Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Nine seats, no shortcuts, book early.

Yuji is a nine-seat kappo counter in Japantown running a 12-course seasonal menu under chef Takayuki Hagiwara. Recognised by a Michelin Plate in 2025 and consistently listed by Opinionated About Dining, it is one of San Francisco's strongest choices for an intimate special-occasion dinner — but seats are hard to secure and the format suits parties of one or two far better than larger groups.
If you have already been to Yuji once, you already know whether you are coming back. The nine-seat kappo counter in Japantown runs a 12-course seasonal menu that changes with enough regularity that a return visit is rarely repetitive — and the discipline of the kitchen, recognised by a Michelin Plate in 2025 and consistent placement on Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants list since 2023, holds. Book it for a special occasion, a date where the conversation needs to carry the room, or a solo meal where you want to eat at a counter run by someone who clearly knows what they are doing. If you are looking for a louder, more theatrical tasting experience, Lazy Bear or Atelier Crenn will suit you better. Yuji is quieter and more precise — which is either the point or the problem, depending on what you want.
Yuji sits at 1700 Post Street in the heart of San Francisco's Japantown, inside what Opinionated About Dining describes as an inconspicuous space that feels removed from the street outside. The room is small enough that the counter format is not a design choice , it is the entire architecture of the experience. Nine seats, all facing the kitchen, all subject to the same 12-course progression. There is no main room versus a better room. There is only the counter, and that uniformity is part of what makes Yuji function well as a special-occasion venue: every seat is the right seat.
Chef Takayuki Hagiwara works in the kappo tradition, which sits closer to an interactive counter experience than the more ceremonial kaiseki format. Dishes span hot and cold preparations across the progression, with pristinely fresh seafood appearing in multiple forms , clean sashimi cuts alongside fried preparations. OAD's description of ultra-crunchy fried tilefish and impeccably sliced sashimi gives a sense of the range the kitchen covers within a single meal. The progression closes with steamed rice, pickled vegetables, and miso soup , a grounding, deliberate ending , and a silky matcha custard that OAD notes as a final note of refinement. These are not invented details; they come from OAD's own write-up of the venue, which has tracked Yuji since at least 2023.
The seasonal structure means the menu shifts in ways that make a return visit worthwhile. OAD's mention of hairy crab enriching the steamed rice course is an example of how the kitchen incorporates seasonal ingredients at the menu's most satisfying point rather than as an opening flourish. If you are visiting in autumn or winter, that course is likely to read differently than a summer visit. This is relevant for planning: the experience you had six months ago is not quite the experience you will have today.
For a special occasion, the format has genuine advantages over larger, more formal tasting rooms. The counter keeps the meal social without requiring you to engineer conversation , you are watching the kitchen, and that shared focus removes the pressure of a purely face-to-face dining format. For two people celebrating something, or for a client dinner where the food should do most of the talking, Yuji works. It is less suited to groups larger than what the nine-seat counter can accommodate, and given there is no private dining room to speak of, this is effectively a venue for parties of one, two, or at most a small number of adjacent seats.
Google reviewers rate Yuji 4.9 out of 5 from 85 reviews , a high score from a relatively small base, which in practice means the floor of disappointment at this venue is low. Guests who arrive with the right expectations consistently leave satisfied. The expectation to calibrate is this: Yuji is not trying to compete on scale or spectacle. It competes on precision, seasonal attentiveness, and the integrity of the counter format. Against Benu or Quince, which operate larger rooms with more service infrastructure, Yuji feels intimate to the point of being spare. That is a feature for some diners and a limitation for others.
OAD's repeated placement of Yuji on its Leading Restaurants list , Highly Recommended in 2023, ranked #325 in 2024, ranked #349 in 2025 , reflects a kitchen that is consistent without being stagnant. The slight shift in ranking between 2024 and 2025 is worth noting but not overreading; OAD's list is competitive and its methodology rewards discovery of newer venues. The Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 confirms the kitchen meets a defined standard of quality, even if it has not yet attracted a star. For context on where this sits in the broader Japanese fine dining world, RyuGin in Tokyo and Gion Sasaki in Kyoto represent the ceiling of the format. Yuji is operating at a serious level for San Francisco without claiming that tier.
Booking at Yuji is hard. A nine-seat counter running dinner only, Tuesday through Sunday (closed Mondays and Sundays), with no walk-in culture at this format, means demand consistently outpaces availability. Plan a minimum of three to four weeks ahead for weekday slots, and longer for Friday or Saturday. OAD's write-up notes specifically that punctuality is not optional , the meal begins on time regardless of late arrivals. Treat this less like a restaurant reservation and more like a ticketed event: confirm the time, arrive early, and do not count on flexibility from the kitchen. There is no phone number or website in the public record we hold, which means booking likely runs through a third-party reservation platform; check Resy or Tock for current availability.
| Detail | Yuji | Lazy Bear | Benu |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price range | $$$$ | $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Cuisine | Kappo / Kaiseki | Progressive American | French-Chinese |
| Seats | ~9 (counter only) | ~40 | ~30 |
| Dinner only | Yes (Tue–Sat) | Yes | Yes |
| Booking difficulty | Hard | Hard | Hard |
| Private dining | No | Limited | Available |
| Awards (2025) | Michelin Plate, OAD #349 | Michelin Stars | Michelin Stars |
See the comparison section below.
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| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yuji | Kaiseki, Japanese | $$$$ | Hard |
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Atelier Crenn | Modern French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Benu | French - Chinese, Asian | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Quince | Italian, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Saison | Progressive American, Californian | $$$$ | Unknown |
How Yuji stacks up against the competition.
For Japanese fine dining at a similar price point, Yuji's closest SF peer is the kappo and kaiseki format at Hashiri. If you want a longer tasting format with more Western influence, Benu (three Michelin stars) and Quince are the benchmark comparisons. Atelier Crenn suits guests who want a narrative-driven tasting menu rather than a Japanese culinary tradition. Yuji's nine-seat counter and Opinionated About Dining recognition set it apart from larger, more accessible SF tasting rooms.
Yuji is one of the better solo dining options in San Francisco's fine dining tier. A nine-seat counter by design means solo diners are a natural fit — you have a direct sightline to the kitchen and the format does not penalise single bookings the way private-room tasting venues do. At $$$$ per head, it is a serious solo spend, but the counter setup justifies it.
This is not documented in available venue data for Yuji, and the 12-course kappo format — which revolves around pristinely fresh seafood and seasonal Japanese ingredients — leaves limited room for major substitutions by its nature. check the venue's official channels before booking if you have serious dietary restrictions; a nine-seat counter typically requires advance notice to adjust a set menu.
At $$$$ for a 12-course kappo menu, Yuji earns its price if the format suits you. Opinionated About Dining has ranked it among its top restaurants two consecutive years (2024 and 2025), and it holds a Michelin Plate. The progression — delicate bites, sashimi, fried courses, steamed rice, and matcha custard — is tightly structured. If you want à la carte flexibility or a more casual Japanese meal, look elsewhere; this counter demands full commitment to the format.
Yuji serves dinner only, Tuesday through Saturday, from 4 to 11 pm — there is no lunch service to compare. If a lunch tasting format is your preference, you will need to look at other venues.
The entire restaurant is a nine-seat counter, so every seat at Yuji is effectively a bar seat with a kitchen view. There is no separate dining room or tables — the counter is the format, not an option within it. Walk-ins are not realistic given the seat count and the difficulty of securing a reservation.
Yes, with caveats on group size. The nine-seat counter is well-suited to occasions for one or two diners; larger parties will struggle with availability. Opinionated About Dining's back-to-back top-restaurant recognition and the Michelin Plate give it the credibility profile that special occasions often call for. Punctuality matters here — Opinionated About Dining notes the meal begins without latecomers.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.