Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Daikokuya
425Pearl PointsQueue-dependent ramen that earns its line.

About Daikokuya
Daikokuya in Little Tokyo is one of Los Angeles's most consistently recognised ramen counters, holding OAD Cheap Eats North America placement from 2023 through 2025 and a Pearl Recommended designation. Expect a walk-in queue rather than a reservation system, a compact and energetic room, and a focused ramen menu that delivers genuine value. Arrive at opening to minimise wait time.
The Line Outside Is Not a Trap — It's the Whole Point
The most common mistake people make about Daikokuya is assuming the queue means something went wrong with their planning. It didn't. The line at 327 1st St in Little Tokyo is structural — it's a feature of how this ramen counter operates, not a scheduling failure on your part. If you show up expecting a quick weekday lunch with no wait, you will be disappointed. If you budget twenty to forty minutes and treat it as part of the experience, Daikokuya delivers exactly what it promises: a bowl of ramen that has been earning serious recognition year after year.
Daikokuya has appeared on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America list for three consecutive years , ranked #128 in 2023, #179 in 2024, and #194 in 2025 , and holds a Pearl Recommended designation for 2025. OAD Cheap Eats rankings are sourced from a network of well-traveled diners who take value seriously, which means placement there is a signal of sustained quality at an accessible price point, not just local hype. A Google rating of 4.4 across more than 4,200 reviews puts it in the kind of consensus territory that's hard to fake or game.
What the Room Feels Like
Daikokuya's dining room is compact and direct , the energy is warm but not precious. This is not a quiet dinner-date venue. The ambient noise sits somewhere between lively and loud, especially during peak hours, with the counter and close-packed tables creating the density that ramen shops in this price tier tend toward. Think of it as closer to the atmosphere you'd find at Afuri in Tokyo or Afuri Ramen in Portland than to a polished sit-down Japanese restaurant. If you want conversation over dinner without competing with the room, arrive early , the first thirty minutes after opening are noticeably calmer than midday or evening rushes.
Timing and Booking
Daikokuya does not require advance reservations in the conventional sense , this is a walk-in ramen shop, and booking difficulty rates as easy. But easy to book does not mean easy to get in quickly. The practical question is not how far ahead to reserve, but when to arrive. Weekday lunches and early evenings are the highest-traffic windows. If you are visiting Los Angeles on a tight itinerary, factor in wait time. A weekend brunch or mid-morning visit on a weekday, if the opening hours allow, will get you through the door faster than the conventional lunch rush. For a first visit, arriving when the restaurant opens is the most reliable way to avoid a long wait without compromising the experience.
Who Should Book, and Under What Conditions
Daikokuya works well for solo diners , counter seating suits single visitors, and the pace of service at a ramen shop means you won't be sitting long. It works for pairs and small groups too, though the room's size means larger parties may find it tight. For people staying in or near downtown Los Angeles, the Little Tokyo location makes it a genuinely practical option rather than a pilgrimage. If you are building a Los Angeles dining itinerary that includes more ambitious meals at places like Kato or Somni, Daikokuya slots in cleanly as the counterpoint , the meal that doesn't require a jacket, a reservation made weeks out, or a hundred-dollar minimum spend.
It is not the right choice for a special occasion that calls for ceremony or a quiet room. The atmosphere, the price point, and the format all point in the same direction: a well-executed, no-fuss bowl of ramen in one of Los Angeles's most established Japanese neighborhoods. For that specific purpose, it has earned its recognition consistently across multiple years.
If ramen is your focus in Los Angeles, also consider Iki Ramen and Tsujita L.A. as comparisons , each takes a different approach to the format, and which you prioritize depends on what you want from the bowl. For broader dining context, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, and for planning the rest of your trip, our guides to Los Angeles hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences are useful starting points.
Quick reference: Walk-in only, no advance reservation needed. Arrive at opening to minimize wait. Located at 327 1st St, Los Angeles, CA 90012 (Little Tokyo). Pearl Recommended 2025; OAD Cheap Eats North America 2023–2025.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Daikokuya good for solo dining?
Yes — solo is arguably the format Daikokuya suits best. Counter seating means you're in and out without the social overhead of a table, and ramen is a single-bowl format that doesn't reward group ordering. The Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats ranking (top 200 in North America in 2025) reflects a place that performs reliably at pace, which matters when you're eating alone.
What should a first-timer know about Daikokuya?
Arrive early or expect a line — this is a walk-in-only shop in Little Tokyo at 327 1st St, and it draws a consistent crowd. There's no reservation system to game, so timing is your only lever. Daikokuya has held a spot on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America list for three consecutive years (2023–2025), which signals consistency rather than hype.
How far ahead should I book Daikokuya?
You don't book — Daikokuya is walk-in only. The practical strategy is arriving at or before opening, or during off-peak hours mid-afternoon if service runs continuously. Weekend lunches and dinner rushes will have the longest waits; plan accordingly.
Is Daikokuya good for a special occasion?
Not really. The room is compact and high-energy, the format is quick-turnover ramen, and there's no reservation option to guarantee a smooth experience. For a special occasion dinner in LA, a sit-down restaurant with bookable tables and a longer format will serve you better. Daikokuya earns its place as a reliable, highly regarded bowl — not as a celebratory venue.
What are alternatives to Daikokuya in Los Angeles?
If you want to stay in the affordable, high-quality lane, other OAD Cheap Eats-tracked spots in LA are worth cross-referencing. For a more structured, reservation-based meal in LA, Kato (tasting menu, Jonathan Gold alumni territory) or Hayato (Japanese kaiseki, extremely hard to book) are in a different category entirely — higher price, higher formality, no overlap in format.
Can Daikokuya accommodate groups?
Small groups of two to three are manageable; larger parties will find the compact dining room and walk-in format a friction point. There's no private dining, and a group of five or more risks being split or facing a longer wait for a single table. For groups, a bookable restaurant is the more practical choice.
Can I eat at the bar at Daikokuya?
Counter seating is available and is one of the better ways to experience Daikokuya, particularly for solo diners. It suits the pace of the venue — you're there for a bowl of ramen, not a long sit, and counter seats typically turn over faster than tables.
Location
327 1st St, Los Angeles, CA 90012
Los Angeles, United States
Compare Daikokuya
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daikokuya | Ramen | Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #194 (2025); Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #179 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America in Ranked #128 (2023) | Easy | — | |
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Hayato | Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Camphor | French-Asian, French | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Gwen | New American, Steakhouse | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Kato — New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
- Hayato — Japanese, $$$$
- Vespertine — Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
- Camphor — French-Asian, French, $$$$
- Gwen — New American, Steakhouse, $$$$
Comparing Daikokuya to the rest of Pearl's current Los Angeles recommendations requires switching price registers entirely. Kato, Hayato, Vespertine, Camphor, and Gwen all operate at the $$$$ tier, where a meal for two will run well north of $200 before drinks. Daikokuya sits at the opposite end of that spectrum — a walk-in ramen counter with a sub-$20 per-person price point and three consecutive years of OAD Cheap Eats recognition. These are not in competition for the same booking. The real question is how Daikokuya fits into a broader Los Angeles itinerary that might also include one or two of those higher-end options.
Within its own format, Daikokuya is better positioned than most of its price-tier peers for recognition credentials and repeat-visit reliability. If you are choosing between Daikokuya, Tsujita L.A., and Iki Ramen for a ramen meal, the decision comes down to style preference and location logistics rather than a quality gap. Tsujita is the stronger call if tsukemen (dipping noodles) is what you want; Daikokuya has the longer public recognition track record for its tonkotsu-style bowls. Neither requires advance booking, which makes the comparison a same-day call rather than a planning decision.
If your Los Angeles trip is built around high-end Japanese dining at Kato or Somni, Daikokuya works well as the casual counterpoint — a meal that doesn't compete with your main reservation and gives you a genuine sense of how good Los Angeles's accessible Japanese food scene is. For diners who want ceremony, a quiet room, or a wine list, none of the ramen options in this tier will satisfy; in that case, Camphor or Gwen are the more appropriate choices for a relaxed but polished evening.
Recognized By
Explore Los Angeles
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