Restaurant in Kyoto, Japan
Noguchi Tsunagu
600Pearl PointsKyoto pedigree, Osaka address, book early.

About Noguchi Tsunagu
Noguchi Tsunagu is the Osaka outpost of one of Kyoto's most respected Japanese restaurants, holding a Michelin star and a Tabelog Award 2026 Bronze with a score of 3.96. With only 17 seats and a fish-focused omakase format, it is one of the harder reservations in Kansai — budget JPY 50,000–60,000 all-in and book well in advance by phone.
Verdict: Book it — but act well ahead of schedule
Noguchi Tsunagu is the Osaka outpost of one of Kyoto's most respected Japanese restaurants, opened in March 2025 inside the Grand Green Osaka South Building. With just 17 seats, a Tabelog Award 2026 Bronze recognition, a Tabelog score of 3.96, and a Michelin star from 2024, this is one of the harder reservations to secure in the Kansai region right now. If you're serious about Japanese cuisine and are travelling to Osaka or Kyoto, this should be near the leading of your list — but you need to plan well in advance.
What to expect
The room holds 11 counter seats and 6 table seats. That scarcity is not incidental , it shapes the entire experience. Counter seating puts you close to the preparation; table seating allows for more relaxed conversation. The atmosphere is calm and unhurried: a quiet, focused room rather than a social or convivial one. If you're after high energy or a buzzy dining room, this is the wrong venue. The format here rewards patience and attention. Noise levels stay low, which makes Noguchi Tsunagu a better fit for a meaningful dinner with someone you want to actually talk to, rather than a group celebration that needs volume.
The kitchen is particular about fish , the Tabelog record flags this explicitly , and the menu rotates around seasonal omakase-style courses. The meal structure moves through a procession of seasonal dishes, including wagyu stew, and closes with freshly cooked white rice and miso soup. Rice accompaniments such as fried fish, fried chicken, or braised pork are worth requesting. Sake (Nihonshu) and wine are available to accompany the meal. This is an experience designed to be eaten in the room, at pace, as a complete arc , not a format that lends itself to takeout or delivery. The kitchen's emphasis on freshly cooked rice and sequential course progression means off-premise dining is not a meaningful option here.
Price and booking
Budget: course pricing runs JPY 30,000–39,999 per person for both lunch and dinner; actual spend based on reviews averages JPY 50,000–59,999 once beverages and any additional orders are added. Credit cards are accepted; electronic money and QR code payments are not. Reservations: phone reservation is the primary method , call +81-6-7653-0062 and flag any dietary restrictions or allergies at the time of booking. Seats: 17 total (11 counter, 6 table). Private room: available for parties of 4. Children: welcome for those aged 13 and over who can take the full adult course. Parking: available in the Grand Green Osaka South Building basement. Smoking: non-smoking throughout.
Cancellation terms are strict: 30% from reservation until 4 days prior; 50% from 3 to 2 days out; 100% from the day before. Book as far in advance as possible , this is not a venue where last-minute availability is realistic. The restaurant operates on irregular holidays, so confirm your visit directly with the venue before finalising travel plans around it.
How It Compares
See the full comparison section below for how Noguchi Tsunagu sits against Kyoto's top-tier Japanese dining options.
Explore more in Kyoto and beyond
For other top-tier kaiseki and Japanese dining in Kyoto, Pearl's coverage includes Isshisoden Nakamura, Gion Matayoshi, Kikunoi Roan, Kodaiji Jugyuan, and Kyokaiseki Kichisen. See the full Kyoto restaurants guide, Kyoto hotels guide, Kyoto bars guide, Kyoto wineries guide, and Kyoto experiences guide. If you're covering the wider region, Pearl also covers HAJIME in Osaka, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, Harutaka in Tokyo, Myojaku in Tokyo, Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Noguchi Tsunagu?
Yes. The room has 11 counter seats out of 17 total, so counter dining is the primary format here, not an afterthought. Counter seats give you the closest view of the kitchen and are the default booking for solo diners or pairs. If you prefer a table, there are 6 table seats available, but book early either way — at JPY 30,000–39,999 per person before drinks, this is not a walk-in venue.
What should I order at Noguchi Tsunagu?
The format is a set course, but you can supplement with à la carte additions chosen from the day's ingredients. The menu is fish-focused, and the kitchen finishes with freshly cooked white rice served with accompaniments such as fried fish, fried chicken, or braised pork — reviewers flag this as a highlight. One practical note: beverages are charged separately on the day, and actual spend based on reviews runs JPY 50,000–59,999 once drinks are added.
Can Noguchi Tsunagu accommodate groups?
Parties of up to 4 can book the private room, and the venue is available for full private hire. With only 17 seats total, larger groups are not really the format — if you need space for 6 or more without buyout, look elsewhere. For 2–4, the private room option works well and suits a special occasion without the open-counter dynamic.
Is Noguchi Tsunagu good for a special occasion?
It is a strong choice. Tabelog users specifically cite it as family-friendly for occasions, private rooms are available for up to 4, and the Michelin 1-star credential (2024) gives it the weight a celebration warrants. At an average real-world spend of JPY 50,000–59,999 per person including drinks, set expectations accordingly — this is a high-commitment dinner, not a casual splurge.
What are alternatives to Noguchi Tsunagu in Kyoto?
For kaiseki in Kyoto specifically, Kikunoi Roan is the most accessible Michelin-recognised option with a slightly lower price ceiling. Kyokaiseki Kichisen sits at the very top of the format in Kyoto but is significantly harder to book and more expensive. Gion Sasaki is worth considering if you want a fish-forward counter experience in Gion itself. Noguchi Tsunagu is technically in Osaka, not Kyoto, so factor in travel time if Kyoto is your base.
Is Noguchi Tsunagu worth the price?
At JPY 30,000–39,999 for the course alone — and closer to JPY 50,000–59,999 with drinks — this is serious money. The Michelin 1-star (2024) and Tabelog Bronze 2026 with a score of 3.96 suggest the kitchen delivers at that level consistently. If you are already committed to high-end kaiseki in the Osaka-Kyoto corridor, the value holds. If you are price-sensitive or unfamiliar with the format, the spend is hard to justify.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Noguchi Tsunagu?
The set course is the only real way to eat here — it is the format the kitchen is built around. The structure moves from seasonal dishes through to a rice course with fish or meat accompaniments, and you can add à la carte items from that day's ingredients. For guests who want to direct their own meal, this is not the right venue. For those who trust a kitchen with a Michelin star and a Tabelog score of 3.96, the format suits.
Location
371-4 Kiyomotocho, Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto, 605-0084, Japan
Kyoto, Japan
Compare Noguchi Tsunagu
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Noguchi Tsunagu | ¥¥¥ | Hard |
| Gion Sasaki | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| cenci | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Ifuki | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Kyokaiseki Kichisen | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| SEN | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
A quick look at how Noguchi Tsunagu measures up.
Also Consider
- Gion Sasaki, Kaiseki, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
- cenci, Italian, ¥¥¥
- Ifuki, Kaiseki, ¥¥¥¥
- Kyokaiseki Kichisen, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
- SEN, French, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
Noguchi Tsunagu sits at a distinct price point relative to Kyoto's top-tier competition. At ¥¥¥ on list price (with real-world spend closer to ¥¥¥¥ once drinks are included), it undercuts the standard ask at Kyokaiseki Kichisen and Gion Sasaki, both of which sit firmly at ¥¥¥¥ and carry comparable or higher prestige in the kaiseki category. If your priority is depth of kaiseki tradition and you're comfortable paying for it, Gion Sasaki and Ifuki are the stronger choices in Kyoto proper. Noguchi Tsunagu's fish-forward omakase format is more focused than a full kaiseki progression, which can be an advantage or a limitation depending on what you want from the meal.
For a different register entirely, cenci offers Italian at ¥¥¥ and is meaningfully easier to book, the right option if you want a high-quality meal without the reservation difficulty. SEN at ¥¥¥¥ blends French and Japanese approaches and suits diners who want a more hybrid format than Noguchi Tsunagu's Japanese-only menu provides.
On booking difficulty, Noguchi Tsunagu is hard but not impossible, its 2025 opening date means it hasn't yet accumulated the multi-month waitlists of Kyoto's most established kaiseki rooms. That window may close as the restaurant builds its reputation. Book it now if the format appeals; in two or three years, securing a seat may require significantly more lead time.
Recognized By
Explore Kyoto
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