Restaurant in Nara, Japan
KOHYAMA
310Pearl PointsMichelin-recognized Japanese at accessible prices.

About KOHYAMA
KOHYAMA holds back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) and delivers Michelin-vetted Japanese cooking at ¥¥ pricing — a strong value case in a Nara scene where most comparable venues charge significantly more. Booking is easy, the Google score sits at 4.9, and the location in Yamatotakada rewards travelers willing to go a little off the central tourist path.
KOHYAMA, Nara: Pearl Verdict
KOHYAMA earns a confident recommendation for food-focused travelers visiting Nara, particularly those who want Michelin-recognized Japanese cooking at a price point well below what the city's ¥¥¥ tier demands. Back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 confirms this is not a casual neighborhood spot — it is a kitchen operating at a standard that the guide considers worth flagging, and it does so at ¥¥ pricing that makes it one of the more intelligently priced meals you can book in the Kansai region.
Portrait
KOHYAMA sits in Yamatotakada, within Nara Prefecture — a location that places it slightly outside the tourist circuit concentrated around Nara Park and the city center. For the explorer-minded diner, that is a feature rather than a problem. Yamatotakada is a working Yamato Basin town, and arriving here signals a deliberate choice: you are not eating for convenience, you are eating because the kitchen pulled you here. The 1OSビル building on Isonominamicho is unassuming from the outside, which is consistent with how serious Japanese restaurants across this region tend to present themselves, restraint on the exterior, focus inside.
The Michelin Plate designation, awarded consecutively, tells you something specific: Michelin's inspectors found cooking here that clears the threshold of quality they associate with a good meal, without the ceremony or price structure of a starred room. In practical terms, that means you are getting vetted technique and ingredient sourcing at a price most travelers can absorb without much deliberation. For the Nara dining scene, where several of the more prominent names, Wa Yamamura, Araki, and akordu, operate at ¥¥¥, KOHYAMA's position at ¥¥ is meaningful.
On the counter experience specifically: Japanese restaurants at this level frequently configure their space around a chef's counter, and that format matters to how you read the meal. A counter seat places you inside the kitchen's rhythm. You see plating decisions made in real time, observe the sequence of courses as it builds, and get a direct line of visual access to the craft behind what lands in front of you. For a venue operating at this quality tier without a full Michelin star, the counter is often where the kitchen's confidence is most visible, the detail in a garnish placement, the precision of knife work, the stillness of a cook who knows exactly what comes next.
Either reading points toward a kitchen that delivers consistently for the guests it does attract.
For context on what Michelin Plate recognition means in Japan: the guide's standards in this country are among the most scrutinized in the world, and a Plate in successive years indicates sustained quality rather than a one-time performance. Venues like Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, HAJIME in Osaka, and Harutaka in Tokyo occupy the upper end of the regional Japanese dining spectrum, and KOHYAMA is operating in the same credentialing ecosystem, just at an earlier or more modest point on that curve. For a traveler building a Kansai itinerary, that positioning makes KOHYAMA a smart addition, high-signal quality without committing to the budget or booking effort of a starred room.
If you are already planning meals at Nara's more prominent restaurants and want to extend your exploration, KOHYAMA fits well as a lower-stakes, high-reward meal. It also makes sense as a standalone destination if you are based in the Yamato Takada area or traveling through on the Kintetsu Osaka Line corridor. Compare it against nearby options like Oryori Hanagaki, Tsukumo, Ajinokaze Nishimura, and Ajinotabibito Roman when building out your Nara dining sequence. You can also browse our full Nara restaurants guide for a broader view of what the prefecture offers across price tiers.
The booking situation here is rated Easy, which is one of KOHYAMA's practical advantages over comparable Michelin-recognized venues in the region. You are not competing with international reservation queues or dealing with lottery-style booking systems. That accessibility, combined with the ¥¥ pricing and back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition, makes KOHYAMA one of the more straightforwardly justified bookings in Nara's current restaurant scene.
Know Before You Go
- Location: Isonominamicho, Yamatotakada, Nara Prefecture, outside central Nara, closer to the Kintetsu Yamato-Yagi/Takada corridor
- Price range: ¥¥, accessible by regional standards, well below the ¥¥¥ tier of most comparable Michelin-recognized venues in Nara
- Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025
- Booking difficulty: Easy, no complex reservation system required
- Cuisine: Japanese
- Leading for: Food-focused travelers, Kansai itinerary builders, value-conscious diners wanting Michelin-verified quality
- Further Nara planning: Nara hotels guide | Nara bars guide | Nara wineries guide | Nara experiences guide
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to KOHYAMA?
No dress code is confirmed, but Michelin Plate recognition two years running at a ¥¥ price point in Japan points to a considered, modest setting. Smart casual is a safe call: clean trousers and a collared shirt will fit the room without being overdressed. Avoid overly casual beachwear-style clothing, which tends to read as disrespectful in formal Japanese dining contexts.
Can KOHYAMA accommodate groups?
Group capacity is unconfirmed, but Michelin-recognized Japanese restaurants at the ¥¥ level in smaller Nara Prefecture towns typically run compact rooms. If you are planning for four or more, check the venue's official channels before assuming availability. Parties of two will have the most flexibility.
Is KOHYAMA worth the price?
Yes. Back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 at a ¥¥ price point is a strong value signal. In Japan's competitive dining scene, hitting that credential tier without the premium price tag attached to Nara's more tourist-facing restaurants makes KOHYAMA a practical choice for food-focused visitors to Yamatotakada.
Is the tasting menu worth it at KOHYAMA?
Menu format is not confirmed in our current data. At a ¥¥ Michelin Plate restaurant in Japan, both set-course and à la carte formats are common. check the venue's official channels to confirm structure before booking, especially if your party has dietary restrictions or a preference for omakase-style progression.
What should I order at KOHYAMA?
Specific dish data is not available, but at a Michelin Plate Japanese kitchen in Nara Prefecture, leaning into seasonal and locally-sourced preparations is typically where the kitchen's strengths are concentrated. Ask staff for the day's recommendations rather than anchoring to a fixed expectation.
Location
Japan, 〒635-0062 Nara, Yamatotakada, Isonominamicho, 2 1OSビル 1階
Nara, Japan
Compare KOHYAMA
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| KOHYAMA | Japanese | ¥¥ | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy |
| akordu | Spanish, Innovative | ¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown |
| Wa Yamamura | Kaiseki, Japanese | ¥¥¥ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Araki | Sushi, Japanese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown | |
| Tama | Okinawan, French | ¥¥¥ | Unknown | |
| NARA NIKON | Japanese | ¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- akordu, Spanish, Innovative, ¥¥¥
- Wa Yamamura, Kaiseki, Japanese, ¥¥¥
- Araki, Sushi, Japanese, ¥¥¥
- Tama, Okinawan, French, ¥¥¥
- NARA NIKON, Japanese, ¥¥¥
How KOHYAMA Compares in Nara
KOHYAMA's clearest advantage over the Nara field is its price tier. The four most prominent comparison venues, Wa Yamamura, Araki, akordu, and Tama, all operate at ¥¥¥, as does NARA NIKON. KOHYAMA carries Michelin Plate recognition from the same guide that credentials those venues, but at ¥¥. For travelers who want a Michelin-recognized meal in the prefecture without the outlay of a ¥¥¥ booking, KOHYAMA is the obvious answer in the current Nara scene.
On experience profile: Wa Yamamura and Araki sit at the more ceremony-forward end of the Nara spectrum, kaiseki and sushi formats that come with structured service and a higher total spend. Akordu brings a Spanish-innovative approach that is notably different from anything else operating in the prefecture, and Tama's Okinawan-French hybrid makes it a genuinely singular choice for diners who want something outside the Japanese fine-dining template. KOHYAMA, by contrast, plays it straight, Japanese cuisine, Michelin-recognized, accessibly priced, and easy to book. That combination suits a traveler who wants quality without friction.
If your priority is the most technically demanding meal in Nara and budget is not a constraint, Wa Yamamura's kaiseki format is the benchmark. If you want the most distinctive concept, akordu's Spanish-leaning menu is the call. But if you want a Michelin-credentialed Japanese meal at a price that leaves room for the rest of your Kansai itinerary, KOHYAMA is where the value calculation lands most clearly in your favor.
Recognized By
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