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    Restaurant in Kyoto, Japan

    Mizuno

    450pts

    Michelin-starred kaiseki that keeps dining fun.

    Mizuno, Restaurant in Kyoto

    About Mizuno

    Mizuno holds a 2024 Michelin star in Kyoto's Higashiyama Ward and scores 4.9 on Google — at the ¥¥¥ tier, it is one of the better-value paths into serious Japanese dining in the city. The kitchen draws on classical Japanese cuisine with imaginative reach, and Michelin explicitly cites the room's emphasis on fun, kitchen transparency, and genuine hospitality. Book three to six weeks ahead depending on season; this fills fast.

    The Verdict

    Mizuno earns its 2024 Michelin star through a clear philosophy: that dining should be fun, technically precise, and grounded in Japanese classic cuisine with genuine imagination. At the ¥¥¥ price tier, it sits a full bracket below most of Kyoto's kaiseki heavyweights, making it the answer for a special-occasion meal that does not require a ¥¥¥¥ commitment. Book this if you want Higashiyama's quality without the maximal spend — but move fast, because a 4.9 Google rating across its reviews signals this is not a room that forgives late planning.

    Mizuno, Kyoto

    Higashiyama Ward has always been one of Kyoto's most concentrated dining corridors, and Mizuno at 245-2 Nakanocho sits squarely within that competitive field. The 2024 Michelin star formalises what its near-perfect Google score (4.9) had already suggested: this is a restaurant operating at a level meaningfully above its price point. For a special occasion or a date where you want genuine craft without the ceremonial distance of a full kaiseki procession, Mizuno makes a strong case.

    The Michelin inspector's own language is worth quoting here, because it is unusually direct about what the kitchen values: presentation of dishes, transparency into the kitchen's action, and friendly conversation are cited as the pillars that keep the restaurant working. That framing matters for how you should approach your booking. This is not a reverent, silence-preferred room in the mould of Kyoto's more austere kaiseki institutions. It is a place designed around engagement — between the kitchen and the guest, between the craft on the plate and the person eating it. For a celebration or an anniversary dinner where atmosphere counts as much as the food, that distinction is meaningful.

    The kitchen's stated emphasis on imagination drawn from Japanese classic cuisine positions Mizuno in an interesting middle ground. It is not reinventing the wheel, but it is not a rigid traditionalist either. Dishes conceived with that blend of classical grounding and creative reach tend to offer accessibility for guests who may be earlier in their exploration of Japanese fine dining, while still delivering the technical depth that brings returning diners back. If this will be your first serious Japanese dining experience in Kyoto, Mizuno's orientation makes it a more forgiving and enjoyable entry point than the most codified kaiseki formats available elsewhere in the city.

    On the drinks side, the Michelin description's emphasis on the full experience , conversation, kitchen presence, attentive detail , suggests a front-of-house team invested in pacing and hospitality rather than a perfunctory pour-and-move service style. Japanese restaurants at this price point in Kyoto's Higashiyama tend to pair well with sake selections calibrated to the season and the kitchen's output. While specific drink programme details are not confirmed in our data, the experience architecture described by Michelin points to a room where the drinks element is treated as part of the overall hospitality logic, not an afterthought. For sake-curious diners, this is the kind of setting where asking questions of the service team is likely to be welcomed rather than tolerated.

    Timing your visit matters in Kyoto. Higashiyama is one of the city's most visited districts during cherry blossom season (late March to early April) and autumn foliage season (mid-November), when demand for every serious restaurant spikes. A Michelin-starred room at the ¥¥¥ tier in this ward will book out weeks earlier than usual during those windows. If your trip lands in either peak period, treat this as a hard-to-book reservation and plan accordingly , minimum four to six weeks out during peak season is a reasonable working assumption. Outside those windows, the general rule for starred Kyoto restaurants still applies: two to three weeks minimum.

    For context within the Higashiyama dining scene, Mizuno's position is relatively accessible compared to nearby institutions. Venues like Kikunoi Roan and Kodaiji Jugyuan operate in the same ward and offer their own readings of Kyoto's dining culture, but Mizuno's combination of Michelin recognition at the ¥¥¥ level is a specific value proposition worth noting. Further afield in Kyoto's dining network, Isshisoden Nakamura and Gion Matayoshi represent the broader range of what serious Japanese dining looks like across the city. If you are building a multi-night Kyoto itinerary, use our full Kyoto restaurants guide to triangulate which rooms suit different nights and budgets.

    Beyond Kyoto, this style of focused, personality-driven Japanese dining has counterparts worth knowing. Myojaku in Tokyo and Azabu Kadowaki operate in a related register for Japanese cuisine at the starred level. HAJIME in Osaka is the regional reference point for a more avant-garde Japanese experience if Mizuno's classical grounding is not the direction you want. akordu in Nara and Goh in Fukuoka round out the broader Kansai and Kyushu picture for serious diners building a Japan itinerary. For the full Kyoto picture beyond restaurants, see our Kyoto hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    Practical Details

    VenuePrice TierBooking DifficultyStar RecognitionLeading For
    Mizuno¥¥¥HardMichelin 1 Star (2024)Special occasion at accessible price
    Gion Sasaki¥¥¥¥Very HardMichelin starredFull kaiseki splurge
    Ifuki¥¥¥¥HardMichelin starredTraditional kaiseki depth
    cenci¥¥¥ModerateMichelin recognisedItalian-inflected alternative
    SEN¥¥¥¥HardMichelin recognisedFrench-Japanese fusion experience
    Kyokaiseki Kichisen¥¥¥¥Very HardMichelin 3 StarsTop-tier kaiseki, maximum formality

    Address: 245-2 Nakanocho, Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto, 605-0082, Japan. Booking difficulty is rated Hard , plan a minimum of three to four weeks ahead in normal periods and six-plus weeks during cherry blossom and autumn foliage seasons. Hours, phone, and online booking method are not confirmed in our current data; check directly via a Japanese restaurant reservation service or your hotel concierge.

    Compare Mizuno

    Comparing Mizuno to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    MizunoJapanese¥¥¥Presentation of dishes, showing the action in the kitchen, and friendly conversation all keep a restaurant flourishing. A chef always remembers that dining should be fun, and pays attention to every detail. Dishes rich in imagination that draw on Japanese classic cuisine.; Michelin 1 Star (2024)Hard
    Gion SasakiKaiseki, Japanese¥¥¥¥Michelin 3 StarUnknown
    cenciItalian¥¥¥Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    IfukiKaiseki¥¥¥¥Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    Kyokaiseki KichisenJapanese¥¥¥¥Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    SENFrench, Japanese¥¥¥¥Michelin 1 StarUnknown

    A quick look at how Mizuno measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Mizuno?

    Bar seating details are not confirmed in available records for Mizuno. Given its Michelin-starred format and emphasis on kitchen interaction and chef conversation, counter seating is plausible, but you should confirm directly when making a reservation at the Nakanocho address.

    What should I wear to Mizuno?

    Mizuno's 2024 Michelin star and classical Japanese cuisine format suggest a neat, respectful dress standard. Avoid anything overly casual. In Higashiyama Ward's competitive dining corridor, erring toward business casual is a safe call for any starred restaurant.

    Is Mizuno good for solo dining?

    Mizuno's stated philosophy prioritises kitchen transparency and friendly chef conversation, which makes it a solid fit for solo diners who want engagement rather than a quiet meal. At ¥¥¥ pricing, a solo visit is a meaningful spend, but the interactive format justifies it more than a conventional multi-course room would.

    What should a first-timer know about Mizuno?

    Mizuno's identity is built around three pillars: imaginative dishes rooted in Japanese classic cuisine, visible kitchen action, and genuine conversation with the chef. First-timers should expect a participatory experience, not a formal procession. Book well in advance for a 2024 Michelin-starred venue in one of Kyoto's most in-demand dining wards.

    Can Mizuno accommodate groups?

    Group capacity details are not confirmed for Mizuno. Given the kitchen-forward, conversation-driven format at 245-2 Nakanocho, this is unlikely to be a venue suited to large parties. check the venue's official channels before planning any group booking.

    How far ahead should I book Mizuno?

    Book at least four to six weeks out. Michelin-starred restaurants in Higashiyama Ward fill quickly, and Mizuno's 2024 star will have tightened availability further. If you're visiting during peak Kyoto seasons — spring cherry blossom or autumn foliage — add extra lead time.

    What should I order at Mizuno?

    Mizuno's Michelin recognition describes dishes rich in imagination drawn from Japanese classic cuisine, so the menu is almost certainly set or chef-led rather than à la carte. Expect to eat what the kitchen sends. The experience is the format, not the individual dish selection.

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