Restaurant in Madrid, Spain
Ebisu by Kobos
330ptsAccessible omakase, serious technique, easy booking.

About Ebisu by Kobos
A Michelin Plate-recognised omakase counter in La Latina, Ebisu by Kobos is one of Madrid's more accessible high-end Japanese experiences — both in booking difficulty and in format. Chef José Kobos Cortés runs a single seasonal omakase built around a small sushi bar, with fish selection and rice technique as the consistent strengths. At €€€€, it earns its price for the format.
Should You Book Ebisu by Kobos?
Getting a table at Ebisu by Kobos is easier than at most of Madrid's top-tier omakase counters, and that accessibility is part of the case for booking. This is a Michelin Plate-recognised restaurant in La Latina with a Google rating of 4.8 across 119 reviews, ranked #485 in Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Europe list — a serious credential for a small, unpretentious room in a neighbourhood better known for weekend tapas crawls than precision Japanese cooking. If you've already been once and found the format clicked, coming back is a direct decision: the seasonal omakase structure means the menu shifts with what's available, and the chef's approach to fish selection and rice makes repeat visits worthwhile in a way that static à la carte menus rarely are.
The Room and the Counter
The physical space at Ebisu by Kobos is organised around a small sushi bar, and that choice defines everything about the experience. This is not a large dining room with a few counter seats added as an afterthought — the counter is the restaurant. Sitting at a sushi bar of this kind puts you in direct contact with the preparation: you see the fish cuts before they become courses, you watch the rice being worked, and you're close enough to notice the decisions being made in real time. For a repeat visitor, that proximity is the payoff. You already know the format; now you're watching the craft.
The restaurant is on Calle de Luciente, 14, a few metres from the Cebada market in La Latina. The neighbourhood is informal and local-feeling, and the room matches it: unpretentious, not design-led, focused on the food rather than the décor. If you're coming from somewhere like Yugo The Bunker , where the setting is part of the theatrical appeal , Ebisu by Kobos will feel deliberately stripped back. That's the point.
The Omakase Format and What to Expect
There is a single omakase menu. That means no decisions at the table beyond whether to come. The meal opens with a green tea welcome that is refilled throughout the evening, and before the tasting sequence begins, chef José Kobos Cortés presents the fish he'll be working with. That moment , part theatre, part transparency , is one of the more distinctive touches at a Madrid counter. It frames everything that follows as ingredient-led rather than concept-led, which is consistent with the training behind the kitchen: Kobos Cortés spent a year working in Japan under Norihito Endo, and the focus on technique and seasonal produce reflects that foundation.
For a first-timer, this framing is useful context. For a returning guest, it's a cue to pay closer attention to what's changed since your last visit. The fish selection will be different, the rice balance may shift slightly, and the seasonal anchoring means the menu in autumn or winter reads differently from one in spring. If you've done the counter once and want to know what justifies a second visit, the answer is the seasonal structure and the consistency of the rice work , which, across reviews, is the detail that comes up most often as the technical differentiator.
Madrid's Japanese dining options have grown considerably. Hotaru Madrid, Ikigai Flor Baja, Ikigai Velázquez, and Izariya all operate in the same broad category. What positions Ebisu by Kobos distinctly is the small-counter format combined with the chef's documented Japan-trained background and the Michelin Plate recognition , a signal that the standard here is consistent enough to merit institutional attention. It is not trying to be the most ambitious Japanese restaurant in Madrid; it is trying to be a technically grounded, seasonally honest omakase counter, and by the evidence available, it succeeds at that narrower goal.
If you want to benchmark this kind of counter experience against Japanese originals, Myojaku in Tokyo and Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo give a sense of what the format looks like at its highest expression. Ebisu by Kobos is not competing at that level , and does not appear to position itself as doing so , but the training lineage and the OAD ranking suggest the technical baseline is credible by European standards.
Practical Details
Ebisu by Kobos is priced at €€€€, placing it in Madrid's premium bracket. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is relevant: at this price point, the fact that you can usually secure a reservation without weeks of forward planning is a meaningful advantage over higher-profile omakase counters in the city. The restaurant is at Calle de Luciente, 14, Centro, 28005 Madrid, in the La Latina district. Phone and current hours are not confirmed in our data , check directly before visiting, particularly if you're planning around a specific evening. For a broader view of where this sits in Madrid's dining options, see our full Madrid restaurants guide. For hotels nearby, our Madrid hotels guide covers the options. Madrid bars, wineries, and experiences are also covered if you're building a longer trip. For context on Spain's broader fine-dining circuit, Quique Dacosta in Dénia, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, and Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona are all worth knowing.
Quick reference: Michelin Plate (2025) · OAD Europe #485 (2025) · 4.8 Google (119 reviews) · €€€€ · La Latina, Madrid · Booking: Easy.
Compare Ebisu by Kobos
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ebisu by Kobos | Japanese | €€€€ | Easy |
| DiverXO | Progressive - Asian, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| DSTAgE | Modern Spanish, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Smoked Room | Progressive Asador, Contemporary | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Paco Roncero | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Coque | Spanish, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
How Ebisu by Kobos stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Ebisu by Kobos accommodate groups?
The experience is built around a small sushi bar, which limits capacity. Groups larger than four will find the counter format tight and the single omakase menu means there is no flexibility on what is served. For larger parties wanting a private dining setup, DSTAgE or Coque are better-suited options in Madrid.
Is Ebisu by Kobos worth the price?
At €€€€, it sits in Madrid's premium bracket, but booking difficulty is rated Easy — which means you are not paying a scarcity premium on top of the food. Chef José Kobos Cortés earned a Michelin Plate in 2025 and an OAD Top 485 Europe ranking, and his year training under Norihito Endo in Japan anchors the technique. For the price point, the accessibility and the credentials make it a credible case for booking.
Does Ebisu by Kobos handle dietary restrictions?
The format is a single omakase menu with no à la carte alternatives, so there is no switching out courses at the table. If you have serious dietary restrictions, check the venue's official channels before booking — the counter format and fish-forward menu leave limited room for substitution.
What should I order at Ebisu by Kobos?
There is only one option: the single omakase menu. No decisions required beyond showing up. The meal opens with a green tea welcome, and the chef presents the fish cuts before the tasting sequence begins — the rice is a noted element of the format.
What are alternatives to Ebisu by Kobos in Madrid?
For omakase at a higher tier, Smoked Room offers a more theatrical format at comparable or higher prices. DSTAgE and Coque cover Spanish tasting menus if you want to stay in that register. DiverXO is the city's ceiling for experimentation but is significantly harder to book and more expensive. Ebisu by Kobos sits in a practical middle ground: serious Japanese technique, OAD-ranked, and actually bookable.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Ebisu by Kobos?
Yes, if omakase is the format you want. The Michelin Plate recognition and the OAD Top 485 Europe ranking for 2025 confirm it delivers at the level its price implies. The chef's training under Norihito Endo in Japan gives the menu a technical foundation that separates it from Madrid's more surface-level Japanese options. If you prefer choice at the table, this is not the right venue.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Madrid
- CoqueCoque holds 2 Michelin Stars, a Green Star, and 96 points on La Liste — making it one of Madrid's most credentialled restaurants. Run by the three Sandoval brothers across five distinct spaces, the evening is as much a service experience as a meal. Book well ahead: availability here is near impossible, and this is a venue worth planning a trip around.
- DiverXODiverXO is David Muñoz's three-Michelin-star flagship in Madrid, ranked #4 in the World's 50 Best (2024) and 98 points on La Liste (2026). The single "Flying Pigs Cuisine" tasting menu blends Asian technique with Spanish ingredients in deliberately provocative combinations. Booking difficulty is near-impossible — reserve three to four months out, and only come if you're ready for a long, high-energy evening with no à la carte option.
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