Restaurant in Osaka, Japan
Michelin French in Osaka without the ¥¥¥¥ bill.

nent holds a Michelin 1 Star (2024) and delivers serious French cooking in Osaka's Kita Ward at ¥¥¥, making it among the most accessible starred French options in the city. The basement counter format suits food-focused diners over large groups. Book four to six weeks ahead minimum — this one fills well before walk-in range.
The common assumption about Michelin-starred French dining in Osaka is that you're looking at a ¥¥¥¥ bill before the night is over. nent corrects that assumption. This basement-level French restaurant in Kita Ward holds a Michelin 1 Star (2024) and prices at ¥¥¥, putting it in a different bracket from peers like La Cime and LE PONT DE CIEL. If your question is whether the star is earned at this price, the short answer is yes — a Google rating of 4.2 across 43 reviews suggests consistent satisfaction, not a venue coasting on its award. Book it.
French restaurants in Japan often blur the line between European technique and the intimacy of Japanese counter dining, and nent sits squarely in that tradition. The B1F (basement) address is your first signal: this is a room designed for focus, not spectacle. Counter seating at venues like this puts you close to the kitchen's rhythm — the heat, the timing, the quiet precision of plating. It is a format that rewards attention. If you're booking nent for a conversation-heavy evening or a large group, you may find the format limiting. But if the meal itself is the point, the counter is exactly where you want to be. For food-focused diners travelling through the Kansai region who have already done Gion Sasaki in Kyoto or plan to visit akordu in Nara, nent fits naturally into that itinerary as the Osaka anchor for serious French cooking at a considered price.
The Shibata address in Kita Ward places nent in one of Osaka's more functional dining districts , not the tourist circuit of Dotonbori, but a neighbourhood where locals and visiting food enthusiasts eat seriously. The basement setting is worth flagging: it creates a degree of separation from street noise that works in the restaurant's favour, sharpening the focus on what's on the plate rather than what's outside.
For French restaurants operating at this level in Japan, the autumn and winter months (October through February) represent the strongest seasonal case. French technique applied to Japanese produce peaks during this period, when cold-weather ingredients , root vegetables, game, and coastal fish species at their leading in cooler water , give the kitchen the most to work with. If your travel window allows it, aim for a weekday dinner between November and January. Weekends at Michelin-starred venues in Osaka's Kita Ward fill quickly, and nent's booking difficulty is rated hard. A Tuesday or Wednesday reservation in late autumn is the practical sweet spot.
Avoid assuming you can walk in. With only 43 Google reviews logged, nent is not a venue that has been widely discussed in English-language travel content , but its star means it is well-known to Japanese diners and Osaka regulars. The seat count is not confirmed in available data, but basement French restaurants in this style and price tier in Japan typically run small, which only increases the booking pressure. Plan at least four to six weeks ahead, particularly for weekend slots.
Reservations: Hard to secure , plan four to six weeks in advance minimum, further for weekend dates in autumn and winter. Budget: ¥¥¥ per head, making this among the more accessible Michelin-starred French options in Osaka compared to ¥¥¥¥ peers. Location: B1F, 1 Chome-5-12 Shibata, Kita Ward, Osaka , walk from major Kita Ward train connections. Dress: No confirmed dress code in available data, but smart casual is the safe default for a Michelin-starred room in Japan. Group size: Counter-format dining at this level suits parties of two most naturally; larger groups should confirm table configuration when booking. Language: Confirm English-language reservation support directly with the venue, as booking infrastructure details are not confirmed in available data.
Osaka has a genuine depth of serious French cooking, and nent is one of several venues worth knowing. For context outside the city, Harutaka in Tokyo shows how Japanese precision applies at the highest level in a different format, and Goh in Fukuoka demonstrates the regional range of serious Western-influenced cooking across Japan. Further afield, Les Amis in Singapore and Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier represent what French fine dining looks like at the leading of its range internationally , useful benchmarks if you're calibrating expectations for what Michelin-starred French cooking can deliver at different price tiers. Within Osaka specifically, Différence, La Bécasse, and Point round out the French options worth considering depending on your budget and booking window. For planning beyond the restaurant, our full Osaka hotels guide, our full Osaka bars guide, and our full Osaka restaurants guide cover the wider picture. If sake bars and Japanese whisky are on the agenda, our Osaka wineries guide and experiences guide are worth a look, as is the 1000 in Yokohama and 6 in Okinawa if your Japan itinerary extends further.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| nent | French | Michelin 1 Star (2024) | Hard | — |
| HAJIME | French, Innovative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| La Cime | French | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama | Japanese | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| Taian | Kaiseki, Japanese | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| Fujiya 1935 | Innovative | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between nent and alternatives.
Contact nent directly before booking to raise any dietary restrictions. French tasting menus at this level — nent holds a 2024 Michelin Star — are typically built around a fixed sequence, which makes last-minute changes difficult. The earlier you communicate restrictions, the more likely the kitchen can accommodate them.
La Cime and Fujiya 1935 are the most direct comparisons in Osaka for serious French technique, though both tend to sit at a higher price point. Taian and Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama lean Japanese rather than French if you want to stay in Osaka's top tier but shift cuisine format. HAJIME is the ceiling for French in the city, with multiple Michelin Stars and pricing to match.
At ¥¥¥, nent is one of the more accessible entry points for Michelin-starred French in Osaka, a city where this format usually demands a ¥¥¥¥ budget. If you're comparing value against peers like HAJIME or Fujiya 1935, nent makes a strong case on price-to-award ratio. The format suits guests who want a structured, chef-led meal rather than an à la carte experience.
nent is a counter-format French restaurant in Osaka's Kita Ward — a basement-level space at 1 Chome-5-12 Shibata. Plan to book four to six weeks out minimum, extending to further in advance for autumn and winter weekends, when demand is highest. It's a Michelin Star venue at ¥¥¥, so arrive with the expectation of a set tasting experience, not a menu you browse.
Yes, provided the counter format suits your group. nent's Michelin Star (2024) and ¥¥¥ pricing make it one of the stronger cases for a celebration that doesn't require a ¥¥¥¥ outlay. It works well for two; larger groups should confirm table configuration at the time of booking, as counter seating has inherent limits.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.