seating configurations before booking.
Can HASUO accommodate groups?
HASUO's Hiroo address and ¥¥ price point suggest a smaller, neighbourhood-scale dining room rather than a large-group venue. Parties of four or more should book well in advance and confirm capacity directly with the restaurant. For large group Korean dining in Tokyo, purpose-built Korean BBQ formats will give you more flexibility.
Is HASUO worth the price?
At ¥¥, HASUO is one of the stronger value arguments in Tokyo's Michelin-recognised dining tier — two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) for a price point that sits well below the starred competition. If you want serious technique applied to Korean cuisine without paying omakase prices, this is a clear yes.
Does HASUO handle dietary restrictions?
No dietary restriction policy is documented in available data for HASUO. Given the banchan format with 16 side dishes and ingredients like sauce-marinated blue crab, the menu is ingredient-driven and may have limited flexibility. Reach out ahead of your visit — the kitchen's apparent precision suggests they take requests seriously, but confirm before assuming substitutions are possible.
Is the tasting menu worth it at HASUO?
The structured menu format — including 16-dish banchan, the five-colour Imperial Crepe, and ganjang-gejang — reads as the point of the meal, not an optional add-on. At ¥¥, it delivers Michelin Plate-level ambition at a price that makes it a low-risk commitment compared to Tokyo's starred tasting menus. Book the full experience.
Is HASUO good for solo dining?
Hiroo's quieter residential character and HASUO's focused, technique-driven Korean format make it a reasonable solo choice, particularly if you want to eat seriously without the social theatre of a big group meal. The banchan spread with 16 dishes is designed for sharing, so solo diners should confirm portion sizing directly with the restaurant.
Location
5 Chome-10-3 Hiroo, Shibuya, Tokyo 150-0012, Japan
Tokyo, Japan
Compare HASUO
Also Consider
- Harutaka, Sushi, ¥¥¥¥
- RyuGin, Kaiseki, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
- L'Effervescence, French, ¥¥¥¥
- HOMMAGE, Innovtive French, French, ¥¥¥¥
- Florilège, French, ¥¥¥
The most direct comparison question for HASUO is whether to spend more. RyuGin and Harutaka both operate at ¥¥¥¥ and carry Michelin stars, the gap in ambition and execution is real, but so is the gap in cost and booking difficulty. If your priority is a single high-investment meal, those are the venues. If you want consistent, technically serious cooking that does not require booking months out or spending at the starred tier, HASUO is the stronger practical choice. It is also doing something categorically different: no other venue on this comparison list is working in the New Korean register.
Florilège at ¥¥¥ is the closest peer in terms of price tier among the French-leaning restaurants listed, it carries Michelin recognition and is well-regarded for French cooking with a Japanese sensibility. Between the two, the choice comes down to cuisine preference: Florilège for French technique applied locally, HASUO for Korean tradition reframed through a Western culinary education. Both are solid value within Tokyo's serious dining tier. L'Effervescence and HOMMAGE operate at ¥¥¥¥ and represent a different spending decision entirely.
For diners building a multi-night Tokyo itinerary: use HASUO as the counter-seat, mid-budget, cuisine-specific meal, and reserve your ¥¥¥¥ spend for Sézanne or Crony if French is the priority, or RyuGin if kaiseki is what you are after. HASUO fills a gap in the Tokyo dining week that none of the French-leaning competition addresses.
Recognized By
Explore Tokyo
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