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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    Mensho

    320pts

    San Francisco's most decorated affordable ramen.

    Mensho, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About Mensho

    Mensho is the most credentialed affordable Japanese restaurant in San Francisco, holding a Michelin Plate and consecutive Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats rankings. Chef Tomoharu Shono's ramen counter on Geary delivers serious technique at a single-dollar-sign price point. Easy to book, high on consistency, and the right call for food-focused visitors who don't want to spend $$$$ to eat well.

    The Verdict

    If you have been to Mensho once, the question on a return visit is not whether the ramen is still good — it is. The question is whether the bowl in front of you is the same bowl you remember. At this price tier (a single dollar sign, meaning most visits land well under $25), Mensho at 672 Geary St earns its place on the San Francisco restaurant shortlist through consistency and craft rather than novelty. Chef Tomoharu Shono has built a reputation serious enough to attract Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, plus a top-30 ranking in Opinionated About Dining's North American Cheap Eats list as recently as 2023. That is a meaningful credential set for a ramen counter on Geary. Book it.

    What You Are Walking Into

    The room does the job without performing. Expect a counter-forward setup where the visual drama, if there is any, is in the bowls arriving in front of you: the colour of the tare, the sheen of the broth, the placement of toppings. This is a functional dining environment, not a designed one, and that is appropriate for the format. The focus here is the bowl, not the backdrop.

    Mensho belongs to a specific register of Japanese ramen that takes technique seriously without pricing itself into fine dining. Chef Shono has operated iterations of Mensho in Tokyo as well, so this is not a single-location phenomenon. The San Francisco outpost has developed its own following, reflected in a 4.5 Google rating across nearly 3,000 reviews — a signal of volume and sustained satisfaction rather than a one-off spike. For context on how serious Japanese cooking operates at other price points in the city, Nisei and Gozu are both worth knowing, but they sit in entirely different price tiers. Mensho is the answer when your budget is tight but your standards are not.

    Why the Seasonal Angle Matters Here

    Ramen in Japan has always had a seasonal dimension that rarely gets communicated clearly to diners in the US. The base broth , whether shio, shoyu, tonkotsu, or tare-forward , is not the only variable. Temperature, fat content, and toppings shift in serious ramen kitchens depending on what is in season and what the weather demands. At a venue like Mensho, where the OAD Cheap Eats ranking has shifted year over year (30th in 2023, 77th in 2024, 89th in 2025), this is worth paying attention to: the menu is not static. What earned the highest ranking in 2023 may not be what you encounter in 2025, and that is not necessarily a decline , it may be a deliberate evolution of the offering.

    If you are a return visitor, this is where the experience earns its depth. A first-timer is discovering the format; a second-timer is in a position to track what has changed and make a more targeted order. The OAD ranking movement is a useful signal: the restaurant has shifted in the list, which suggests the evaluators are tracking changes across visits too. Come back in different seasons if you are serious about the category. San Francisco's mild climate does not create the same hard seasonal breaks as Tokyo, but the kitchen's sourcing and adjustment cycles still produce a meaningfully different bowl depending on when you visit.

    For a deeper comparison of how Japanese restaurants in this city approach seasonality, Iyasare and Izakaya Rintaro both take seasonal sourcing seriously, though across different Japanese formats. Delage is another reference point if you are building a Japanese-leaning itinerary in the city.

    How It Compares to the Wider Ramen and Japanese Category

    Mensho is comfortably the most credentialed ramen option at this price point in San Francisco. The Michelin Plate designation is not a star, but it does signal that the tyre company's inspectors found the food worth documenting , meaningful for a single-dollar-sign venue. The OAD Cheap Eats ranking places it in direct comparison with the leading affordable Japanese and ramen spots across North America, not just locally. If you are tracking Chef Shono's broader influence or comparing this to serious ramen in Tokyo, venues like Myojaku and Azabu Kadowaki give you a benchmark for how Tokyo's Japanese dining operates at the high end , a very different register, but useful context for understanding what Mensho is drawing from technically.

    At the national level, the gap between Mensho and trophy restaurants like The French Laundry in Napa or Alinea in Chicago is not just price , it is format, occasion, and intent. Mensho is a weekday lunch or casual dinner, not an anniversary booking. Its peer set is other serious cheap-eats counters, and within that set it has consistently ranked highly. Providence in Los Angeles, Le Bernardin in New York, and Emeril's in New Orleans are all context for California's fine-dining tier , Mensho occupies a completely different lane and wins decisively within it.

    Practical Details

    DetailMensho (672 Geary St)
    Price tier$ (under $25/head typical)
    AwardsMichelin Plate 2024 & 2025; OAD Cheap Eats North America (2023, 2024, 2025)
    Google rating4.5 / 5 (2,927 reviews)
    Booking difficultyEasy
    CuisineJapanese (ramen)
    LocationTenderloin/Lower Nob Hill, San Francisco
    HoursNot confirmed , check directly before visiting
    ReservationsNot confirmed , walk-in likely; verify before visit

    Also Worth Knowing

    • The OAD ranking has shifted over three consecutive years (30 → 77 → 89), which suggests evaluator scores have tightened. This does not mean quality has dropped , OAD rankings reflect a competitive and growing field , but it is worth tracking if you are using rankings as your primary filter.
    • Geary Street sits in the Tenderloin/Lower Nob Hill corridor. Parking is tight; public transit or rideshare is the practical call.
    • For a fuller picture of eating and drinking in the city, see our San Francisco bars guide, our San Francisco hotels guide, our San Francisco wineries guide, and our San Francisco experiences guide.
    • Serious ramen at this price tier rewards ordering with purpose. If it is your first visit, get the signature broth; if it is a return visit, ask what has changed seasonally.

    Who Should Book

    Book Mensho if you want the most decorated affordable Japanese meal in San Francisco. It is the right call for solo diners, food-focused travelers on a budget, or anyone who wants to understand what serious ramen looks like before spending multiples more on fine dining. Skip it only if ramen is not your format , in which case Izakaya Rintaro or Iyasare offer Japanese cooking in a different register at a similar or slightly higher price point. For everything else in the city, start with our full San Francisco restaurants guide.

    Compare Mensho

    Full Comparison: Mensho
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    MenshoJapaneseOpinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #89 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #77 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America in Ranked #30 (2023)Easy
    Lazy BearProgressive American, ContemporaryMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Atelier CrennModern French, ContemporaryMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    BenuFrench - Chinese, AsianMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    QuinceItalian, ContemporaryMichelin 3 StarUnknown
    SaisonProgressive American, CalifornianMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Comparing your options in San Francisco for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Mensho worth the price?

    At $ pricing, Mensho is the most credentialed ramen in San Francisco by a clear margin — Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, plus an OAD Cheap Eats North America ranking that climbed to #30 in 2023 before settling at #77 and #89 in subsequent years. For what you spend, there is no comparable decorated option at this price point in the city. The value case is straightforward.

    What should a first-timer know about Mensho?

    Go in knowing this is a counter-forward ramen shop, not a full-service Japanese restaurant. The draw is the bowl itself, shaped by chef Tomoharu Shono's approach to seasonal ramen. Lines form, particularly at peak hours, so arriving early or off-peak is the practical move. Mensho sits at 672 Geary St in the Tenderloin-adjacent stretch of San Francisco.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Mensho?

    Mensho is a ramen-focused venue, not a tasting menu format — the experience is built around individual bowls rather than a multi-course progression. If a structured tasting menu is the priority, venues like Benu or Atelier Crenn serve that format, at a significantly higher price. Mensho's case rests on doing a single thing at a high level for $ spend.

    Is Mensho good for solo dining?

    Yes — counter seating makes solo dining the natural fit here. You order a bowl, you eat it, the format is designed for it. Solo food-focused travelers and locals who want a credentialed meal without coordinating a group will find Mensho easier to execute than most San Francisco Japanese options at any price tier.

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