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    Restaurant in Newport Beach, United States

    Sushi ii

    210Pearl Points

    Hard to book. Worth the planning.

    Sushi ii, Restaurant in Newport Beach

    About Sushi ii

    A Michelin Plate holder for 2024 and 2025, Sushi ii is Newport Beach's most recognized Japanese counter at the $$$$ tier. Book at least two to three weeks out — this is not a walk-in venue. Come in person; the counter experience is the point, and the food does not justify the price once you take it off-site.

    Verdict: Worth the Effort to Book, but Go In-Person

    Getting a seat at Sushi ii takes planning. This is not a walk-in spot, and at the $$$$ price tier, you should treat it like the considered reservation it is. Chefs Koji Takahashi and Norio Izawa have held a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which puts Sushi ii in a small group of recognized Japanese restaurants on the Orange County coast. If you are returning after a first visit, the question is no longer whether the kitchen can deliver, it is how to get the most out of the next time. Book directly and book early.

    The Space

    Sushi ii sits on the second floor at 100 West Coast Hwy in Newport Beach, suite 202, which immediately sets a different tone from street-level casual dining. Second-floor omakase-style rooms in this format tend to be compact and counter-focused, which shapes the entire dining experience: the physical distance between diner and chef is short, the room is quiet enough for conversation, and the pacing is set by the kitchen rather than by a floor manager turning tables. If you are coming as a pair, this format works strongly in your favour. Larger groups should confirm whether the configuration accommodates them before booking, because a room designed around a tight counter does not always flex well for four or more.

    On Returning: What to Focus On Next

    If you have been once, you already know the kitchen's baseline. The Michelin Plate recognition in consecutive years signals consistency rather than a one-season performance, so the fundamentals will hold. For a returning visit, the angle worth pursuing is timing: a counter seat at a quieter service window gives you more direct engagement with the chefs than a peak Friday booking. Japanese dining at this price tier rewards the guest who pays attention to pacing and asks questions, and that is easier when the room is not at full capacity.

    On the food itself: without confirmed current menu data, the safest approach is to let the kitchen lead. At a Michelin-recognized Japanese counter in the $$$$ range, the omakase format, if offered, is almost always the higher-value choice compared to ordering individually. You are paying for the chefs' sequencing and sourcing judgment, and the tasting progression is where that shows. Check current availability and format directly with the venue when booking, as hours and menu structures are not confirmed in current data.

    The Takeout and Delivery Question

    This is a point worth being direct about: sushi at this level does not travel well, and the physical format of Sushi ii matters to the experience. The counter setting, the interaction with the chefs, and the precision of temperature and texture at service are core to what you are paying for in the $$$$ tier. Takeout from a Michelin-recognized sushi counter is a trade-off that strips the experience of most of what justifies the price. If convenience is the priority on a given evening, there are better-value options in Newport Beach for off-premise dining. If the question is whether Sushi ii's food holds up in a delivery container, the honest answer is that it holds up less well than the in-room experience, and at this price point, that gap matters. Reserve Sushi ii for in-person visits where you can engage with the format fully.

    For off-premise Japanese in Newport Beach, the $$ and $$$ tier options will serve you better per dollar spent when eating at home. Save the $$$$ spend for the room itself.

    Ratings and Recognition

    Sushi ii holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, indicating consistent quality recognized by the guide's inspectors across two consecutive years. The Google rating sits at 4.4 from 82 reviews, which is a solid signal for a specialty counter with limited seating. Low review volumes at high-end Japanese counters are normal: small seat counts produce fewer reviews than high-volume brasseries, so 82 reviews at 4.4 is a meaningful data point rather than a thin sample to dismiss. For context, Michelin Plate recognition places Sushi ii in the same tier as restaurants flagged as quality destinations without yet reaching star level, a tier that includes many genuinely compelling counters across California. If you are calibrating against starred Japanese experiences in the state, Providence in Los Angeles operates at a higher Michelin tier, and The French Laundry in Napa represents the ceiling of California tasting-menu recognition more broadly, though neither is a direct sushi comparison.

    Booking Logistics

    Booking difficulty is rated hard. The website and phone are not confirmed in current data, so the most reliable approach is to search for the current reservation method directly before your visit. Second-floor suite restaurants of this type in the Newport Beach area often use reservation platforms rather than phone booking, but confirm this rather than assume. Given the Michelin recognition and the likely small seat count for a counter format, plan to book at minimum two to three weeks ahead for weekend service. If you are flexible on day and time, a midweek booking is the more accessible route and often the better experience at a quiet counter.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how Sushi ii sits against Newport Beach peers including Bello by Sandro Nardone, Fable & Spirit, Marché Moderne, and Bourbon Steak Orange County.

    For Japanese dining benchmarks further afield, Myojaku in Tokyo and Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo represent the reference tier for counter Japanese globally. Domestically, Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Smyth in Chicago are useful comparisons for tasting-menu counter formats at similar price points, though neither is Japanese cuisine.

    Pearl Picks: More Newport Beach and Beyond

    FAQ

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Sushi ii?

    • At the $$$$ price tier with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition, the tasting format, if available, is where the kitchen's sourcing and sequencing judgment is most apparent. It is worth it if Japanese counter dining is the format you want. If you prefer a la carte control, confirm whether that option is offered before booking, as not all counters at this level provide it.

    What should I order at Sushi ii?

    • With two Michelin Plates behind them, Chefs Takahashi and Izawa are leading trusted to sequence the meal. Let the kitchen lead rather than directing individual pieces, and engage with the chefs directly at the counter for the most out of the experience. Current menu specifics are not confirmed in available data, so check at the time of booking.

    Does Sushi ii handle dietary restrictions?

    • Phone and website details are not confirmed in current data, so contact the venue directly when making your reservation to discuss restrictions. Japanese counter formats at this price point typically accommodate dietary needs with advance notice, but raw fish and shellfish are central to the format, so confirm specifics before booking if allergies are a factor.

    Can I eat at the bar at Sushi ii?

    • The second-floor suite format at 100 West Coast Hwy suggests a counter-style setup, which is common for Japanese restaurants operating at this tier in Newport Beach. Whether walk-in counter seats are available depends on current policy. Given the hard booking difficulty rating, securing a reservation rather than counting on counter availability is the practical approach.

    What are alternatives to Sushi ii in Newport Beach?

    • Marché Moderne ($$$, French) is the closest peer in terms of ambition and price, and is more accessible to book for groups. Bello by Sandro Nardone ($$$, Italian) is the better choice if you want a special-occasion dinner without the booking difficulty. Bourbon Steak Orange County is the right call for a group that wants a high-spend, high-energy room rather than a quiet counter. Fable & Spirit ($$, Californian) drops the price considerably and works well for a casual evening where Sushi ii's format would feel like overkill.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Sushi ii?

    At the $$$$ price tier, Sushi ii justifies the spend if omakase is your preferred format. Back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025 signals that the kitchen performs consistently, not just on good nights. If you want flexibility to order à la carte, this is not the right room. Commit to the format and the price, or look elsewhere.

    What should I order at Sushi ii?

    Sushi ii operates at the $$$$ tier under chefs Koji Takahashi and Norio Izawa, and the kitchen's Michelin Plate recognition is tied to the full omakase experience rather than individual dishes. Ordering off a menu is not the point here — trust the progression. Specific dishes are not confirmed in current data, so do not go in with a list; go in for the chef's sequence.

    Does Sushi ii handle dietary restrictions?

    Dietary restrictions are not documented in current data for Sushi ii. At this price tier and format, the standard practice for omakase restaurants is to disclose restrictions at the time of booking, not on arrival. check the venue's official channels before reserving — arriving with undisclosed restrictions at a $$$$ omakase counter is a poor outcome for everyone.

    Can I eat at the bar at Sushi ii?

    Sushi ii is on the second floor at Suite 202, 100 West Coast Hwy, which suggests a dedicated space rather than a casual drop-in bar setup. Whether counter seating is available separately from the main omakase booking is not confirmed in current data. Given that booking difficulty is rated hard, assume all seats require a reservation and plan accordingly.

    What are alternatives to Sushi ii in Newport Beach?

    Marché Moderne and Fable & Spirit are the closest Newport Beach alternatives if you want serious kitchen credentials without committing to a Japanese omakase format. For a different cuisine at comparable investment, Bourbon Steak Orange County offers a larger-group-friendly setup. Bello by Sandro Nardone is worth considering if you want Italian fine dining as the trade-off. None of them replicate the Michelin-recognized omakase format that Sushi ii offers specifically.

    Location

    100 West Coast Hwy Suite 202, Newport Beach, CA 92663

    Newport Beach, United States

    Compare Sushi ii

    Sushi ii in Context: Awards and Value
    VenueAwardsPrice
    Sushi iiMichelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)$$$$
    Bello by Sandro Nardone$$$
    Fable & Spirit$$
    Marché Moderne$$$
    Bourbon Steak Orange County

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

    Also Consider

    Sushi ii is the highest-commitment option on this list in terms of both price ($$$$ vs. $$$ for Marché Moderne and Bello by Sandro Nardone) and booking difficulty. If the goal is a counter-format Japanese dinner with Michelin recognition in Newport Beach, Sushi ii is the only credentialled option in that category locally, which makes the comparison across cuisine types rather than within it.

    For a high-spend special occasion where you want more flexibility on group size and an easier reservation, Marché Moderne is the practical alternative: French technique, a proven kitchen, and a room that works better for four or more. Bourbon Steak Orange County is the right choice if your group wants an energetic, high-volume room rather than a quiet counter, the formats are entirely different and the decision between them is really about what kind of evening you want, not which kitchen is stronger.

    If budget is the variable, Fable & Spirit at $$ drops the price significantly and suits a casual weeknight without the planning overhead. Bello by Sandro Nardone sits in the middle at $$$ and is the better pick when you want a generous, convivial Italian dinner without the counter-format precision that Sushi ii demands from its guests. Sushi ii is the right booking when Japanese cuisine is specifically the goal and you are willing to plan ahead for it.

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