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    Restaurant in Honolulu, United States

    Sushi Izakaya Gaku

    150pts

    OAD-recognised izakaya; bring a group.

    Sushi Izakaya Gaku, Restaurant in Honolulu

    About Sushi Izakaya Gaku

    Sushi Izakaya Gaku is one of Honolulu's most consistently recognised casual dining venues, ranked #346 on Opinionated About Dining's North America Casual list in 2025. The izakaya format rewards groups ordering broadly across the menu. Booking is easy, evening hours run Wednesday through Sunday until 22:00, and the South King Street location draws a reliable local crowd rather than tourist foot traffic.

    The Verdict

    Sushi Izakaya Gaku is not what most visitors expect from a sushi-forward spot on South King Street. This is an izakaya first — a casual, social eating format built around small plates, shared drinking, and a longer table — not a counter omakase or a conveyor belt. If you walk in expecting a sushi restaurant in the Western sense, you will be disoriented. If you walk in expecting the izakaya format , ordering broadly, eating slowly, drinking alongside the food , you will likely be satisfied. Opinionated About Dining has ranked it among the leading casual dining venues in North America three consecutive years (Recommended 2023, #386 in 2024, #346 in 2025), which is a credible signal that the kitchen is executing consistently above its price point.

    What to Expect as a First-Timer

    Izakaya dining, as a format, rewards a particular approach: order more dishes than you think you need, share everything, and treat the meal as a session rather than a sequence of courses. For anyone more familiar with sit-down sushi bars or tasting menus at venues like Bar Maze in Honolulu, the pace here will feel looser and the room considerably more informal. The energy at Gaku tends toward the convivial side , expect ambient noise from neighboring tables, an open social atmosphere, and staff who are not operating in fine-dining mode. This is not a criticism; it is the point. If you need quiet for a conversation-heavy dinner, arrive early in the evening rather than mid-service on a weekend.

    The address is 1329 S King St, Honolulu , a stretch of King Street that is more neighborhood than tourist corridor, which helps explain why the venue has built a consistent local following rather than cycling through first-time visitors. It is the kind of place regulars return to, which matters when assessing the quality floor. The Google rating sits at 4.5 across 296 reviews, which for a casual izakaya in a competitive city suggests the kitchen holds its standard reliably.

    Hours and Timing

    The weekly schedule has a practical split worth knowing before you plan. Monday and Tuesday run 09:00 to 17:00 , daytime hours only, which positions those visits as lunch or early afternoon rather than dinner. Wednesday through Sunday extend to 22:00, opening up proper evening dining for most of the week. The extended evening hours on weekends make Friday and Saturday the natural high-traffic nights, so if you prefer a calmer room, Wednesday or Thursday dinner is a more practical choice. Honolulu's casual dining scene can fill quickly on weekends across categories, from izakayas like Gaku to New American spots like Fête, so planning around midweek is a consistent advantage.

    Groups and Shared Tables

    Izakaya format is genuinely better with more people. Two diners can navigate it, but the format opens up properly at four or more, where the ability to order widely across the menu , sushi, small plates, grilled items , becomes practical rather than aspirational. For groups visiting Honolulu and looking for a low-friction, high-variety dinner that does not require a reservation weeks in advance, Gaku is one of the more sensible options in this part of the city. Booking difficulty is rated easy, which means walk-ins may be possible but calling ahead for a group of four or more is still the smarter move. There is no listed private dining room in the available venue data, so groups expecting a separated space should confirm availability directly before visiting.

    Pearl's Take

    Three consecutive years of recognition from Opinionated About Dining , a guide that weighs food quality and consistency heavily , is the most useful signal here. OAD's casual North America list is not volume-driven; it reflects genuine kitchen reliability at an accessible price point. That trajectory from Recommended to #386 to #346 suggests the kitchen is improving, not plateauing. For a first-timer in Honolulu who has already covered the obvious high-end options or wants a break from resort dining, Gaku represents a credible, well-credentialed casual dinner without the booking pressure of higher-profile venues. Compare it against Fujiyama Texas if you want a Japanese-adjacent alternative with a different energy, or consider Miro Kaimuki if the French-Japanese register at a more formal level appeals. For izakaya specifically, international comparisons like Benikurage in Osaka or Berangkat in Kyoto set the benchmark for the format at its ceiling , Gaku is not in that conversation, but it does not need to be. It is the right choice for casual, consistent izakaya dining in Honolulu, and that is a narrower, more useful recommendation than trying to be everything.

    Browse our full Honolulu restaurants guide, our Honolulu bars guide, or the Honolulu experiences guide to plan the rest of your visit.

    Compare Sushi Izakaya Gaku

    Booking Options Near Sushi Izakaya Gaku
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Sushi Izakaya GakuIzakayaEasy
    FêteNew AmericanUnknown
    Liliha BakeryBakeryUnknown
    Miro KaimukiFrench - JapaneseUnknown
    ZiguJapaneseUnknown
    PAI HonoluluNew AmericanUnknown

    Comparing your options in Honolulu for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Sushi Izakaya Gaku?

    Book at least a few days ahead for Wednesday through Sunday dinner service, when the venue runs its full evening hours until 22:00. Monday and Tuesday cut off at 17:00, so those slots suit early planners only. Gaku has earned three consecutive years of Opinionated About Dining recognition, which means demand is real — same-week booking is possible but not guaranteed for groups.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Sushi Izakaya Gaku?

    Dinner is the stronger choice for the izakaya experience. Wednesday through Sunday run until 22:00, giving you time to order in rounds and share across multiple dishes — the format the kitchen is built around. Monday and Tuesday close at 17:00, which makes them practical for an early meal but limits the session-style eating that defines izakaya dining.

    What should I wear to Sushi Izakaya Gaku?

    This is a casual izakaya on South King Street — Honolulu casual is the right register. Think clean, relaxed clothing rather than anything formal. Gaku's three-year run on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list signals the food is taken seriously, but the dress expectation follows the format: comfortable, not dressed up.

    What should I order at Sushi Izakaya Gaku?

    Specific menu details are not confirmed in available data, so ordering strategy matters more than individual dishes here. The izakaya format rewards ordering several small plates across the meal rather than one main per person. Arrive with a group of four or more if you can — more people means broader coverage of the menu and a better read on what the kitchen does well.

    Can Sushi Izakaya Gaku accommodate groups?

    Yes, and groups are where the format earns its keep. The izakaya model is genuinely better with four or more diners — the ability to share widely across the menu changes the meal. Two people can manage it, but a larger table gets more out of the format. Book ahead for evening service Wednesday through Sunday, and flag group size when you reserve.

    Hours

    Monday
    09:00-17:00
    Tuesday
    09:00-17:00
    Wednesday
    09:00-22:00
    Thursday
    09:00-22:00
    Friday
    09:00-22:00
    Saturday
    09:00-22:00
    Sunday
    09:00-22:00

    Recognized By

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