Best-of Guides Vancouver

Vancouver's Best Japanese Restaurants

5 Restaurants
The freshest local and sustainable seafood stars at Vancouver's Japanese restaurants, where you can tuck into affordable omakase and soft shell crab with a view of Vancouver harbor.
Updated on 09 April 2024
The Lobby Lounge & RawBar
1038 Canada Pl., V6C 0B9 Vancouver
$$$$ · Japanese

Snack on a variety of sushi, including salmon motoyaki, a signature roll with chopped wild sockeye, steelhead trout, avocado, cucumber and warm motoyaki sauce. Miso soup is a good bet for a cold night, and braised local octopus is a simple delight. Local salmon and steelhead figure largely on the menu.

Miku
200 Granville St., Ste. 70, V6C 1S4 Vancouver
$$$ · Asian

With views of Vancouver Harbor, Miku could coast on its looks alone, but this reliable spot instead offers high-quality dishes without the sticker shock. This is a kitchen that deliciously fuses elements of French and Italian cuisine into the well-known Japanese canon. Impeccable seafood is paired with elevated sauces for memorable results. 

Sushi Bar Maumi
1668 Robson St., V6G 1C7 Vancouver
$$$$ · Japanese

Sushi omakases can be serious affairs that cost as much as a ticket to Tokyo, but this little counter by chef Maumi Ozaki is a refreshingly affordable alternative. Nigiri is delivered with rapid-fire progression. Ozaki uses wasabi minimally and dresses fish with little more than a quick brush of nikiri. Dinner is over in under an hour. 

Yuwa
2775 W. 16th Ave., V6K 3C3 Vancouver
$$$ · Japanese

Yuwa's chic interior may lean European, but just one bite of Chef Masahiro Omori's creations and you'll be firmly planted in Japan. This is not fusion cuisine; instead, the chef adheres to the classics. External influences may not come into play, but freshness does—the menu shifts daily to take advantage of the best products available.

Masayoshi
4376 Fraser St., V5V 4G3 Vancouver
$$$$ · Japanese

Chef Masayoshi Baba brings Japan's luxurious, jewel-box sushi counters to Vancouver with this eponymous restaurant.  Chef Baba lets British Columbia's bounty guide this omakase, spotlighting locally sourced fish in his Edomae-style nigiri. It's one hit after the next.