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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    NIJŪ

    290pts

    Katei ryōri sharing format, Michelin-noted, Mayfair price.

    NIJŪ, Restaurant in London

    About NIJŪ

    A well-sourced Mayfair Japanese with a sharing format that works better for groups than most comparable restaurants at this tier. Endo Kazutoshi's menus combine katei ryōri plates, sushi, and charcoal wagyu — backed by two consecutive Michelin Plates. At £££, it sits below the omakase tier but above casual Japanese dining, with an attached cocktail bar that makes it a complete evening.

    Who Should Book NIJŪ — and When

    NIJŪ is the right choice for a special-occasion dinner in Mayfair when you want something more considered than a standard Japanese restaurant but less formal than a full omakase counter. If you are planning a celebratory dinner for two, a high-stakes business meal, or a group evening where the table needs to share and talk as much as eat, this is a strong candidate. The katei ryōri format — Japanese home-style sharing dishes alongside sushi and charcoal-grilled wagyu , works particularly well for groups who want a communal experience without the silence and ceremony of a traditional omakase. Book now for the winter season, when wagyu over charcoal and warming sharing dishes suit the occasion far better than they would in midsummer.

    The Venue

    NIJŪ occupies a handsome address at 20 Berkeley Street, W1J, putting it squarely in the heart of Mayfair's restaurant corridor. The spatial design is one of the more deliberate choices here: the venue splits across two rooms with meaningfully different atmospheres. One room runs moody and clubby , low light, close seating, a feel more suited to an intimate dinner or a business meal where discretion matters. The other is brighter, more open, and features a small sushi counter where the kitchen's precision becomes visible. For a special occasion, the darker room is the more atmospheric option. For a solo diner or a couple who want to watch the sushi being prepared, the counter seats are worth requesting specifically.

    The Nipperkin cocktail bar, attached to the venue, gives you a natural bookend for the evening , drinks before or after dinner without leaving the building. This matters if you are hosting clients or celebrating and want the night to flow without logistics. It is a practical detail that separates NIJŪ from many comparable Mayfair Japanese restaurants where the pre- and post-dinner drink requires a separate reservation entirely.

    The Food Case

    Endo Kazutoshi has designed the menus, and the concept is coherent: katei ryōri sharing plates alongside a sushi selection and Japanese beef cooked over charcoal. The produce focus is explicit , wagyu, hamachi, roasted turbot with furikake and miso butter are cited in the venue's own positioning. This is not a kitchen trying to reinvent Japanese cooking; it is one applying careful sourcing and technical execution to familiar formats. That is a meaningful distinction. If you want experimentation or a chef's narrative tasting menu, look elsewhere. If you want a well-sourced, well-executed Japanese dinner with enough variety to satisfy a table of different preferences, NIJŪ delivers that without the rigidity of a single-path menu.

    The sharing format makes this one of the more group-friendly Japanese restaurants at this price point in London. At £££ pricing , mid-to-upper Mayfair range , the experience sits below the city's ££££ omakase operations but above casual Japanese dining. That positioning is intentional and, for the right group, genuinely useful. You are paying for quality produce and a polished room, not for a chef's performance or a theatrical experience.

    Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) signal consistent kitchen quality without the full star pressure that makes some comparable venues feel stiff. A Google rating of 4.5 across 342 reviews suggests the experience lands reliably for a broad range of diners, not just those who came with high expectations and generous scoring instincts.

    Groups and Private Dining

    This is where the dual-room layout has the most practical value. The split between the clubby room and the brighter sushi-counter room means the venue can accommodate different group dynamics without forcing everyone into the same atmosphere. For private or semi-private group dining, the darker room's layout and mood make it the more controlled environment , better for speeches, presentations, or simply keeping a large table cohesive. The sharing menu format also removes one of the friction points of group dining at Japanese restaurants: nobody has to negotiate a single omakase path, and dietary variety is easier to handle across sharing dishes than across fixed tasting menus.

    If you are considering NIJŪ for a group booking, request the moody room specifically and ask about the sushi counter separately if any members of your party want that experience. The two-room structure gives you more configuration options than most single-room competitors at this tier. For comparison, Umu in Mayfair operates at a higher price point with a more formal structure , better for a two-person special occasion, harder to navigate with a larger group. Chisou is the more accessible, lower-price alternative if group budget is the primary constraint.

    How It Compares in the Japanese London Set

    NIJŪ sits in a specific gap in London's Japanese dining market. Above it, Umu and Akira offer more technically rigorous and expensive experiences. Below it, Chisou and Humble Chicken cover the more casual end. Ginza St James's is the closer peer in format and neighbourhood. What NIJŪ offers that most of these do not is the combination of a sharing-plate format, a sushi counter, charcoal-grilled wagyu, and an attached cocktail bar under one roof , which makes it the more complete evening for a group or a couple who want variety without venue-hopping. For Japanese dining in Tokyo for comparison framing, Myojaku and Azabu Kadowaki represent what the leading of the category looks like at source.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 20 Berkeley St, London W1J 8EE
    • Price range: £££ (mid-to-upper Mayfair; expect to spend meaningfully but below the ££££ omakase tier)
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025
    • Google rating: 4.5 / 5 (342 reviews)
    • Cuisine: Japanese , katei ryōri sharing plates, sushi counter, charcoal-grilled wagyu
    • Booking difficulty: Moderate , book at least 2–3 weeks ahead for weekend evenings and special occasions; weekday tables are more available
    • Groups: The dual-room layout makes this one of the more group-adaptable Japanese restaurants in Mayfair; the sharing format helps with varied dietary needs
    • Before or after dinner: The Nipperkin cocktail bar is on-site , use it
    • Room preference: Request the moody room for intimate dinners or group privacy; the brighter sushi-counter room for a more open feel
    • Nearest transport: Green Park (Jubilee, Victoria, Piccadilly lines) , a short walk

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    Frequently Asked Questions

    • Is the tasting menu worth it at NIJŪ? NIJŪ does not operate as a strict tasting menu restaurant , the format is katei ryōri sharing plates alongside a sushi selection, which gives your table more flexibility than a locked tasting path. Two Michelin Plates in consecutive years (2024 and 2025) and a 4.5 Google rating support the quality case at the £££ price point. If you want a full chef's tasting menu format, Umu is the closer comparison; NIJŪ suits those who prefer sharing and variety over a single narrative menu.
    • Can NIJŪ accommodate groups? Yes , the dual-room layout is one of the venue's practical strengths for group dining. The sharing format removes the coordination problem of fixed menus for large tables. Request the moody, clubby room for a more private group experience. Book at least 2–3 weeks ahead for groups, and contact the venue directly about private dining arrangements in the dedicated room.
    • What should I order at NIJŪ? The menu centres on three pillars: katei ryōri sharing dishes, a sushi selection (hamachi is specifically noted as a prime-produce focus), and Japanese beef cooked over charcoal. The roasted turbot with furikake and miso butter is flagged in the venue's own positioning as a signature direction. Order across all three categories to get the full range of what the kitchen does , treating it as a single-format visit misses the point of the concept.
    • Does NIJŪ handle dietary restrictions? The sharing format and multi-category menu gives more flexibility than a fixed tasting menu , pescatarian diners, for instance, have strong options across the sushi and fish dishes. For specific allergies or requirements, contact the venue directly before booking; there is no public dietary policy available, and the charcoal wagyu component means meat-free options will need advance confirmation.
    • Is NIJŪ worth the price? At £££ , below London's ££££ omakase tier , NIJŪ delivers Michelin Plate-recognised quality, prime produce (wagyu, hamachi, turbot), and a more complete evening than most single-format Japanese restaurants at the same price. For pure sushi precision at a lower price, Chisou is the value alternative. For those who want the full Mayfair Japanese experience with more technical rigour, Umu costs more but delivers more. NIJŪ sits in a sensible middle ground for groups and special occasions.
    • How far ahead should I book NIJŪ? Aim for 2–3 weeks minimum for weekend evenings. Michelin Plate recognition two years running and a Mayfair address means demand is consistent. Weekday lunches and early weekday dinners are more accessible at shorter notice. If you are booking for a group or want to request a specific room, go further out , 3–4 weeks , to secure the configuration you want.

    Compare NIJŪ

    Worth the Price? NIJŪ vs. Peers
    VenuePriceValue
    NIJŪ£££
    Restaurant Gordon Ramsay££££
    CORE by Clare Smyth££££
    The Ledbury££££
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library££££
    Dinner by Heston Blumenthal££££

    What to weigh when choosing between NIJŪ and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at NIJŪ?

    NIJŪ does not follow a strict tasting-menu format — the concept is katei ryōri sharing plates alongside a sushi selection and Japanese beef cooked over charcoal, designed by Endo Kazutoshi. That format rewards tables who want to graze across multiple dishes rather than follow a fixed progression. If a structured omakase is what you are after, Umu or Akira in the same price bracket offer a more conventional tasting-menu experience. At £££, NIJŪ's approach delivers value primarily through variety and produce quality rather than course-by-course theatre.

    Can NIJŪ accommodate groups?

    Yes, and the split layout makes it one of the more group-friendly Japanese restaurants in Mayfair. The venue divides across two rooms: a moody, clubby space better suited to larger or more private gatherings, and a brighter room with a sushi counter that works well for smaller groups or couples. Parties of four or more should aim for the clubby room; two diners wanting counter seats should request the sushi-counter room specifically when booking.

    What should I order at NIJŪ?

    The menu centres on three pillars: katei ryōri sharing dishes, a sushi selection, and Japanese beef over charcoal — with roasted turbot with furikake and miso butter and wagyu among the documented highlights. Order across all three rather than anchoring to one; the concept is built for the table to share. Start or end with a drink at the Nipperkin cocktail bar on the same premises, which is worth factoring into your visit.

    Does NIJŪ handle dietary restrictions?

    Specific dietary accommodation details are not available in the current record. The menu is produce-led and spans fish, beef, and sharing plates, so pescatarian and meat-focused diners are well-served by the format. If you have specific requirements, check the venue's official channels before booking — at £££ and Michelin Plate level, most restaurants of this standing manage dietary requests with advance notice.

    Is NIJŪ worth the price?

    At £££, NIJŪ sits in a competitive bracket in Mayfair. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 signals consistent kitchen execution, and the Endo Kazutoshi-designed menus justify the price if the sharing-plates format suits your group. For solo diners or couples who want a more ceremonial experience, Umu charges more but offers greater technical rigour. NIJŪ is the stronger pick when you want produce-driven Japanese food in a considered setting without the formality or price ceiling of the tier above.

    How far ahead should I book NIJŪ?

    Book at least two to three weeks ahead for weekend evenings; Mayfair at this price point moves quickly, and NIJŪ's dual-room layout means seating is not unlimited. Weekday bookings are typically easier to secure with a week's notice. The venue is at 20 Berkeley Street, W1J — well-positioned relative to Green Park and Bond Street stations, which makes it a practical anchor for a broader Mayfair evening.

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