Restaurant in Mie, Japan
Wadakin
630Pearl PointsMatsusaka beef sukiyaki, low booking friction.

About Wadakin
Wadakin has held Tabelog Bronze every year since 2017 and earned a spot in Tabelog's Hot Pot Top 100 for 2024. Plan JPY 20,000–29,000 per person all-in for Matsusaka beef sukiyaki in a traditional house restaurant with private rooms for groups of 2 to 30-plus. Easy to book and the strongest argument for eating sukiyaki at source in Mie.
Pearl Verdict
Plan to spend JPY 15,000–20,000 per person at Wadakin, with actual bills often running JPY 20,000–29,999 once drinks and the 10% service charge are added. For that price, you get Matsusaka beef sukiyaki in a 100-seat house restaurant that has held Tabelog Bronze every year since at least 2017 and earned a spot in Tabelog's Hot Pot Top 100 for 2024. If Matsusaka beef is the reason you're making the trip to Mie, this is the right booking. If you're undecided between sukiyaki and other formats, compare Wadakin against Nikawa (yakitori and creative, similar price tier) before committing.
What to Expect
Wadakin has been operating since Meiji 11 (1878), making it one of the oldest beef restaurants in a region that defines Japan's premium wagyu market. The building functions as a traditional house restaurant: tatami rooms, sunken seating, and a large hall create a layered space that works equally well for a two-person lunch or a group of 30-plus. Private rooms are available for parties of 2 through to groups over 30, which makes this a practical choice for business dinners or family occasions. The venue seats 100 in total and accepts parties up to 70. Wheelchair access is available, and parking is on-site.
For first-timers: sukiyaki is a communal hot pot format where thinly sliced beef is cooked tableside in a sweet soy broth, typically dipped in raw egg before eating. The quality of the beef is the main variable between restaurants, and Matsusaka beef specifically is raised in Mie Prefecture under strict single-farmer protocols that produce high marbling and a distinct richness. Wadakin's Tabelog score of 4.19 and consecutive Bronze wins reflect sustained quality rather than a single-year peak.
Leading Time to Visit
Lunch and dinner run the same price range (JPY 15,000–19,999 listed, JPY 20,000–29,999 based on actual reviews), so timing comes down to logistics. Saturday and Sunday service starts at 11:00 AM versus 11:30 AM on weekdays, giving weekend visitors a slightly earlier window. Last admission is 19:00 and last order is 20:00 regardless of day. Avoid the fourth Tuesday of each month (irregular closure), January 1–2, and August 16. If you're travelling from Nagoya or Osaka, a weekday lunch arrival avoids weekend tourist traffic in the city centre while keeping full access to the menu.
Booking
Reservations are available online and by phone (10:00 AM to 7:00 PM). Booking difficulty is low relative to comparably-awarded venues in Japan's major cities. A cancellation fee applies from two days before your reservation date, and date or headcount changes are treated as cancellations under the same policy. If you book a seat-only reservation, menu selection happens on arrival, though not all options are guaranteed. To lock in a specific menu, book it at reservation time. Online reservations are the most reliable route for international visitors who may not speak Japanese.
Practical Details
| Detail | Wadakin | Hiyama (Tokyo) | Imafuku (Tokyo) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Sukiyaki | Sukiyaki | Sukiyaki |
| Price range | JPY 15,000–19,999 (listed); JPY 20,000–29,999 (actual) | Separate Pearl page | Separate Pearl page |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Moderate |
| Private rooms | Yes (2–30+) | Varies | Varies |
| Parking | Yes | Urban (no) | Urban (no) |
| Service charge | 10% | Varies | Varies |
For sukiyaki in Tokyo, see Hiyama and Imafuku. For broader dining context in the Kansai and surrounding regions, HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, and akordu in Nara represent different cuisine types at comparable or higher price points. Wadakin sits in a different category from all of them, and its combination of easy booking, ample private rooms, and consistent Tabelog recognition makes it the default choice for Matsusaka beef sukiyaki in Mie.
How It Compares
Against other Mie dining options, Wadakin occupies its own lane. Hinode and La Mer focus on seafood, and if Ise-shima's coastal catch matters more to you than wagyu, those are better fits. For sushi, Komada and Edo Machi Sugimoto (JPY 15,000–29,999 depending on format) are the natural alternatives. Nikawa at JPY 15,000–19,999 offers yakitori and creative cooking at a similar spend if you want something less format-specific than sukiyaki.
Wadakin's advantage over Tokyo sukiyaki specialists such as Hiyama is proximity to source: Matsusaka is the production region, and eating here removes one supply chain step. Its advantage over other Mie restaurants is format specificity — the menu is built around a single product done at a high level over many decades. The trade-off is that sukiyaki is the whole point; if your group is split on the format, a broader menu restaurant will serve you better.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at Wadakin?
Either works — the price range is identical at both meals (JPY 15,000–19,999 listed, trending JPY 20,000–29,999 on actual bills). Lunch on weekdays opens at 11:30 AM, while Saturday and Sunday service starts at 11:00 AM, making weekends the better option if you want maximum time with a private room. Last admission is 19:00 regardless of when you visit, so an early dinner keeps your options open.
Can I eat at the bar at Wadakin?
Wadakin's seating options include a large hall, private rooms, tatami rooms, and sunken seating — the venue is described as a house restaurant with 100 seats total. There is no counter or bar format listed in the venue data, so this is not a counter-dining experience like Tokyo omakase spots.
Is Wadakin good for solo dining?
Sukiyaki is a format designed around sharing — the hotpot experience works best with at least two people. Wadakin does offer private rooms starting from two guests, so solo travellers willing to pay for a two-person booking could manage, but this is not where Wadakin delivers its best value. Solo diners in Matsusaka are better served by a yakiniku counter format.
What should a first-timer know about Wadakin?
Budget JPY 20,000–29,999 per person all-in once drinks and the 10% service charge are added. Reservations can be made online or by phone (10:00 AM–7:00 PM), but if you book a seat only, menu selection happens on the day — and not all choices are guaranteed. Wadakin has held the Tabelog Bronze Award every year from 2017 through 2026, and was named to the Tabelog Hot Pot Top 100 in 2024, so the consistency record is solid.
What are alternatives to Wadakin in Mie?
Nikawa and Komada are the relevant alternatives for meat-focused dining in Mie. If the priority shifts to seafood, La Mer and Hinode cover Ise-shima's coastal produce at comparable price points. Edo Machi Sugimoto offers a different Japanese dining register altogether. Wadakin is the clearest choice specifically for Matsusaka beef in its traditional sukiyaki preparation.
Is Wadakin good for a special occasion?
Yes, and the format suits it well. Private rooms are available for groups from 2 to 30-plus people, the venue explicitly lists celebrations as a supported occasion, and the 10-year Tabelog Bronze streak from 2017–2026 gives you confidence the experience will hold up. Factor in the 10% service charge and confirm your group size when booking, since cancellation fees apply from two days before your visit.
Location
1878 Nakamachi, Matsusaka, Mie 515-0083, Japan
Mie, Japan
Within Mie's dining options, Wadakin is the default booking for Matsusaka beef, there is no direct sukiyaki competitor in the city at this award level. If beef isn't the priority, the comparison changes. Hinode and La Mer both focus on seafood, which is the other major regional product in Mie given its proximity to Ise-shima's fishing grounds. If you're torn between wagyu and seafood, your decision should come down to what you're travelling to Mie for specifically.
For sushi at a similar price tier, Komada and Edo Machi Sugimoto (JPY 15,000–29,999) are the relevant comparisons. Edo Machi Sugimoto's upper price bracket overlaps with Wadakin's actual spend level. The format difference matters: sushi counter dining is a different experience from tableside sukiyaki, and both have merit depending on what your group wants from the meal. Nikawa at JPY 15,000–19,999 is the best alternative if anyone in your group is uncertain about the sukiyaki format, yakitori and creative cooking covers more ground and the price is similar.
Wadakin's practical edge over all of these is booking ease and private room availability. It seats 100 with rooms configurable for groups of 2 to 30-plus, which makes it the most logistically flexible option in Mie for business dinners or larger celebrations. For solo or duo visits where counter intimacy matters more than group logistics, sushi at Komada may suit better. For the specific experience of eating Matsusaka beef in Matsusaka, Wadakin is the clear choice.
Hours
- Monday
- 11:30 am–9 pm
- Tuesday
- 11:30 am–9 pm
- Wednesday
- 11:30 am–9 pm
- Thursday
- 11:30 am–9 pm
- Friday
- 11:30 am–9 pm
- Saturday
- 11 am–9 pm
- Sunday
- 11 am–9 pm
Recognized By
Explore Mie
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