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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    The Shota

    570pts

    Counter precision. Book six weeks out.

    The Shota, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About The Shota

    A Michelin-starred counter in San Francisco's Financial District, The Shota combines Edomae sushi with kaiseki-paced composed dishes built on imported Japanese ingredients and local California produce. Ranked #399 on OAD's North America list in 2025, it is one of the city's most serious sushi commitments — hard to book, worth the effort for focused omakase diners.

    Should You Book The Shota?

    If you come back a second time, the format will feel familiar — counter seats, a structured progression of Edomae nigiri woven through kaiseki-style composed dishes, imported Japanese ingredients alongside California produce — but the menu moves with the seasons, which is exactly the point. For a first-timer, the question is simpler: The Shota is a Michelin-starred counter in San Francisco's Financial District that ranked #399 on Opinionated About Dining's North America list in 2025, and it earns that position on the quality of its sourcing and the precision of its execution. At the $$$$ price tier, it is one of the more serious sushi commitments you can make in the city. Book it if ingredient-driven omakase with a kaiseki dimension is what you are after. Look elsewhere if you want a purely traditional Edo-style experience without the composed courses.

    The Counter Experience

    The Shota operates out of 115 Sansome Street, inside an office building in the Financial District , an address that does nothing to signal what is inside, which is part of what makes the first visit disorienting in the leading sense. The counter format here is not incidental to the meal; it is the meal. Chef Ingi Son works in front of you, and the proximity means you are watching the sourcing philosophy play out in real time: imported Japanese ingredients meeting local California produce, course by course.

    For a first-timer, understanding the structure helps. This is not a straight nigiri progression. The menu combines Edomae sushi technique with kaiseki pacing, which means small composed dishes appear between nigiri, each one calibrated to highlight a seasonal ingredient. According to Opinionated About Dining's notes on the restaurant, dishes have included chawanmushi described as delicate and silky, studded with fava beans and borage flowers, alongside nigiri such as kasugo , young seabream with jewel-skinned fillets , and firefly squid with broccoli rabe, white miso, and mandarin. These are not permanent menu fixtures; they reflect what the kitchen is working with at any given time. Do not arrive expecting a fixed list.

    The counter seating means there is no hiding behind a table for two. You are in the room, part of the rhythm, and the pacing is controlled by the kitchen. That works in your favour if you are paying attention and against you if you were hoping for a more private dinner. The Shota is a focused experience, and the counter format enforces that focus.

    Ratings and Recognition

    The Shota holds a Michelin one star (2024) and has appeared on Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in North America list in both 2024 (#411) and 2025 (#399), moving up the ranking year over year. Its Google rating sits at 4.8 from 225 reviews, which is consistent with a venue where most diners arrive with high expectations and leave having met them. For context on what that ranking means: OAD's North America list is critic- and diner-driven, and a placement in the top 400 puts The Shota in the same tier as destinations that draw visitors specifically to eat there, not just locals filling a Tuesday night.

    Booking and Logistics

    Getting a table at The Shota is hard. Plan for a booking window of four to six weeks minimum, and expect competition. The restaurant operates Wednesday through Sunday, 5 to 9 pm only, with Monday and Tuesday closed. That five-night window and a counter format mean availability is genuinely limited. Check back regularly if your preferred date is full , cancellations do come up, but the window is narrow. There is no phone number listed publicly, so your leading route is through the reservation platform the restaurant uses; check the venue's website directly for the current booking method. Go in with flexible dates if you can.

    The Financial District location is practical for anyone staying in or near downtown San Francisco. It is an area built around office hours, which means the street is quiet by the time dinner service starts , a different atmosphere than dining in the Mission or Hayes Valley. If you are building a broader San Francisco evening around the meal, plan your pre-dinner drink separately; the immediate neighbourhood does not offer much. For broader planning, our full San Francisco restaurants guide covers the city's dining options by neighbourhood and format, and our San Francisco bars guide can help you find somewhere for a drink beforehand.

    Who Should Book

    The Shota is the right call for a diner who wants a counter seat at a technically precise, ingredient-focused meal that goes beyond straight sushi. The kaiseki integration makes it more structured than a traditional omakase and more interesting if you want to see California produce used alongside imported Japanese product in a single cohesive menu. It is a strong choice for solo diners , the counter format is genuinely well-suited to eating alone, with the kitchen providing natural rhythm and focus. Couples work well here too. Large groups do not: the counter format is not designed for parties, and the intimate pacing would be disrupted.

    For comparison within the San Francisco sushi category, jū-ni offers a more traditional omakase format that is slightly more accessible on timing, while Kusakabe blends kaiseki and sushi in a similar spirit to The Shota, giving you a direct alternative if your dates do not align. Hamano Sushi is a lower-pressure, lower-price option if you want Japanese without the omakase commitment. Outside the city, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg is the Northern California reference point for kaiseki-influenced tasting menus at a similar price tier, and The French Laundry in Napa remains the region's benchmark for structured fine dining if you are weighing a day-trip option. Internationally, Masa in New York City and Sushi Masaki Saito in Toronto represent the North American high end of the omakase format for direct style comparison.

    The Shota is not the easiest restaurant to get into, and it is not the cheapest meal you will have in San Francisco. But the OAD ranking, the Michelin star, and the consistency of its Google score point in the same direction: this is a kitchen operating at a level that justifies the effort of booking it. If the format fits what you are looking for, do not wait.

    Compare The Shota

    Value Check: The Shota and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    The Shota$$$$Hard
    Lazy Bear$$$$Unknown
    Atelier Crenn$$$$Unknown
    Benu$$$$Unknown
    Quince$$$$Unknown
    Saison$$$$Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is The Shota worth the price?

    At $$$$, The Shota earns it — a Michelin star (2024) and back-to-back appearances on Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in North America list (#411 in 2024, #399 in 2025) put it among the most credentialed counters in the city. The format combines Edomae nigiri with kaiseki-style composed dishes, which means you are getting considerably more material and technique than a straight sushi-only omakase. If you want just nigiri and nothing else, the format may feel overbuilt for the price. For diners who want precision cooking across a full progression, it justifies the spend.

    Is lunch or dinner better at The Shota?

    The Shota operates dinner only, Wednesday through Sunday, 5–9 pm. There is no lunch service. Monday and Tuesday are closed, so plan around that schedule when booking.

    Can The Shota accommodate groups?

    The Shota is a counter-format restaurant inside an office building at 115 Sansome Street — counter seating is not built for large groups. Parties of two are the natural fit. If you are considering a group of four or more, verify availability and seating configuration directly with the restaurant before booking, as the counter format typically limits how many seats can be held together.

    What should I wear to The Shota?

    The venue sits inside a Financial District office building, and the counter format signals a focused dining environment rather than a casual one. At $$$$ per head with a Michelin star, dressing neatly — think smart or business casual — is the practical read. Nothing in the venue data specifies a dress code, so when in doubt, err toward polished.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at The Shota?

    Yes, with a specific caveat: the format combines Edomae sushi with kaiseki-style composed dishes using imported Japanese ingredients and local California produce. If that hybrid structure appeals to you, the menu is well-suited to the price. If you want a traditional nigiri-only omakase without the interstitial composed plates, a more focused sushi-only counter might serve you better.

    How far ahead should I book The Shota?

    Plan for four to six weeks minimum. The Shota is among the harder reservations in San Francisco — Michelin-starred, counter-only, and operating just five nights a week. Do not assume last-minute availability. Book as early as the reservation window allows.

    Is The Shota good for solo dining?

    Counter-format restaurants are generally well-suited to solo diners, and The Shota is no exception. A single seat is easier to secure than a pair, which can actually work in your favour given how competitive the booking window is. The counter also puts you close to the preparation, which adds to the experience for a solo diner paying close attention to the technique.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    5–9 pm
    Thursday
    5–9 pm
    Friday
    5–9 pm
    Saturday
    5–9 pm
    Sunday
    5–9 pm

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