Restaurant in Orlando, United States
Michelin-recognized sushi, well below fine-dining prices.

Edoboy is a Michelin Plate-recognized sushi counter in Orlando's Audubon Park neighborhood, earning consecutive Plates in 2024 and 2025 with a 4.9 Google rating from 312 reviews. At $$$, it is the clearest value case among Orlando's recognized fine dining options. Book two to three weeks ahead and treat the visit as intentional.
A Google rating of 4.9 across 312 reviews is not something you see at tourist-district sushi chains or casual roll shops. At Edoboy on North Thornton Avenue in Orlando's Audubon Park neighborhood, that number signals something specific: a small, serious sushi operation that has earned Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, which means Michelin's inspectors found cooking worth going out of your way for, two years running. If you have been once and are wondering whether to return, the short answer is yes. The longer answer is below.
Edoboy sits on North Thornton Avenue, in a part of Orlando that is not Disney-adjacent, not downtown, and not a hospitality district built around hotel foot traffic. It is a neighborhood restaurant in the truest sense: a sushi counter that earns its audience through quality rather than location convenience. For Orlando residents, that distinction matters. The city's dining scene has long been divided between theme-park-adjacent venues with captive audiences and a smaller tier of independently driven restaurants that compete on merit alone. Edoboy belongs firmly to the second group, and the Audubon Park corridor is better for having it.
That neighborhood anchor dynamic also shapes how you should approach a visit. This is not a venue you stumble into. You plan it, you book ahead, and you treat the trip itself as intentional. If you are visiting Orlando from elsewhere, factor in the drive from the resort corridor and build the evening around it rather than trying to combine it with other stops. See our full Orlando restaurants guide for context on how Edoboy fits within the city's broader dining map.
A Michelin Plate is not a star. It is Michelin's recognition that a restaurant serves food worth eating, awarded to venues that don't yet meet star criteria but clear the bar for quality. Two consecutive Plates, in 2024 and 2025, suggests Edoboy is operating consistently at a level that Michelin's inspectors consider notable. For sushi specifically, that is meaningful: Michelin inspectors evaluate technical precision, rice quality, sourcing, and the coherence of the overall experience. Earning the Plate two years running at a $$$ price point in a mid-sized American city is a signal that the kitchen is not coasting.
For context, other Michelin-recognized sushi destinations at the leading end of the global spectrum include Harutaka in Tokyo and Sushi Shikon in Hong Kong. Edoboy is not playing in that tier, nor does it need to. Its value proposition is different: serious sushi at a $$$ price in a city where few independents operate at this level of recognized quality.
At $$$, Edoboy sits below the $$$$ ceiling occupied by most of Orlando's other Michelin-acknowledged fine dining. That price positioning, combined with the double Plate recognition, makes it one of the stronger value cases in the city's higher-end restaurant tier. You are paying for craft, not for a room that costs $10 million to build, which is a meaningful distinction if you are weighing where to spend for a quality meal without committing to a full fine-dining blowout.
If you are returning after a first visit, the case for a second booking rests on whether the sushi format suits your preference. Sushi done well at this price tier rewards regulars who can track how the kitchen evolves across visits, what changes with the season, and how the fish sourcing shifts. If your first visit left you curious rather than fully satisfied, that is a reason to return, not to move on. The combination of the neighborhood setting and the Michelin recognition suggests a kitchen with a point of view worth engaging with more than once.
For comparison with other Michelin-recognized independent restaurants around the country, see Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Smyth in Chicago, and Le Bernardin in New York City, all operating at higher price tiers with star-level recognition, which puts Edoboy's Plate-level positioning in useful perspective.
With Michelin Plate status in consecutive years and a rating that suggests strong word-of-mouth demand, Edoboy warrants advance planning. Book at least two to three weeks out for a weekend seat. Weeknights may offer slightly more flexibility, but do not assume walk-in availability at a counter-format sushi venue with this profile. The booking difficulty here is rated moderate, which means seats exist if you plan ahead, but last-minute bookings on desirable evenings will be a challenge.
No phone number or website is currently listed in Pearl's database. Check Google or a booking platform to confirm current reservation options and hours before visiting.
Within Orlando's Japanese restaurant category, Edoboy competes alongside Kadence and Natsu, as well as the broader Japanese dining option at Sorekara. For a returning visitor deciding whether to go back to Edoboy or try one of those alternatives, the distinguishing factor is format and price. Edoboy's $$$ positioning offers Michelin-recognized quality at a tier below the $$$$ venues, which is a meaningful advantage if value within the quality tier matters to your decision.
For the full picture of dining options across cuisine types in the city, the Orlando restaurants guide covers everything from Camille's Vietnamese cooking to Capa's steakhouse format. For broader Orlando planning, see also our guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences.
Edoboy is a Michelin Plate-recognized sushi counter in Orlando's Audubon Park neighborhood. Two consecutive Plates (2024, 2025), a 4.9 Google rating from 312 reviews, and $$$ pricing make it the clearest value case in Orlando's recognized fine dining tier. Book two to three weeks ahead. Go with intent. If you have been once, it warrants a return.
Quick reference: 728 N Thornton Ave, Orlando, FL 32803 | Sushi | $$$ | Michelin Plate 2024 & 2025 | Google 4.9 (312 reviews) | Book 2–3 weeks ahead | Moderate booking difficulty.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Edoboy | Sushi | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Moderate | — |
| Sorekara | Japanese | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Camille | Vietnamese | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Papa Llama | Peruvian | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Victoria & Albert's | New American, Contemporary | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Capa | Steakhouse | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Edoboy measures up.
Yes, and it punches above its price point for the occasion. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) and a 4.9 Google rating signal consistent quality without the $$$$ price tag most Orlando special-occasion spots require. If you want a meaningful dinner that doesn't require the commitment of Victoria & Albert's pricing, Edoboy is the stronger call.
Specific menu items are not documented in available venue data, so ordering specifics should be confirmed at the time of booking or on arrival. Given the Michelin Plate recognition two years running, the sushi counter format is the draw — trust the house selections rather than building a custom roll order.
Dietary accommodation details are not confirmed in the venue record. For a sushi-focused counter at the $$$ price point with Michelin recognition, it's worth contacting the restaurant directly before booking if you have significant restrictions, as counter-format menus can be less flexible than à la carte.
Book at least two to three weeks in advance. Michelin Plate status in consecutive years, combined with a 4.9 rating across 300+ reviews, points to strong demand for a venue that is not operating at tourist-district scale. Weekend slots will go faster than weekday seatings.
At $$$, Edoboy sits below the $$$$ tier where most of Orlando's Michelin-acknowledged restaurants operate, and two consecutive Plates confirm the quality clears a meaningful bar. For sushi at this recognition level in Orlando, the price-to-quality ratio is difficult to beat. Kadence and Natsu compete in the same category, but neither carries consecutive Michelin Plate recognition.
Edoboy is on North Thornton Avenue in Audubon Park, away from downtown Orlando and tourist corridors — plan the trip intentionally rather than tacking it onto another itinerary. It's a sushi counter, not a large dining room, so the experience is focused. Two Michelin Plates mean the kitchen has been vetted twice; first-timers can arrive with confidence.
Capacity and private dining details are not confirmed in the venue record. Counter-format sushi venues typically seat smaller parties more comfortably than large groups, so parties of five or more should check the venue's official channels before assuming availability. For a large group celebration, Victoria & Albert's has dedicated private dining infrastructure.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.