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    Restaurant in Sapporo, Japan

    Sushinokura

    400Pearl Points

    Four seats, four Tabelog Bronze years running.

    Sushinokura, Restaurant in Sapporo

    About Sushinokura

    Sushinokura is a four-seat counter sushi restaurant in Sapporo's Chuo Ward, holding Tabelog Bronze status from 2023 through 2026 with a score of 4.16. Dinner runs JPY 20,000–29,999 per person. Cash only, reservation required via TERIYAKI Booking. Best for two or three people celebrating an occasion who want focused counter service built on Hokkaido's sourcing advantage.

    Should you book Sushinokura for a special occasion in Sapporo?

    Yes, if you want a counter sushi experience that has held Tabelog Bronze status every year from 2023 through 2026 and scored a 4.16 on Tabelog's public rating, this is one of the most credible options in Hokkaido for a celebration dinner. The caveat is logistical: four seats, cash only, reservation required through TERIYAKI Booking, and a single chef running everything from prep to service. If those conditions suit your evening, Sushinokura delivers at a price point of JPY 20,000–29,999 per person for dinner.

    What makes Sushinokura worth the price

    Hokkaido's position as Japan's primary seafood-producing region is the foundation of what Sushinokura is doing at this price tier. The island accounts for a disproportionate share of Japan's sea urchin, salmon, crab, scallop, and kelp harvest, which means a sushi counter in Sapporo operating at this award level has access to sourcing that counters in Tokyo or Osaka have to work harder to replicate. When you are paying JPY 20,000–29,999 per head at a four-seat counter in Chuo Ward, the logic is: proximity to the source translates directly into the quality on the plate. That is the case Sushinokura makes, and the four consecutive Tabelog Bronze awards suggest it holds up.

    The counter format matters here. With four seats and a solo operator, this is not a restaurant where you are processed through a rotation. You are in a room with a single chef who controls every element of the meal. For a date or a small celebration with close friends, that level of focus is part of what you are booking. Sushinokura's Tabelog listing tags it as a recommended occasion for friends, which fits: a two- or three-person group for a birthday or anniversary dinner is the ideal configuration. Children are not permitted, which keeps the room quiet and the focus on the food.

    The venue sits in the basement of the Otoi Building on Minami 2-jo Nishi 4-chome in Chuo Ward, roughly a four-minute walk from Odori Station on the Namboku, Tozai, and Toho lines, and about three minutes from the Nishi 4-chome streetcar stop. Getting there is not complicated; the basement location is what Tabelog classifies as a "hideout," which in practical terms means it does not present as a high-street restaurant from the outside. Plan to navigate by address or map rather than signage.

    Drinks are limited to sake (nihonshu) and wine. If you are hoping for a broad cocktail menu or beer, this is not that kind of counter. For a sushi dinner at this price level, sake pairing is the relevant choice, and the focused list keeps the decision simple.

    Key details and booking

    Sushinokura opens at 18:00 Monday through Saturday, with two complete seatings and the second beginning at 20:30. The venue is closed Sundays and public holidays. Online reservations through TERIYAKI Booking are the correct channel for new customers; the chef notes that phone availability is limited due to solo operation. Cash is the only accepted payment method, so arrive prepared: credit cards, electronic money, and QR code payments are all declined.

    With four seats and a single operator, walk-ins are not a realistic option. Booking difficulty is rated easy by Pearl standards, but that reflects reservation availability rather than the informality of the process. Secure your table in advance and confirm the cash payment requirement before arrival.

    How Sushinokura sits in Sapporo's award dining tier

    Sushinokura has been named to Tabelog's Sushi EAST "Tabelog 100" list in 2021, 2022, and 2025, a selection that places it among the most recognised sushi counters in eastern Japan. For context on what Tabelog Bronze means in competitive terms: the award is calibrated to identify restaurants with consistent, high-quality execution as measured by a large volume of diner reviews, not just critical recognition. A score of 4.16 with Bronze status held across four consecutive years is a signal of durability, not a single strong season.

    If you are comparing Sushinokura to other award-level sushi in Japan, counters such as Harutaka in Tokyo or experiences like Gion Sasaki in Kyoto operate at higher price points and with different sourcing logic. Sushinokura's argument is Hokkaido proximity. For broader Japan context, HAJIME in Osaka, Goh in Fukuoka, and akordu in Nara represent comparable award-level dining in different formats and cities. Within Sapporo's counter sushi category, Arima and aki nagao are the direct peers to weigh.

    Logistics at a glance

    DetailSushinokuraArima (Sapporo)Hanakoji Sawada
    CuisineSushiSushiKaiseki
    Price range (dinner)JPY 20,000–29,999Not listedNot listed
    Seats4Not listedNot listed
    Booking methodTERIYAKI Booking (online)See Pearl pageSee Pearl page
    PaymentCash onlySee Pearl pageSee Pearl page
    Tabelog awardBronze 2023–2026See Pearl pageSee Pearl page
    ChildrenNot allowedSee Pearl pageSee Pearl page

    Pearl's verdict

    Book Sushinokura if you want a focused, small-counter sushi dinner in Sapporo with a credible four-year award track record, at a price that reflects Hokkaido's sourcing advantage. It is the right choice for two or three people marking an occasion who are comfortable with cash-only payment and advance online booking. If you need a larger table, a private room, or card payment, look at other options in Sapporo's award tier. For everything else, this counter earns its reputation.

    For more dining options in the city, see our full Sapporo restaurants guide. If you are planning a wider trip, our Sapporo hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city. For comparable award-level Japanese dining, 1000 in Yokohama and Atomix in New York City offer different formats worth considering. Within Sapporo, Hidetaka, Higebozu, and Hanakoji Sawada round out the award-dining options. Le Bernardin in New York City is a useful reference point for seafood-forward fine dining at a global standard.

    Frequently asked questions

    • Can I eat at the bar at Sushinokura? Sushinokura is a counter-only restaurant with four seats, so the counter is the entire dining room. There is no separate bar area. All seats face the chef, which is standard for a counter of this size and format. Reserve in advance through TERIYAKI Booking; walk-ins are not practical.
    • Can Sushinokura accommodate groups? The restaurant seats four people in total and is available for private use, so a group of up to four can book the entire venue exclusively. If your party is larger than four, Sushinokura cannot accommodate you at a single seating. For groups, consider Hanakoji Sawada or other Sapporo venues with larger capacity. Contact via TERIYAKI Booking rather than by phone, as the chef notes limited phone availability.
    • Is Sushinokura good for solo dining? Yes. A four-seat counter run by a solo chef is well suited to a single diner: you get the chef's full attention and the counter format is standard for solo sushi in Japan. At JPY 20,000–29,999 per person, the per-head cost is the same regardless of party size, so there is no penalty for dining alone. Book through TERIYAKI Booking and bring cash.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Sushinokura? Sushinokura does not serve lunch. The kitchen opens at 18:00 Monday through Saturday, with a second seating at 20:30. Dinner is your only option. If you prefer the 18:00 first seating, book early as the four-seat counter fills quickly for each session.
    • What are alternatives to Sushinokura in Sapporo? For sushi at a comparable award level, Arima is the most direct peer. If you want a different format, Hanakoji Sawada offers kaiseki and Nukumi focuses on Hokkaido crab. For a lower price point with strong local credentials, Menya Saimi is Sapporo's reference ramen counter. The right choice depends on your format preference: counter sushi stays closest to what Sushinokura offers.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Sushinokura?

    Yes — counter seating is the only format. Sushinokura has just 4 seats at the counter, so every guest is at the bar. That also means the experience is fully front-row: you are watching a solo chef handle preparation and service throughout the meal. Reservation via TERIYAKI Booking is required; walk-ins are not the operating model here.

    Can Sushinokura accommodate groups?

    Only up to 4 people, since that is the total seat count. The venue is available for private use, so a party of 4 can effectively book the entire space. Groups larger than 4 cannot be seated together — if your party exceeds that, you will need to split visits or consider a venue with a larger counter.

    Is Sushinokura good for solo dining?

    It is one of the better formats for solo dining in Sapporo's award tier. A 4-seat counter with a single chef working both preparation and service is a focused, unhurried setting — solo guests are not filling an awkward table. At JPY 20,000–29,999 for dinner and a Tabelog score of 4.16, it delivers comparable value per seat to much larger omakase venues, without the group-dining pressure.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Sushinokura?

    Dinner only — Sushinokura does not serve lunch. The kitchen opens at 18:00, with two complete seatings and the second starting at 20:30. If the 20:30 slot suits you, book it: later seatings at small counters like this tend to be less rushed. The venue is closed Sundays and public holidays, so plan your Sapporo itinerary accordingly.

    What are alternatives to Sushinokura in Sapporo?

    Within Sapporo's award dining tier, Hanakoji Sawada offers a different format if you want a more formal kaiseki-influenced experience rather than a pure sushi counter. For a change of cuisine entirely, Le Musee IDEA covers Western fine dining in the city. If the 4-seat intimacy of Sushinokura appeals but you want a fallback option due to booking difficulty, Arima and Nukumi are worth checking — though Sushinokura's four consecutive Tabelog Bronze wins from 2023 to 2026 give it a documented track record that is harder to match in this price band.

    Location

    乙井ビル 地下1階, 4 Chome Minami 2 Jonishi, Chuo Ward, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-0062, Japan

    Sapporo, Japan

    Also Consider

    Within Sapporo's award dining tier, Sushinokura and Arima are the two counters to weigh if sushi is your format. Both carry Tabelog recognition. Sushinokura's argument is its four-seat scale and solo-operator focus: you get an undivided counter experience. If Arima offers more seats or a different booking channel, that may suit larger parties or those who want a more flexible reservation process. For a special-occasion sushi dinner for two or three, Sushinokura is the more concentrated experience.

    If you are open to a different cuisine format, Hanakoji Sawada offers kaiseki, which covers more of Hokkaido's seasonal produce across a multi-course structure rather than anchoring on seafood alone. Hanakoji Sawada is the stronger choice if your group includes someone less focused on sushi or if you want the kaiseki pacing for a longer celebration dinner. Nukumi is the right call if Hokkaido crab specifically is the occasion, rather than a broader sushi progression.

    For diners who want award-level food without the JPY 20,000+ commitment, Menya Saimi is Sapporo's most credible ramen counter and sits at a significantly lower price point. It is not a substitute for Sushinokura as a celebration venue, but it is the answer if budget is the constraint. Le Musee IDEA covers French cuisine if your group is split between Japanese and Western formats. The practical note that applies across all these options: cash-only payment at Sushinokura is the most operationally limiting factor. If card payment matters, check peer venues before committing.

    Hours

    Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat, Day before public holiday, Day after public holiday 18:00 - 22:30

    Recognized By

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