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    Restaurant in Seoul, South Korea

    Yakitori Kiyu

    210pts

    Twice Michelin-noted. Easy booking. Go.

    Yakitori Kiyu, Restaurant in Seoul

    About Yakitori Kiyu

    Yakitori Kiyu holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, making it one of the stronger cases for yakitori in Seoul at the ₩₩ price tier. Located in Mapo-gu with a 4.4 Google rating across 311 reviews, it delivers Michelin-recognised quality without the tasting-menu price tag. Book a few days ahead on weeknights; give yourself more lead time for weekends.

    Michelin Plate recognition, twice running — and a price tag that makes Yakitori Kiyu one of Seoul's more direct calls

    Yakitori Kiyu has held a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which in Seoul's competitive dining scene is a signal worth paying attention to. The ₩₩ price positioning makes that recognition even more meaningful: this is not a venue asking you to spend big to eat well. If you are looking for serious yakitori in Mapo-gu without committing to a tasting-menu budget, Kiyu earns the booking.

    What the space tells you before you order

    Yakitori restaurants in Seoul, much like their counterparts in Japan, tend to live or die by their physical setup. The counter-and-grill arrangement is the format that matters here: proximity to the charcoal, the rhythm of the skewers coming off the grate, the intimacy of a room built around a single cooking station. That spatial logic is central to why venues like Kiyu work. The address in Mapo-gu, a district that has developed a reputation for independent food and drink operators over the past decade, fits the format. Mapo is not the obvious destination for visitors staying closer to Gangnam or Myeongdong, but it rewards the detour. For comparable atmosphere at a Japanese source, Ichimatsu in Osaka and Torisaki in Kyoto offer useful reference points for what the yakitori counter format can deliver at its leading.

    Timing: when to go and when to avoid

    Weekday evenings are the practical answer for most diners. Seoul yakitori spots at the ₩₩ price tier with Michelin recognition tend to fill quickly on Friday and Saturday nights, and the walk-in window narrows considerably. Earlier in the week, you have more flexibility and the room generally runs at a pace that suits the cooking style: unhurried, sequential, skewer by skewer. If you are travelling from outside Seoul, pairing a Kiyu visit with exploration of the broader Mapo dining circuit makes logistical sense. Check our full Seoul restaurants guide for neighbourhood context, and the Seoul bars guide if you want to extend the evening in Mapo after dinner.

    The drinks angle: how the bar program fits the format

    Yakitori and drinks are inseparable in the format's original logic. The Japanese tradition pairs grilled skewers with highballs, cold beer, and sake, and Seoul's stronger yakitori venues have adapted that pairing culture to local tastes, sometimes integrating Korean spirits or soju-based highballs alongside the Japanese canon. At the ₩₩ tier, you should not expect an elaborate cocktail list, but you should expect the drinks to be calibrated to the food: clean, cold, and structured around what makes grilled chicken taste better. That is the honest function of the bar program here. If you want a more elaborate cocktail experience alongside dinner, Seoul's bar scene has options for pre- or post-dinner drinks that operate at a different register entirely.

    How Yakitori Kiyu positions in Seoul's broader food scene

    Seoul has developed a layered yakitori scene over the past several years, and Kiyu sits at a specific point within it: Michelin-recognised, mid-price, and planted in a neighbourhood that attracts diners who are looking for quality without ceremony. For comparison, Yakitori Mook is the other Seoul yakitori name worth benchmarking against. Beyond the yakitori category, the broader context of Seoul's Michelin-listed dining includes venues operating at much higher price points: Mingles for Korean contemporary, Jungsik for modern Korean at the higher end, and Kwonsooksoo for traditional Korean fine dining. Kiyu is not competing in that tier and does not need to. At ₩₩, the question is not whether it matches those experiences on ambition; it is whether it delivers on its own terms. The 4.4 rating across 311 Google reviews suggests it does, consistently.

    Booking and practicalities

    With a 4.4 Google rating and consecutive Michelin Plate awards, demand is real but the ₩₩ price point and Mapo location mean this is rated Easy on booking difficulty. A few days' lead time should be sufficient for most weeknights; book further ahead for weekend visits. No booking method details are available in the current database record, so check Google Maps or Naver for current reservation options, which is standard practice for smaller Seoul venues of this type. The address is 31 Dohwa 4-gil, Mapo-gu, Seoul. For additional Seoul context before your visit, the Seoul hotels guide, experiences guide, and wineries guide cover the broader trip. If you are travelling around Korea more widely, Mori in Busan is worth noting for a southern extension, and Baegyangsa Temple in Jangseong-gun offers a very different kind of dining experience if you are moving through the southwest. Further afield in the region, alla prima in Seoul and venues like Kwon Sook Soo in Gangnam-gu round out the city's higher-end options if you are building a full Seoul itinerary. For day trips and regional variety, Double T Dining in Gangneung and Market Café in Incheon are worth a look, as is The Flying Hog in Seogwipo if you are heading to Jeju.

    Frequently asked questions

    • What should a first-timer know about Yakitori Kiyu? It is a mid-price yakitori restaurant in Mapo-gu with two consecutive Michelin Plate awards and a 4.4 Google rating from over 300 reviews. The format is yakitori: charcoal-grilled chicken skewers served in sequence. Come hungry, expect a relaxed pace, and do not over-order early. At ₩₩, it is one of the more accessible entry points into Michelin-recognised dining in Seoul.
    • What should I order at Yakitori Kiyu? Specific menu items are not confirmed in the current database, so ordering guidance from the restaurant directly is the safest approach. In the yakitori format generally, working through a range of cuts, from thigh to wing to offal if you are comfortable with it, gives you the fullest picture of what a kitchen can do. Ask the staff for their current highlights.
    • How far ahead should I book? Booking difficulty is rated Easy. A few days' notice is generally sufficient for weeknights. For Friday or Saturday, book at least a week out to be safe. The Michelin Plate recognition does drive demand, but the ₩₩ price tier and Mapo location mean it does not fill as aggressively as higher-profile tasting-menu venues in Gangnam or central Seoul.
    • Is Yakitori Kiyu good for solo dining? Yes. The yakitori counter format is well-suited to solo diners: the cooking happens in front of you, the pacing is conversational, and you are not paying for a table built around group sharing. At ₩₩, a solo visit is also financially direct. Seoul has a strong solo dining culture, and Mapo-gu in particular has the neighbourhood character that makes eating alone feel easy rather than awkward.
    • Can Yakitori Kiyu accommodate groups? Seat count is not confirmed in the database, but yakitori restaurants in this format tend to run small, typically 20 to 40 seats across counter and table seating. Groups of four to six should be manageable with advance notice; larger parties should contact the venue directly before booking. For group dining at higher price points, venues like Mingles or Jungsik offer private room options better suited to large bookings.
    • Does Yakitori Kiyu handle dietary restrictions? Yakitori is a meat-focused format built around chicken, which limits flexibility for vegetarians and those avoiding poultry. No specific dietary accommodation details are available in the current database. If restrictions are a factor, contact the venue directly before booking. For Seoul dining with broader dietary flexibility, the full Seoul restaurants guide covers a wider range of formats and cuisines.

    Compare Yakitori Kiyu

    How Yakitori Kiyu Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Yakitori KiyuYakitori₩₩Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)Easy
    SolbamContemporary₩₩₩₩Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    OnjiumKorean₩₩₩₩Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    7th DoorKorean, Contemporary₩₩₩₩Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    L'AmitiéFrench₩₩₩Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Zero ComplexKorean-French, Innovative₩₩₩₩Michelin 1 StarUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Yakitori Kiyu handle dietary restrictions?

    Yakitori is a format built almost entirely around grilled meat on skewers, so it is a poor fit for vegetarians or those avoiding poultry. If you have specific allergies or restrictions, check the venue's official channels before booking — the ₩₩ price point and focused format leave limited room for substitutions. This is worth checking before you commit, especially for groups with mixed dietary needs.

    What should I order at Yakitori Kiyu?

    No specific menu details are available in the record, but at a Michelin Plate yakitori counter, the standard approach is to let the kitchen lead — omakase-style progression through the skewer menu is the format most venues at this level prefer. If an à la carte list is offered, prioritise the skewers the kitchen is visibly pushing that evening. Pair with whatever highball or cold beer the bar is running.

    What should a first-timer know about Yakitori Kiyu?

    Yakitori Kiyu has held a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which signals consistent quality at a ₩₩ price point — this is not a splurge venue, and you should not approach it like one. The format is counter dining around a live grill, which means the meal is interactive and paced by the kitchen, not by you. Arrive on time, eat at the counter if you can, and do not expect a long menu to browse.

    Is Yakitori Kiyu good for solo dining?

    Yes — a counter-and-grill format is one of the better setups for solo diners in Seoul. You get direct sight of the grill, the meal paces itself naturally, and there is no awkward table-for-one arrangement. At ₩₩, solo dining here is one of the more cost-efficient ways to access Michelin-recognised cooking in the city.

    How far ahead should I book Yakitori Kiyu?

    Pearl rates this Easy on booking difficulty — consecutive Michelin Plate recognition and a 4.4 Google rating mean demand is real, but the Mapo-gu location and ₩₩ pricing keep it accessible. Booking a few days ahead for weeknights should be sufficient; for Friday or Saturday, aim for at least a week out. Do not treat easy availability as a reason to book same-day without checking.

    Can Yakitori Kiyu accommodate groups?

    Yakitori counter formats are generally better suited to pairs and small groups of three or four than to larger parties. Seats at a live grill counter are limited, and large groups can disrupt the kitchen's pacing. If your group is five or more, contact the venue in advance to confirm capacity and whether the full group can be seated together.

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