Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Nagamoto
625Pearl PointsCounter kaiseki, one menu, no shortcuts.

About Nagamoto
Nagamoto is a Michelin-starred (2024) counter-only kaiseki restaurant in Central Hong Kong, running a single omakase menu built on seasonal <em>shun</em> ingredients. At the $$$$ price tier with a 4.6 Google rating, it delivers focused, high-quality Japanese dining — but the format is strict: one menu, all counter seats, and booking is hard. Plan several weeks ahead.
Verdict
Nagamoto earns its Michelin star and your booking effort. If you are after serious kaiseki in Hong Kong — counter seating, a single omakase menu, and the chef working directly in front of you — this is one of the most focused Japanese dining experiences the city offers. The all-counter format and single-menu format mean there is no hedging: you either commit to the experience or you do not. For first-timers, that clarity is a feature, not a limitation. Book hard in advance; this is not a walk-in venue.
What to Expect on a First Visit
Nagamoto opened in 2022 on On Lan Street in Central, taking over the exact premises where Kashiwaya had operated until its 2021 closure. Chef Teruhiko Nagamoto, who had helmed Kashiwaya, effectively continued an established kaiseki tradition in Hong Kong under his own name. For anyone who followed Kashiwaya, the continuity is deliberate. For first-timers arriving without that history, what matters is this: the restaurant runs a single omakase menu built around shun ingredients , seasonal Japanese produce sourced at peak condition , with kaiseki courses structured to move through texture, temperature, and intensity across the meal.
All seating is at the counter. There are no tables, no private rooms, and no à la carte option. This keeps seat count low, which is why the booking window is long and availability is tight. Every diner has a direct sightline to Chef Nagamoto working through each course. For a first-time visitor, this is worth understanding before you arrive: the experience is participatory in the sense that you are close to the preparation, not passive in a dining room watching servers come and go. If that dynamic appeals, Nagamoto delivers it with consistency. If you prefer a more private or separated dining format, look elsewhere.
The venue operates Tuesday through Saturday evenings, 7 PM to 10:30 PM, with a Saturday lunch sitting from 1 PM to 3 PM. Sunday is closed. At the $$$$ price tier, expect this to sit comfortably in the HK$1,500–$2,500+ per head range typical of Michelin-starred omakase in Hong Kong, though exact current pricing should be confirmed at booking. Google reviewers rate it 4.6 out of 5 across 57 reviews , a high score for a venue with this level of specialisation and this small a seat count.
Leading Time to Visit
Saturday lunch is the entry point worth targeting if you can get it. The 1 PM to 3 PM sitting is shorter than an evening service and may carry a different menu cadence, but it is also the only midday option in the week , useful if you want to keep your evening free or are managing jet lag on a short trip. Evening sittings run seven-to-ten-thirty any day Tuesday through Saturday, with no early-late split, so the timing pressure is less about which evening you pick and more about when you can actually secure a reservation.
In terms of seasonality, kaiseki built on shun ingredients shifts meaningfully across the year. Autumn and winter tend to favour richer preparations , matsutake, crab, warm broths , while spring and summer bring lighter courses centred on early-season vegetables and fish. Neither season is a wrong time to go; the menu adapts to what is genuinely in peak condition at the moment of your visit. What this means practically is that a second visit to Nagamoto will feel different from the first, which is part of the design of this format and a reason regulars return across seasons.
Ratings and Recognition
- Michelin: 1 Star (2024)
- Google rating: 4.6 / 5 (57 reviews)
- Price tier: $$$$
- Format: Counter-only omakase
Booking
Booking difficulty is high. The counter-only format keeps capacity deliberately small, and Michelin recognition since 2024 has not made availability easier. Plan to book several weeks out at minimum , potentially further for a Saturday lunch or for peak travel periods like Golden Week or the winter festive season. There is no walk-in culture here. Confirm the booking method directly with the restaurant; no online booking platform is listed in publicly available data, which suggests reservation requests may go through the restaurant directly or via a third-party concierge service. If you are visiting from abroad, engaging a hotel concierge with local connections is a practical move.
Practical Details
| Detail | Nagamoto | Kappo Rin | Godenya |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Japanese kaiseki / omakase | Japanese kappo | Japanese (sake pairing) |
| Price tier | $$$$ | $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Michelin | 1 Star (2024) | Check listing | Check listing |
| Format | Counter only, single omakase menu | Counter / table | Counter / omakase |
| Lunch available | Saturday only | Check listing | Check listing |
| Booking difficulty | Hard | Hard | Hard |
| Solo-friendly | Yes , counter format suits solo | Yes | Yes |
For more Japanese counter dining in Hong Kong, see also Ryota Kappou Modern, Zuicho, and Hanabi. For the broader dining picture in Central, our full Hong Kong restaurants guide covers the city's range across cuisines and price points. You may also want to browse our Hong Kong hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide to build out a trip.
Visitors interested in comparable kaiseki traditions in Japan can look at Isshisoden Nakamura in Kyoto, Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo, or Kagurazaka Ishikawa in Tokyo for context on where Nagamoto's format sits within the broader Japanese kaiseki tradition. The direct institutional predecessor, Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama, also offers a reference point for understanding the lineage Chef Nagamoto carries into his Hong Kong kitchen.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Nagamoto good for solo dining?
It's one of the better setups in Hong Kong for solo diners. The counter-only format means every seat faces the kitchen, so a solo booking is structurally identical to any other — no awkward table placements. If you're comfortable spending at the $$$$ tier for a single omakase menu, this is a strong solo call.
Can I eat at the bar at Nagamoto?
There is no bar at Nagamoto — the entire restaurant is counter seating. Every diner sits at the counter and watches Chef Teruhiko Nagamoto work. This is a feature, not a limitation: it's the whole format.
What should I order at Nagamoto?
There is no ordering. Nagamoto runs a single omakase menu built around kaiseki courses using 'shun' (peak-season) ingredients. You eat what the chef decides that evening. If you need menu flexibility, this isn't the right venue.
Is Nagamoto worth the price?
At $$$$ per head with a Michelin star earned in 2024, Nagamoto is priced in line with serious omakase counters across Hong Kong. The value case rests on the kaiseki format and the chef's pedigree — he helmed Kashiwaya at the same address before relaunching as Nagamoto in 2022. For comparable spend, Ta Vie offers a more French-inflected tasting format; Nagamoto is the call if you want Japanese kaiseki specifically.
Is Nagamoto good for a special occasion?
Yes, with one caveat: the counter format means you're dining alongside strangers in close proximity, not in a private room. If the occasion requires privacy, look elsewhere. If the occasion suits an intimate, chef-focused dinner with Michelin recognition behind it, Nagamoto works well.
Is lunch or dinner better at Nagamoto?
Saturday lunch is the more accessible entry point. The 1 PM to 3 PM sitting is the only weekend daytime option and may differ in length and potentially in price from the evening service. Evening service runs Monday through Saturday, 7 PM to 10:30 PM. If availability is the obstacle, target Saturday lunch first.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Nagamoto?
The omakase is the only option, so the question is really whether kaiseki at this level is worth $$$$ in Hong Kong. Given the Michelin star, the counter-seat format, and the chef's history running Kashiwaya at the same address, the answer is yes — if kaiseki is the format you want. If you'd prefer a broader tasting menu with more European influence, Vea or Ta Vie give you that at a comparable price point.
Location
Hong Kong, Central, On Lan St, 18號8/F
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Compare Nagamoto
| Venue | Price |
|---|---|
| Nagamoto | $$$$ |
| 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong) | $$$$ |
| Ta Vie | $$$$ |
| The Chairman | $$ |
| Feuille | $$$ |
| Vea | $$$$ |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong), Italian, $$$$
- Ta Vie, Japanese - French, Innovative, $$$$
- The Chairman, Chinese, Cantonese, $$
- Feuille, French Contemporary, $$$
- Vea, Innovative, $$$$
Nagamoto sits in a distinct position among Hong Kong's $$$$ Japanese restaurants. If you are comparing it to Ta Vie, which runs an innovative Japanese-French format at the same price tier, the key difference is flexibility. Ta Vie offers more menu variation and a different kind of creativity; Nagamoto is more doctrinaire about its kaiseki structure, which is either exactly what you want or a reason to book elsewhere. For pure Japanese tradition executed with Michelin-verified consistency, Nagamoto is the stronger call.
Against the Italian-led $$$$ dining of 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana or the innovative format at Vea, Nagamoto is for a different diner entirely, one who wants seasonal Japanese precision over broader European or fusion ambitions. Feuille at $$$ offers an interesting alternative if you want contemporary tasting-menu quality at a lower price point, though the cuisine and format differ significantly. For value-conscious diners who want something excellent without the $$$$ outlay, The Chairman at $$ is a genuine alternative, different cuisine entirely, but similarly serious about sourcing and technique.
The clearest peer comparison within Japanese dining is Kappo Rin and Godenya, both of which offer counter-led Japanese experiences at comparable price tiers. If Nagamoto is fully booked, which is the more likely outcome, either of these is a credible fallback rather than a compromise. The choice between them comes down to format preference: Nagamoto is the most rigidly traditional of the three, which is precisely why its regulars keep returning.
Hours
- Monday
- 7 PM-10:30 PM
- Tuesday
- 7 PM-10:30 PM
- Wednesday
- 7 PM-10:30 PM
- Thursday
- 7 PM-10:30 PM
- Friday
- 7 PM-10:30 PM
- Saturday
- 1 PM-3 PM 7 PM-10:30 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
Explore Hong Kong
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