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    Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan

    Yakitori Omino

    900Pearl Points

    Counter-only yakitori that earns its price tag.

    Yakitori Omino, Restaurant in Tokyo

    About Yakitori Omino

    Yakitori Omino is one of Tokyo's most consistently awarded yakitori counters — eight straight Tabelog Bronze Awards, Yakitori Top 100 every year since 2018, and an Opinionated About Dining ranking of #158 in Japan. Budget JPY 15,000–19,999 all-in for 14 counter seats in Oshiage, where chef Komino's Torishiki-trained technique makes the price defensible. Book two months out; closed Sundays.

    Verdict: Book It — But Understand What You're Signing Up For

    The most common mistake visitors make with Yakitori Omino is treating it as a casual yakitori stop. It isn't. This is a 14-seat counter operation in Oshiage — Sumida Ward, not Shinjuku or Ginza , where chef Masayoshi Komino has earned consecutive Tabelog Bronze Awards every year from 2019 through 2026, plus Tabelog Silver in 2018, and has appeared on the Tabelog Yakitori Top 100 list without interruption since 2018. Opinionated About Dining ranked it #158 among all Japan restaurants in 2024, rising to #235 in 2025 across an enormously competitive field. At JPY 10,000–14,999 per head (with reviews suggesting actual spend lands closer to JPY 15,000–19,999 once drinks and the 10% service charge are added), this is serious-money yakitori , and it delivers serious results to match.

    The Counter Experience

    The room itself sets expectations immediately. All 14 seats face the grill in a U-shape, which means every diner watches Komino and his team work from the moment they sit down. There is no hiding from the kitchen here, and the kitchen does not hide from you. Komino trained for six years at Torishiki , one of Tokyo's most-cited yakitori references , and that lineage shapes the approach: brand-name chicken, generous cuts, high-flame grilling at close range, and a clear preference for salt over tare sauce to let the meat's own flavour carry the meal. The progression of skewers functions as a tasting sequence rather than a casual order-as-you-go format. Each piece arrives at pace, building from lighter preparations through richer ones, with the grill determining the rhythm.

    If you've eaten here once and want to know what to prioritise on a return visit: the whole chicken heart with ginger and the chicken drumettes with yuzu zest and chilli paste are the preparations that reviewers return for specifically. Both illustrate why salt-forward yakitori rewards attention , the seasoning is a tool for flavour contrast, not a substitute for technique. The drink programme skews toward sake and wine, with the venue notably particular about both; a sommelier is available, and BYO is permitted, which is a practical advantage at this price point if you want to manage costs.

    Children under 16 are not admitted. Private rooms are unavailable. The space is counter-only , there is no option for semi-private dining or group tables. Smart casual dress is required. Cashless payment only; credit cards, IC cards (Suica, QUICPay), and QR codes are accepted.

    Getting In

    Booking is classified as easy relative to Tokyo's most contested counters, but that does not mean casual. Reservations open up to two months in advance, with the phone line staffed 10:00 AM–4:00 PM. Note that the restaurant may not answer during service hours. Book as early as the two-month window allows for weekend slots; weekday evenings tend to have more give. The cancellation policy has real teeth: 30% for cancellations seven days out, 50% at three days, and 100% the day before , so confirm your dates before committing. If you are more than 30 minutes late, your reservation may be cancelled.

    Logistically, Yakitori Omino sits a three-minute walk from Oshiage Station (B3 or A1 exit), which puts it on the same line as Tokyo Skytree. For visitors based in central Tokyo, build in 20–30 minutes from Shinjuku or Ginza. Wednesday and Saturday are the only days with lunch service (from 11:30 AM); all other days start at 4:30 PM. The restaurant is closed Sundays and has fixed closure dates scattered through the first quarter of the year , check the current schedule before booking.

    How It Sits in the Tokyo Yakitori Picture

    If you're comparing options in the yakitori category specifically, Omino sits at the leading of the Tokyo East tier. BIRD LAND in Ginza is the other name that comes up consistently at this level , more central, easier for business travellers, but a different atmosphere. Asagaya BIRD LAND and Chataro offer strong alternatives if Omino's booking window doesn't work for your schedule. Aramaki and 124. KAGURAZAKA are worth considering if you want yakitori in a different Tokyo neighbourhood with comparable quality credentials. For yakitori outside Tokyo, Ichimatsu in Osaka and Torisaki in Kyoto are the peer references worth knowing.

    For broader Japan planning: HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa represent the range of high-end restaurant options across the country. For everything else in the capital, see our full Tokyo restaurants guide, our Tokyo hotels guide, our Tokyo bars guide, our Tokyo wineries guide, and our Tokyo experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • Is Yakitori Omino good for solo dining? Yes , arguably the leading format for it. The 14-seat counter means solo diners get a full view of the grill and the same experience as any other guest. In Oshiage specifically, it's one of the stronger solo fine-dining options at this price point in Tokyo.
    • What should I order at Yakitori Omino? The menu follows the chef's sequence, so ordering is largely not in your hands , which is the point. On a return visit, the whole chicken heart with ginger and the chicken drumettes with yuzu zest and chilli paste are the preparations with the most distinctive flavour logic. The sake list is curated with care; ask the sommelier for a pairing rather than ordering ad hoc.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Yakitori Omino? There is no bar separate from the counter. All 14 seats face the grill in a U-shape , it is a counter-only restaurant. Every seat is, in effect, a bar seat with a direct sightline to the kitchen.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Yakitori Omino? At JPY 10,000–14,999 listed (with actual spend running JPY 15,000–19,999 once drinks and the 10% service charge are included), this is one of the pricier yakitori experiences in Tokyo. Eight consecutive Tabelog Bronze Awards and consistent placement on the Yakitori Top 100 since 2018 , plus an Opinionated About Dining ranking of #158 in Japan in 2024 , give you a credible benchmark for the quality level. If yakitori is a format you care about, the price is justified. If you want a broader tasting experience, RyuGin or L'Effervescence at ¥¥¥¥ give you more range, but they are different categories entirely.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Yakitori Omino? Lunch is only available on Wednesdays and Saturdays. If your schedule allows a Wednesday or Saturday lunch, it's worth booking , the same counter, the same chef, and typically fewer international visitors than prime weekend dinner slots. Dinner gives you more date flexibility across five days of the week, but the experience itself does not change by time of day.
    • Is Yakitori Omino worth the price? Yes, with one condition: you need to value yakitori specifically as a format. Budget JPY 15,000–19,999 per person all-in with drinks and service. For that spend you get a counter seat at one of Tokyo's most consistently decorated yakitori operations, with a pedigree traceable to Torishiki and an award record spanning eight years. If you're comparing on pure price-per-experience against ¥¥¥¥ kaiseki or sushi counters, this delivers at a lower entry cost , but it is a single-category, counter-format meal, not a multi-course theatrical production.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Yakitori Omino good for solo dining?

    Yes — solo is arguably the format Omino suits best. All 14 seats are counter-only, so a solo diner gets an unobstructed view of Komino working the grill and the full rhythm of service without compromise. Booking a single seat is also easier to secure than a pair or group when reservations open two months out.

    What should I order at Yakitori Omino?

    The kitchen uses brand-name chicken and favours salt over sauce to let the meat speak, so lean into the salt-seasoned skewers rather than pushing for tare on everything. Documented standouts from the venue include whole chicken heart with ginger and chicken drumettes with yuzu zest and chilli paste. Expect skewers built from generous cuts, not the thin, rushed portions common at casual yakitori chains.

    Can I eat at the bar at Yakitori Omino?

    There is no bar section separate from the counter — the entire restaurant is counter seating arranged in a U around the grill. Every seat is effectively a bar seat with a direct view of the kitchen, which is the point. No tables, no private rooms, no alternative configuration.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Yakitori Omino?

    At ¥10,000–¥14,999 per head listed price (with review-based spend tracking closer to ¥15,000–¥19,999 after the 10% service charge), Omino sits at the top end for Tokyo yakitori. The Tabelog Bronze award every year from 2019 through 2026, plus consecutive Tabelog 100 selections in the yakitori category, support that price positioning. It is worth it if you are specifically focused on yakitori at its most precise — not if you want variety of cuisine or a more casual, drop-in format.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Yakitori Omino?

    Lunch is only available Wednesday and Saturday (from 11:30 am), while dinner runs most weekdays from 4:30 pm. Dinner is the default experience and the one with more available slots across the week. If your schedule is flexible, dinner is the easier reservation to target; lunch slots on Wednesday or Saturday are worth grabbing if you can, but competition for them is real given fewer weekly openings.

    Is Yakitori Omino worth the price?

    Yes, with one condition: you need to go in treating this as a focused counter experience, not a casual night out. At ¥15,000–¥19,999 all-in, Omino charges a premium for Tokyo yakitori — but eight consecutive Tabelog Bronze awards and seven years of Tabelog 100 yakitori selections confirm that the ranking holds. Chef Komino trained for six years at Torishiki, which is one of Tokyo's reference-point yakitori counters, so the pedigree behind the pricing is documented. For the same budget, a more casual yakitori crawl across several spots would give you breadth; Omino gives you depth.

    Location

    Japan, 〒131-0045 Tokyo, Sumida City, Oshiage, 1 Chome−38−4 清流ビル 1F

    Tokyo, Japan

    Also Consider

    Yakitori Omino sits at ¥¥¥ against a peer set of ¥¥¥¥ venues, which makes it the value entry point among Tokyo's top-tier restaurant options — but only if yakitori is the format you want. Against RyuGin or L'Effervescence, the comparison is almost category-level: both offer multi-hour, multi-course kaiseki or French tasting menus with deeper kitchen ambition and broader range. If you want a structured tasting experience that moves through many flavour registers and techniques, those venues do things Omino doesn't attempt. Omino's counter is single-category by design — that focus is either a strength or a limitation depending on what you're after.

    Against Harutaka (sushi, ¥¥¥¥), the comparison is more instructive. Both are intimate counters, both require advance planning, and both deliver a chef-led sequence rather than a la carte flexibility. Harutaka costs more and offers the sushi omakase format; Omino costs less and offers yakitori. If you're trying to fit both into a Tokyo trip, they don't compete — they complement. For first-timers choosing between sushi and yakitori at the serious-counter level, Omino's lower price point makes it a lower-risk first booking.

    HOMMAGE and Crony operate in innovative French territory at ¥¥¥¥ — higher spend, harder to book, and aimed at a diner who wants European technique applied to Japanese produce. If that's the brief, neither Omino nor any yakitori counter is the right answer. But if the goal is a Tokyo meal that is categorically Japanese, deeply technical, and counter-focused without the booking difficulty of the city's hardest reservations, Omino is the clearest recommendation at its price tier.

    Hours

    Monday
    4–10:30 pm
    Tuesday
    4–10:30 pm
    Wednesday
    11:30 am–10:30 pm
    Thursday
    4–10:30 pm
    Friday
    4–10:30 pm
    Saturday
    11:30 am–10:30 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

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