Restaurant in Dublin, Ireland
Matsukawa
820Pearl PointsEight seats. Book now or miss out.

About Matsukawa
An eight-seat counter in Smithfield running omakase built on Irish seafood and Japanese technique. Michelin Plate (2025), La Liste 99.5 points, and a 4.9 Google rating across 158 reviews make this one of Dublin's most credentialled small restaurants. Limited sittings mean you book as soon as a slot appears — this is worth the persistence.
Verdict: One of Dublin's hardest reservations to hold — and worth every attempt
Getting a seat at Matsukawa requires persistence. Eight counter seats, a closed Sunday, and dinner sittings that run from 6 to 8 pm mean availability is structurally limited. That scarcity is real, not manufactured — this is a small operation by design. If you land a booking, take it. The combination of a 4.9 Google rating across 158 reviews, a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, a La Liste score of 99.5 points, and a ranking of #8 on Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in Japan in 2024 (rising to #11 in 2025 as the list expanded) puts Matsukawa in a category almost entirely occupied by restaurants in Tokyo or Kyoto, not Smithfield.
The Space
Eight seats around a single counter at 8 Queen Street in Smithfield, Dublin 7. That physical reality shapes everything about the experience. There is no ambient crowd to disappear into, no large dining room to buffer the evening. You are close to the chef, close to the work, and close to the other diners. For a special occasion, a significant birthday, an anniversary, a meal you've been planning for months, that intimacy is the point. It is not a setting for a loud group celebration or a casual midweek dinner. It is a setting for paying attention. If that framing appeals to you, the space will deliver. If you need more room, more noise, or more flexibility, the counter format will feel constrictive rather than focused.
The Food and Seasonal Logic
Matsukawa runs an omakase menu built primarily around Irish seafood. Multiple nigiri servings form the structural core of the meal, and the kitchen's approach is grounded in the seasonality of what Irish waters and suppliers can provide at any given point in the year. This is where the decision of when to visit becomes meaningful.
Kaiseki tradition, from which Matsukawa draws its discipline, is inseparable from seasonal rotation. The menu changes with what is available, not with a printed schedule. Spring and early summer bring lighter, more delicate fish. Autumn tends to produce richer, fattier catches. The Michelin inspector's notes specifically highlight hamachi and salmon as particular strengths, both of which benefit from cold-water Irish conditions and tend to be at their leading in the colder months. If you have flexibility in your timing, autumn through early spring represents the period when cold-water Irish seafood is at its peak, though any visit will reflect what the season is actually producing at that moment. The menu adapts to the supply; the supply adapts to the sea.
The kitchen uses Irish produce as the foundation but applies Japanese technique throughout. Sake and Japanese spirits round out the beverage offering. Service is described as endearing and deliberately paced, the 6–8 pm dinner window is structured to give you a satisfying, complete experience without extending the evening unnecessarily. For a special occasion, that efficiency is a feature, not a compromise.
Practical Details
Matsukawa is open Monday through Wednesday for dinner only (6–8 pm), closed Thursday lunch, open Thursday through Saturday for both lunch (12–2 pm) and dinner (6–8 pm), and closed Sunday. Lunch service is only available Thursday and Saturday. Price range is €€€€. With only eight seats, both lunch and dinner fill quickly, but the booking difficulty for this listing is rated Easy relative to the typical Dublin fine-dining tier, act on an opening as soon as you find one rather than waiting. There is no published phone number or website through which to verify current booking channels; check current availability through reservation platforms or direct contact at the Smithfield address.
Quick reference: 8 Queen St, Smithfield, Dublin 7 | €€€€ | Mon–Wed dinner only; Thu–Sat lunch and dinner; closed Sunday | 8 counter seats.
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for how Matsukawa sits against Dublin's other top-tier options.
Pearl Picks: If You're Planning Around Matsukawa
If Matsukawa is unavailable, the closest Dublin experiences in terms of ambition and price tier are Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen, Glovers Alley, and D'Olier Street, all operating at the upper end of Dublin's dining register, though none offer an equivalent counter omakase format. For the full picture of what's worth booking in Dublin across categories, see our full Dublin restaurants guide, our full Dublin hotels guide, our full Dublin bars guide, and our full Dublin experiences guide.
For Irish restaurants operating at a comparable level of seasonal, produce-driven precision, Liath in Blackrock, Aniar in Galway, and dede in Baltimore are the strongest comparisons nationally, each with their own seasonal intelligence built around Irish produce. Terre in Castlemartyr, Bastion in Kinsale, and Campagne in Kilkenny are worth knowing if you're travelling beyond Dublin. For the kaiseki reference point that contextualises what Matsukawa is doing, the Japanese tradition this cuisine draws from, RyuGin in Tokyo and Gion Sasaki in Kyoto are the benchmarks.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Matsukawa?
Book as early as possible — ideally four to six weeks out. With only eight counter seats and sittings capped at two hours (6–8 pm for dinner, 12–2 pm for lunch Thursday and Saturday), availability disappears fast. If you miss the initial release, check back regularly; cancellations do come up.
What should I wear to Matsukawa?
The venue data doesn't specify a dress code, but an eight-seat counter omakase at €€€€ pricing — with a Michelin Plate (2025) and La Liste recognition at 99.5 points — puts you in company that dresses respectfully. Neat, considered clothing fits the format; this is not a casual drop-in.
What should a first-timer know about Matsukawa?
The format is omakase: you eat what Chef Tadayoshi Matsukawa sends out, with Irish seafood and nigiri forming the structural core of the meal. There are only eight seats and the sitting runs two hours, so conversation with the counter team is part of the experience. Sake and Japanese spirits are available alongside the food.
What are alternatives to Matsukawa in Dublin?
If Matsukawa is unavailable, Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen is the closest Dublin equivalent in ambition and price tier — strong tasting menu, more seats, and easier to book. Glovers Alley offers a similar €€€€ commitment with a different European register. Neither replicates the counter omakase format, but both represent serious cooking at a comparable spend.
Is lunch or dinner better at Matsukawa?
Lunch is available Thursday and Saturday only (12–2 pm), making dinner the more accessible option across the week. If your schedule allows Thursday or Saturday lunch, it may be easier to secure than a dinner slot given the narrower window of competition. The omakase format appears consistent across services based on available data, so the choice is primarily logistical.
Location
8 Queen St, Smithfield, Dublin 7, D07 Y683, Ireland
Dublin, Ireland
Compare Matsukawa
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Matsukawa | Kaiseki, Japanese | €€€€ | Easy | |
| Patrick Guilbaud | Irish - French, Modern French | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown |
| Bastible | Modern Irish, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Host | Nordic , Modern Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | |
| mae | Southern, Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown | |
| One Pico | New American, Modern French | €€€ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Dublin for this tier.
Also Consider
- Patrick Guilbaud, Irish - French, Modern French, €€€€
- Bastible, Modern Irish, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Host, Nordic , Modern Cuisine, €€
- mae, Southern, Modern Cuisine, €€€
- One Pico, New American, Modern French, €€€
At €€€€, Matsukawa sits at the same price tier as Patrick Guilbaud and Bastible, but the experience is structurally different from either. Patrick Guilbaud is Dublin's flagship French-Irish fine dining room, a full-service, multi-course environment with a long track record and a larger dining room. Bastible operates in a modern Irish register with a strong seasonal produce focus. Both are excellent choices at the €€€€ tier. Matsukawa is the only option at this price point that offers a counter omakase format, which means if that specific experience is what you're after, there is no direct substitute in the city.
If you're comparing on credentials rather than format, Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen and Glovers Alley are the other names operating at the top of Dublin's dining register. For a special occasion where you want to spend at the €€€€ level but prefer a conventional European tasting-menu format with more seating flexibility, those three are the comparisons to weigh. Matsukawa wins on intimacy and on the specific experience of watching a chef work at close range, it loses on flexibility, group size, and the ability to choose your dishes.
If €€€€ is not the target, mae at €€€ and Host at €€ both offer serious cooking at lower price points and are worth knowing for a different kind of evening. For a date or celebration dinner where the format and price point of Matsukawa are exactly right, no other Dublin restaurant currently replicates what it offers.
Hours
- Monday
- 6–8 pm
- Tuesday
- 6–8 pm
- Wednesday
- 6–8 pm
- Thursday
- 12–2 pm, 6–8 pm
- Friday
- 6–8 pm
- Saturday
- 12–2 pm, 6–8 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore Dublin
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