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    Restaurant in Vancouver, Canada

    Sushi Jin

    290pts

    Hard to book. Internationally benchmarked. Plan ahead.

    Sushi Jin, Restaurant in Vancouver

    About Sushi Jin

    Sushi Jin holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and an Opinionated About Dining ranking that puts it in the same peer set as Japan's most rigorous Japanese counters. At $$$$, it's Vancouver's most independently credentialled Japanese dining room — but it demands advance planning, format commitment, and a diner who knows what they're booking into. Book lunch if dinner slots are gone.

    Vancouver's Most Decorated Japanese Counter — But Is It Right for You?

    If you're choosing between Sushi Jin and Masayoshi for a serious Japanese dinner in Vancouver, the honest answer is that you're comparing two kitchens operating at the leading of the same format. Sushi Jin holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and has appeared on Opinionated About Dining's ranked list for two consecutive years, including a ranked position at #415 in 2024. That's a meaningful credential in a category where most restaurants don't make the list at all. Masayoshi is the more familiar name locally, but Sushi Jin is the choice for the food enthusiast who wants to eat somewhere that's been independently benchmarked against Japan's leading. Book here if you want the credential behind the meal.

    The Room and the Format

    Sushi Jin operates out of 750 Nelson St. in Vancouver's downtown core, running lunch and dinner seven days a week: 11:30 am to 2:30 pm and 6:30 to 10 pm daily. The $$$$-tier pricing places it in the same bracket as Okeya Kyujiro and Sushi Masuda, which means you're looking at a spend that's comparable to a leading omakase counter in Tokyo or a destination meal at Kaiseki Yu-zen Hashimoto in Toronto. The chef behind the kitchen is Izumi Kimura. The Google rating sits at 4.6 across 399 reviews, which is consistent for a restaurant of this calibre in this price tier — high enough to confirm quality, not so artificially inflated as to signal gaming.

    The format here matters for your decision. Japanese counter dining at this price point is a commitment: you are eating on the kitchen's schedule, in the kitchen's sequence. If you're the type of diner who wants to order freely, control the pace, or skip courses, a counter like Sushi Jin is not the right fit. If you want to eat in the hands of a chef who has been benchmarked internationally, this is exactly where you should be sitting. The OAD recognition, in particular, is a signal worth taking seriously , it draws on votes from serious diners and industry professionals rather than general public reviews, and placing on it puts Sushi Jin in a peer set that includes some of the most technically rigorous Japanese restaurants in the world.

    Private Dining and Group Bookings

    The editorial angle worth examining here is what Sushi Jin delivers for groups versus what the main counter experience provides. At the $$$$ tier, Japanese counter restaurants in Vancouver typically configure their rooms as intimate chef's counter formats, and Sushi Jin fits that pattern. The private or group dining question matters practically: if you're coming with a party of four or more, the counter format can work well for groups who are aligned on the dining style, but it's worth confirming seat configuration directly with the restaurant before booking. A group dinner here will work leading if everyone at the table understands the format and is comfortable eating at the same pace. For a corporate dinner or a celebration where guests have varied dining preferences, the controlled sequence of an omakase-adjacent counter is harder to execute than a sharing-plates format. For a group of serious food enthusiasts, it's the right call. Compare that to Octopus Garden or Sumibiyaki Arashi, which offer different Japanese formats and may give mixed groups more flexibility across the table.

    If a private room exists at Sushi Jin, it would represent a meaningful upgrade for the group experience: you get the same kitchen at the same level but with the containment of your own space, which makes the pacing and noise level far more manageable for conversation. Confirm availability and minimum spend requirements directly with the venue when booking, as this detail is not confirmed in publicly available data.

    Booking and Practical Intelligence

    Booking difficulty here is rated hard. The Michelin Plate recognition and the OAD ranking have put Sushi Jin on the radar of visiting food travellers as well as locals, which tightens availability at prime evening slots significantly. Book as far in advance as you can , three to four weeks minimum for a Friday or Saturday dinner is a reasonable baseline, and you may need longer during peak periods. Lunch slots (11:30 am to 2:30 pm) are generally easier to secure than dinner and represent the same kitchen at a potentially lower price point, which is worth considering if your schedule allows. For context on booking difficulty at this tier, Alo in Toronto and Tanière³ in Quebec City operate on similar demand curves: Michelin recognition accelerates bookings fast and does not reverse.

    The $$$$-tier price puts Sushi Jin in a bracket where the spend needs to be intentional. This is not a spontaneous dinner , it's a planned evening. Factor in that Japanese fine dining at this level in Vancouver is a concentrated market: the number of kitchens with international recognition is small, and Sushi Jin occupies one of the credentialled positions in it. If you're travelling to Vancouver and want one serious Japanese meal, this is a more defensible choice than restaurants without independent third-party benchmarking behind them. For broader context on where Sushi Jin sits in the wider Canadian fine dining picture, see how it compares to Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal or Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln for the calibre of credential required to stand out in Canada's top-tier dining set.

    For visitors building a full Vancouver itinerary around the meal, see our full Vancouver restaurants guide, our full Vancouver hotels guide, our full Vancouver bars guide, our full Vancouver wineries guide, and our full Vancouver experiences guide.

    The Verdict

    Sushi Jin is the right booking for a food enthusiast who wants an internationally benchmarked Japanese counter in Vancouver and is prepared to plan ahead and commit to the format. At $$$$, it asks a lot financially, but the OAD ranking and back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition mean the quality benchmark has been tested by sources who eat in this category for a living. If you want the most credentialled Japanese dining room currently operating in Vancouver, this is it. If you want flexibility in what you order or need to accommodate a mixed group, look at other formats first.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Sushi Jin?

    • Book three to four weeks ahead for a weekend dinner as a minimum baseline.
    • Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) has expanded demand beyond the local audience , visiting food travellers now compete for the same slots as locals.
    • Lunch reservations (11:30 am to 2:30 pm) are typically easier to secure and deliver the same kitchen. If your schedule is flexible, lunch is the practical workaround for last-minute planning.
    • At the $$$$ tier in Vancouver, this is one of the harder rooms to walk into without a reservation , treat it like booking Le Bernardin in New York City or The Pine in Creemore: plan, don't improvise.

    Can I eat at the bar at Sushi Jin?

    • Japanese counter restaurants at this level in Vancouver are typically configured as chef's counter formats rather than traditional bar seating, which means the counter IS the primary dining experience.
    • Walk-in bar seating in the casual sense is unlikely to be available at this price tier and format , confirm directly with the venue if you're hoping to arrive without a reservation.
    • For a more spontaneous Japanese dining experience in Vancouver, consider formats with more flexible seating before assuming Sushi Jin can accommodate walk-ins at prime hours.

    What should a first-timer know about Sushi Jin?

    • The OAD Leading Restaurants ranking (#415 in 2024) means you are eating at a kitchen that has been peer-reviewed against Japan's leading , that's the context for why the $$$$ price tag is justified.
    • Come knowing the format: Japanese fine dining at this level runs on the kitchen's sequence. If you have dietary restrictions or strong aversions, communicate them at the time of booking, not at the table.
    • Lunch is the same kitchen for potentially less spend and far easier to book , a first visit at lunch is a smart way to experience the room before committing to a full dinner booking.
    • Pair the meal with a broader Vancouver evening: see our full Vancouver bars guide for options nearby, and Narval in Rimouski for a point of comparison on what serious Canadian tasting-format dining looks like at this level in a different city.

    Compare Sushi Jin

    Value Check: Sushi Jin and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Sushi Jin$$$$Hard
    AnnaLena$$$$Unknown
    iDen & QuanJuDe Beijing Duck House$$$$Unknown
    Kissa Tanto$$$$Unknown
    Masayoshi$$$$Unknown
    Published on Main$$$Unknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Sushi Jin and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Sushi Jin?

    Book at least three to four weeks out for dinner; the Michelin Plate recognition and OAD Top Restaurants ranking have put Sushi Jin on visiting food travellers' lists, which compresses availability fast. Lunch seats at 11:30 am can open up with shorter notice, but don't count on it for weekend slots. If Sushi Jin is full, Masayoshi is the closest comparable in Vancouver at a similar price tier.

    Can I eat at the bar at Sushi Jin?

    Counter seating is the format to request — at a $$$$-tier Japanese counter, the bar position is where the experience is designed to be read. Whether walk-in bar seats are available depends on the night; given booking difficulty rated hard, securing a counter seat in advance is the safer approach rather than arriving and hoping. Call ahead or check availability directly, as no online booking link is publicly listed for this venue.

    What should a first-timer know about Sushi Jin?

    Sushi Jin sits at the $$$$ tier under chef Izumi Kimura and carries a 2025 Michelin Plate alongside an OAD Top Restaurants nod — credentials that set a clear expectation for precision over comfort-food Japanese. The kitchen runs lunch and dinner seven days a week at 750 Nelson St., which is more accessible scheduling than most Vancouver peers at this price point. Come prepared to commit to the format: this is not a casual drop-in, and the price warrants treating it as a planned occasion.

    What is Sushi Jin known for?

    Sushi Jin is primarily known for $$$$ · Japanese in Vancouver.

    Hours

    Monday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 6:30–10 pm
    Tuesday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 6:30–10 pm
    Wednesday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 6:30–10 pm
    Thursday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 6:30–10 pm
    Friday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 6:30–10 pm
    Saturday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 6:30–10 pm
    Sunday
    11:30 am–2:30 pm, 6:30–10 pm

    Recognized By

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