Restaurant in New York City, United States
A Michelin star that actually delivers.

Oiji Mi is one of New York City's most compelling cases for contemporary Korean fine dining: a Michelin-starred, five-course prix fixe in Flatiron with a kitchen ranked #63 in North America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025. Book it for a special occasion or a serious date. Hard to get into, consistently worth the effort.
Oiji Mi earns its Michelin star and its place among New York City's most serious dining rooms. The five-course prix fixe format, a fleet of attentive staff, and a kitchen that treats Korean flavors with genuine precision — not novelty — make this one of the stronger cases for spending $$$$ on a special-occasion dinner in Flatiron. Book it for a milestone meal, a meaningful date, or a business dinner where the food needs to do real work. If you've been before and are weighing a return visit, the short answer is: yes, come back. The kitchen's refinement only reads more clearly the second time.
Returning to Oiji Mi, you notice what you may have missed on a first visit: the service apparatus is doing a great deal of the heavy lifting. The staff-to-diner ratio is high by New York standards, and the team moves with a choreographed efficiency that sits somewhere between formal French service and something more contemporary. That level of staffing costs money, and at this price point it raises a fair question , does the service model earn its share of the bill? At Oiji Mi, largely, it does. Dishes arrive explained with care rather than ceremony, courses are paced without pressure, and the room never makes you feel as though you're being processed through a tasting-menu machine.
Chefs Brian Kim and Tae Kyung Ku have built a menu that treats Korean technique as a foundation rather than a theme. The five-course prix fixe moves through the meal with structure: there is restraint in the early courses, a gradual build in intensity, and desserts that land with real impact. According to Opinionated About Dining , which ranked Oiji Mi #63 in North America in 2025, up from #175 in 2024 , standouts include striped jack hwe finished with seaweed scallion vinaigrette, chili lobster ramyun with gochujang-tossed lobster over springy noodles, and cheese-stuffed chapssal donuts that close the meal on a confident note. That upward movement in the rankings over a single year is a meaningful signal: the kitchen is getting sharper, not coasting.
The beverage program is worth taking seriously. The cocktail list is creative without being theatrical, and the wine list is curated rather than exhaustive , which, for a Korean-forward menu, is the right call. If you're planning a special-occasion dinner and want to run a full pairing, this is a room where the drinks are selected with the food in mind rather than assembled to hit a revenue target.
The room itself is sleek and controlled. For a celebration or an important date, the setting works , it signals occasion without the stuffiness that can make some high-end New York dining rooms feel like performances of wealth rather than good meals. You will not feel underdressed in smart casual, though the overall register of the room does reward some effort. There is no dress code listed, but the clientele and the price point set expectations clearly.
One practical note relevant to special-occasion planning: Oiji Mi operates dinner-only, running 5 PM to 10 PM every day of the week. There is no lunch service, which simplifies the decision , if you want Oiji Mi, you are booking dinner. The consistent seven-day schedule also means weekend availability is the hardest to secure. Plan accordingly and book as far in advance as your timeline allows.
For a broader picture of where to eat, stay, and drink around this neighborhood, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City hotels guide, and our full New York City bars guide. If you're building a wider trip itinerary, our full New York City experiences guide and our full New York City wineries guide are worth a look too.
Booking difficulty is high. Oiji Mi is a Michelin-starred prix fixe with a strong and rising OAD ranking , demand is not softening. Reserve as far out as possible, especially for Friday and Saturday evenings. The venue runs dinner only, so there is no off-peak lunch slot to exploit. If your preferred date is not available, check back: cancellations do open up, particularly midweek.
| Detail | Oiji Mi | Atomix | Le Bernardin | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Contemporary Korean | Modern Korean | French Seafood | |
| Price Range | $$$$ | $$$$ | $$$$ | |
| Format | 5-course prix fixe | Tasting menu | Prix fixe / à la carte | |
| Hours | Daily 5–10 PM | Dinner only | Lunch & Dinner | |
| Booking Difficulty | Hard | Very Hard | Hard | |
| Michelin Stars | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| Leading For | Special occasion, date | Serious food occasion | Business, celebration |
See the full comparison section below.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oiji Mi | New Korean, Korean, Korean (Contemporary) | $$$$ | Hard |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan | $$$$ | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Atomix is the most direct comparison — also Michelin-starred, also modern Korean, but more immersive (and more expensive) with a longer tasting format. If you want Korean fine dining at a slightly lower commitment, Oiji Mi's five-course prix fixe at $$$$ is easier to book and more accessible in format. For non-Korean alternatives at a similar price point, Eleven Madison Park and Le Bernardin operate in the same tier but represent very different cuisine categories.
Oiji Mi is a Michelin-starred prix fixe in a sleek Flatiron dining room with a full service team — dress accordingly. Business casual to dressy is appropriate; jeans are fine if sharp, but this is not a casual neighbourhood spot. Think of it as the kind of place where underdressing will make you feel conspicuous.
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available records. Given the prix fixe format and the level of service staffing described by Opinionated About Dining, it is worth contacting the restaurant directly at 17 W 19th St to ask about counter or bar options before assuming walk-in availability.
Oiji Mi operates a prix fixe format with attentive table service, which works well for small groups of two to four. For larger parties, the structured five-course menu simplifies ordering logistics, but private dining availability is not confirmed in available records — check the venue's official channels to discuss group bookings above six.
Oiji Mi is dinner-only, open every day from 5 PM to 10 PM. There is no lunch service to compare against, so your only decision is how far in advance to book — demand is high given the Michelin star and a rising OAD ranking (#63 in North America for 2025).
Yes, if five-course prix fixe is a format you're comfortable with. Oiji Mi holds a Michelin star and ranked #63 in North America on OAD's 2025 list — credentials that reflect genuine kitchen consistency, not just hype. The OAD citation specifically calls out the refinement and subtlety of the flavor approach, which means this rewards diners who appreciate restraint over maximalism. If you want a longer, more theatrical tasting experience, Atomix is the upgrade; Oiji Mi sits in a more approachable register at the $$$$ price point.
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