Restaurant in Miami, United States
Miami's hardest omakase seat. Book early.

Hiden is Miami's most credentialed omakase counter: Michelin-starred, La Liste-ranked, and helmed by chef Seijun Okano in Wynwood. At $$$$ pricing with a booking difficulty rated Hard, it rewards those who plan ahead. Book four to six weeks out for the most serious Japanese fine dining seat currently operating in Florida.
If you've eaten at Hiden once, you already know the answer. The question on a return visit is whether the experience holds up against the price, the booking friction, and Miami's increasingly serious omakase competition. It does — and then some. Chef Seijun Okano's Michelin-starred counter at 313 NW 25th Street in Wynwood remains one of the clearest arguments in Florida for why Japanese omakase at the $$$$ tier is worth the commitment. The room is spare, the pacing is deliberate, and the visual precision of each course is what you remember most: clean lines on the plate, unhurried presentation, nothing that looks like it was placed by accident.
Hiden earned its Michelin star in 2025 and holds 82 points on the 2026 La Liste ranking, down slightly from 85 points in 2025 — a negligible shift that shouldn't alter your decision. Opinionated About Dining has placed it among the top 355 restaurants in North America for two consecutive years (#344 in 2025, #355 in 2024), which puts it in genuinely elite company on a list that counts places like Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, and The French Laundry in Napa. A Google rating of 4.8 across 126 reviews is consistent, not inflated. For a counter-format restaurant in a city where Japanese fine dining is still maturing, that credential stack matters.
For a second-time visitor, the practical calculus is direct: the format doesn't change, and that's the point. Omakase at this level is a linear experience , you're in Okano's hands, course by course, with little room to customize or redirect. On a return visit, the reward is noticing more: the sequencing choices, the textural contrasts, the way each course visually frames itself before you touch it. If your first visit felt rushed or you were too distracted by the novelty, the second visit is where Hiden actually lands.
Hiden is worth flagging for anyone planning a Miami evening that extends past standard dinner hours. Omakase counters in this city typically run seatings in two distinct windows, and a later seating , where the counter feels quieter, the pacing more intimate , is often the better choice for a second visit. Hours are not confirmed in our database, so check directly before planning, but late-format omakase dining at this price point in Miami is rare enough that Hiden fills a specific gap: serious Japanese technique in a format that doesn't compete with the louder, table-service crowd. Compare that to ITAMAE, which runs a Peruvian-Japanese format and skews more accessible, or L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Miami for French counter dining at a comparable price tier but with a very different energy and room atmosphere. Hiden's visual stillness is part of what you're paying for.
For context within the broader omakase category nationally, Hiden sits in a tier below Masa in New York City and Sushi Masaki Saito in Toronto in terms of price ceiling, but it belongs in the same conversation about technical seriousness. Relative to other destination-worthy tasting counter experiences in the US , think Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg , Hiden is narrower in format but no less precise in execution.
Booking difficulty is rated Hard. Given the counter format and Michelin recognition, expect to plan well ahead , four to six weeks minimum is a reasonable working assumption, and popular Saturday seatings likely book further out than that. The address is 313 NW 25th Street in Wynwood, which is driveable and has street parking options, though ride-share drop-off is direct for the area. Phone and website details are not confirmed in our current database; search directly for current reservation access. Dress code is not specified, but at this price tier and format, smart-casual is the practical floor , a counter omakase at the Michelin level is not the place to test Miami's casual norms. See our full Miami restaurants guide for broader context on the city's fine dining scene, and our Miami hotels guide if you're planning a full trip around a dinner here.
Book Hiden if: you want the most credentialed Japanese omakase seat in Miami right now, you're comfortable with a fixed-format meal at the $$$$ tier, and you're prepared to plan at least a month out. It's the right call for a serious occasion, a second date where you want to impress without theatrics, or a solo counter seat if you want to eat well and watch a kitchen operate without distraction.
Skip it if: you want flexibility in what you order, you're in a group larger than the counter can absorb, or you're comparing it to a standard a la carte sushi dinner on price. For Miami's broader Japanese and Asian dining scene, ITAMAE is the more accessible entry point. For a special-occasion dinner that trades Japanese technique for Argentine fire cooking, Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann is the comparison at the same price tier. Explore our Miami bars guide and Miami experiences guide to build an evening around the reservation.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hiden | $$$$ | Hard | — |
| Ariete | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Boia De | $$$ | Unknown | — |
| Cote Miami | $$$ | Unknown | — |
| Stubborn Seed | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
How Hiden stacks up against the competition.
Plan on four to six weeks minimum. Hiden holds a Michelin star and a counter format with limited seats, which means availability moves fast after any press cycle or award update. If your dates are fixed, book the moment the window opens rather than waiting to confirm plans.
The counter format at Hiden is built for small parties. Pairs and solo diners are the natural fit. Larger groups should check the venue's official channels before assuming availability, since fixed omakase seating does not flex the way a la carte tables do.
Hiden is a fixed-format omakase counter at the $$$$ price tier, so you are committing to the chef's menu from the start. Chef Seijun Okano's recognition on both the Michelin and La Liste lists signals a high-precision Japanese format. Come with a clear appetite and no dietary deal-breakers you haven't flagged at booking.
Yes, with the right expectations. The Michelin star and La Liste recognition give it the credentials to anchor a celebration, and the counter format creates a focused, event-like meal. It works best for two people who want the meal itself to be the occasion, not a backdrop for a large group dinner.
At the $$$$ tier with a Michelin star and consecutive La Liste placements in 2025 and 2026, Hiden is priced in line with its credentials. If omakase is your format and you want the most decorated Japanese counter seat in Miami right now, it justifies the spend. If you want flexibility or a la carte options, this is not that meal.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.