Restaurant in Sausalito, United States
Sushi Ran
250ptsMichelin-recognized sushi at a fair price.

About Sushi Ran
Sushi Ran holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025) and a 4.6-star Google rating across more than 1,000 reviews — making it the most credentialed restaurant in Sausalito and one of the Bay Area's clearest value plays in Japanese cooking. At the $$ price tier with Easy booking, it outperforms its price point by a margin that most comparable sushi restaurants can't match.
The Verdict
Sushi Ran earns back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025 for a reason: it delivers serious Japanese cooking at a price point that makes San Francisco's omakase circuit look aggressive by comparison. If you're based in Marin County or crossing the bridge for a meal, this is the restaurant you should be booking before anywhere else in Sausalito. The $$ price range combined with two consecutive Bib Gourmands means the value-to-quality ratio is among the most favorable you'll find at this level of cooking in the Bay Area.
About Sushi Ran
Cross the Golden Gate into Marin County and the dining calculus changes fast. Sausalito is a small, tourist-adjacent waterfront town where most restaurants survive on foot traffic and views rather than cooking. Sushi Ran on Caledonia Street is the exception that anchors the whole neighborhood's food credibility. It's been the answer to the question "where do locals actually eat in Sausalito?" for long enough that its regulars treat it as a standing institution rather than a discovery.
The physical setup rewards knowing what to ask for. Sushi Ran runs a counter and a dining room, and if you've been once and sat at a table, your next visit should be at the counter. The proximity to the chefs working the fish changes the experience entirely — you're watching the meal get built rather than having it delivered to you, which is how the format is meant to work. The room doesn't try to perform luxury; the spatial focus is on the fish preparation itself, which is exactly where it should be at a sushi restaurant operating at this level.
The Bib Gourmand designation is Michelin's indicator that a restaurant delivers quality above what its price suggests, and Sushi Ran has held that recognition across consecutive years. That consistency matters. A single year's Bib Gourmand can reflect a strong season; two consecutive years reflects a kitchen that's operating with genuine discipline. For context, many of the Bay Area's most discussed Japanese restaurants are pushing $$$$ territory before you add drinks — Sushi Ran at $$ is playing a different and frankly more useful game for most diners.
If you're returning after a first visit, the approach to build on is depth rather than novelty. The menu has enough range that regulars tend to find a personal path through it over multiple visits rather than locking in a single order. The omakase format, where available, gives the kitchen room to show what's working on a given night, which is always the more interesting version of a meal here. Lunch service runs Friday through Sunday from noon to 2:30 pm, and those weekend lunch slots are the most accessible entry point in terms of booking and pace. Dinner runs nightly from 5 pm, with Friday and Saturday stretching to 10 pm , a detail worth noting if you're building an evening around a Sausalito visit that includes time on the waterfront before or after.
Booking is rated Easy, which at a Michelin-recognized restaurant is a practical advantage you should use. This isn't a venue where you need to plan three months out or refresh a reservations page at midnight. A reasonable lead time of one to two weeks should secure most dates, though weekend dinner slots , particularly Friday and Saturday , move faster than weekday dinner. If your schedule is flexible, a weeknight dinner or a weekend lunch is your smoothest path in. The restaurant's consistent recognition has brought it more attention over the past two years, so don't mistake Easy for spontaneous; same-week bookings for prime slots aren't guaranteed.
For visitors combining Sushi Ran with a broader Sausalito trip, the restaurant sits on Caledonia Street in the quieter, more residential part of town rather than on the tourist-heavy waterfront strip. That positioning is part of its character , it operates for people who came specifically for the meal rather than stumbling in from a ferry. If you're building a full day around it, see our full Sausalito restaurants guide, our full Sausalito hotels guide, our full Sausalito bars guide, our full Sausalito wineries guide, and our full Sausalito experiences guide to build out the rest of the day.
In the broader Bay Area sushi conversation, Sushi Ran occupies a distinct and defensible position. It's not trying to compete with the $300-per-head omakase experiences in San Francisco proper , places in the vein of Masa in New York or Sushi Masaki Saito in Toronto, which anchor the leading of the North American sushi price range. What it offers instead is consistent Michelin-acknowledged quality at a price that doesn't require you to treat the reservation as a financial event. That's a harder thing to deliver than most people realize, and two consecutive Bib Gourmands say the kitchen is doing it reliably.
For Marin County residents, Sushi Ran functions as the neighborhood restaurant that also happens to be the leading Japanese option within reasonable distance of home , a rare combination that explains its 4.6-star rating across over 1,000 Google reviews. That volume of reviews at that rating is a signal that the kitchen performs consistently across a wide range of diners, not just on special occasions. If you've been once, the question isn't whether to return , it's what to try next.
Booking & Hours
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. Book one to two weeks out for weekday dinners; push to two weeks or more for Friday and Saturday evenings. Weekend lunch (Friday–Sunday, noon–2:30 pm) is the most accessible slot for flexibility on shorter notice. Dinner runs Monday through Thursday 5–9:30 pm, Friday and Saturday 5–10 pm, and Sunday 5–9 pm.
Compare Sushi Ran
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Sushi Ran | $$ | — |
| Le Bernardin | $$$$ | — |
| Atomix | $$$$ | — |
| Lazy Bear | $$$$ | — |
| Alinea | $$$$ | — |
| Atelier Crenn | $$$$ | — |
Comparing your options in Sausalito for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at Sushi Ran?
At the $$ price point, Sushi Ran delivers Michelin Bib Gourmand-level quality — recognition it has held in both 2024 and 2025, which signals consistent value rather than a one-off nod. The Bib Gourmand designation specifically flags good cooking at moderate prices, so if you want serious Japanese food without omakase-level spend, this is a strong case. For big-ticket tasting formats closer to San Francisco, Atelier Crenn operates in a different price bracket altogether.
How far ahead should I book Sushi Ran?
One to two weeks out covers most weekday dinners without trouble. Friday and Saturday evenings fill faster — push to two weeks or more for those. Weekend lunch (Friday through Sunday, 12–2:30 pm) is a practical lower-competition window if your schedule allows.
Is Sushi Ran good for solo dining?
Yes. A Japanese restaurant with counter-style service traditions suits solo diners well, and the $$ price range keeps a solo meal from feeling like a financial commitment. Weekday evenings are your easiest bet for a relaxed solo seat without the weekend volume.
Is Sushi Ran good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key celebration where the food is the focus and you are not chasing a grand-occasion setting. Back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition gives it credibility as a serious dinner, and the $$ pricing means you can spend on the meal rather than on the room. For a more formal special-occasion format with a tasting-menu structure, Lazy Bear or Atelier Crenn in San Francisco would be the step up.
What are alternatives to Sushi Ran in Sausalito?
Sausalito's dining scene is small, and most alternatives in town are casual waterfront spots rather than serious Japanese kitchens. If you are weighing the cross-bridge trip for sushi specifically, the relevant comparison is whether a San Francisco option — at higher price points and with more booking friction — is worth it over Sushi Ran's Michelin-recognized $$ offer on the Marin side.
What should I order at Sushi Ran?
Specific menu details are not confirmed in available venue data, so ordering specifics are beyond what Pearl can verify here. What the Michelin Bib Gourmand record does confirm is that the kitchen is consistent enough to earn the designation two years running — a reasonable signal to trust the chef's selections on the night. Ask staff what is freshest; that is standard practice at any serious sushi counter.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–9:30 pm
- Tuesday
- 5–9:30 pm
- Wednesday
- 5–9:30 pm
- Thursday
- 5–9:30 pm
- Friday
- 12–2:30 pm, 5–10 pm
- Saturday
- 12–2:30 pm, 5–10 pm
- Sunday
- 12–2:30 pm, 5–9 pm
Recognized By
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