# 16 Best Japanese Restaurants in Barcelona

> The 16 best Japanese restaurants in Barcelona, ranked on specialist reputation and years of eating across the city. Sushi counters, izakaya, robatayaki, ramen, udon and sumiyaki, from Michelin-starred to neighbourhood favourites.

- **Canonical URL:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/best-japanese
- **City:** Barcelona, Spain
- **Published:** 2026-06-20
- **Author:** Justin Mota, Guidavera founder
- **Reading time:** 13 min

## Introduction

This is the Japanese list we send to friends who land in Barcelona thinking sushi is the whole story. It isn't. Yes, the city has serious sushi counters, a couple of them Michelin-starred, but the real depth is everywhere else: charcoal grills, izakaya tapas, homestyle bento, ramen, udon, and Mediterranean-Japanese kitchens run by chefs who trained in Japan and then fell for Catalan produce. There's a genuine Japanese community here, and it shows on the plate. We've ordered our way through the omakase counters and the tiny homestyle spots alike, and what follows is balanced on purpose: not 17 sushi bars, but the full spread of how Japan eats. Prices run from around 12 euros for a bowl of ramen up to 195-euro wagyu tasting menus at the top end. Ramen gets only one anchor here because it has its own guide, and the deepest sushi-counter picks live in our sushi guide.

## A guide to Japanese in Barcelona

### What kinds of Japanese restaurants will you find in Barcelona?

Japanese food in Barcelona goes well beyond the sushi-roll places near the tourist drags. There are dedicated sushi-ya where a chef builds an omakase piece by piece at the counter; izakaya, the casual taverns built for small plates and drinking; robatayaki and sumiyaki spots that grill over charcoal; ramen-ya and udon specialists; and homestyle teishoku kitchens that serve the kind of everyday tray meals you'd eat in Japan. You'll also find a strong seam of Mediterranean-Japanese cooking, where chefs apply Japanese technique to local fish, vegetables and meat. Knowing which format you're walking into helps you order well: at an izakaya you graze, at an omakase counter you let the chef lead, and at a ramen-ya you go for the bowl.

### What's the difference between omakase, izakaya and kaiseki?

Omakase means 'I leave it up to you'. You sit at the counter and the chef serves a set sequence built around the best fish that day, usually a run of nigiri with a few hot and cold dishes around it. Izakaya is the opposite energy: informal, drink-led, lots of small shared plates like gyoza, karaage, grilled skewers and tataki, ordered as you go. Kaiseki is the most formal and seasonal of the three, a multi-course meal that follows a traditional structure and changes with the calendar. Barcelona has all three, plus the looser modern hybrids where a Japanese kitchen leans on Mediterranean ingredients. Match the format to your mood: omakase for a special-occasion counter seat, izakaya for a relaxed night of grazing, kaiseki when you want the full ceremony.

### How do you spot a serious Japanese kitchen in Barcelona?

Look at who's behind the counter and how narrow the focus is. Specialists tend to do one thing properly: a sushi-ya that only runs omakase, an udon spot that makes its noodles the centre of the menu, a sumiyaki grill built around charcoal and good beef. A short, changing menu is usually a good sign, because it means the kitchen is buying what's best that day rather than keeping forty rolls on permanent standby. Counter seating where you can watch the chef work is another tell. And don't write off the Mediterranean-Japanese kitchens: several of Barcelona's best are run by chefs who trained in Japan and now build their menus around Catalan fish and produce.

> "Barcelona's Japanese scene is so much more than sushi, and that's where the best eating hides."

## How we built this list

We order this list by subject authority, not overall restaurant ranking. Historic and category-defining venues come first, then the dedicated specialists, then the broad neighbourhood favourites.

We balance the list across sub-genres on purpose. Rather than stacking it with sushi counters, we make room for izakaya, robatayaki, sumiyaki, ramen, udon and homestyle teishoku so the guide reflects how Japan actually eats.

We cross-check our own meals against the chefs, servers and Japanese-community regulars we trust, and against guide recognition where it exists (Michelin and Repsol). No restaurant pays for placement, and Guidavera has no affiliate or sponsorship deals with any venue here.

Ramen and the deepest sushi-counter picks are held in their own dedicated guides, so this list keeps a single ramen anchor and only the top sushi anchors, and leans into the breadth that makes Barcelona's Japanese scene worth knowing.

## The 16 best Japanese Restaurants, compared

| # | Restaurant | Neighbourhood | Price | Distinction | Signature dish |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | [Koy Shunka](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/koy-shunka) | el Barri Gòtic | €€€€ | Michelin 1-Star · Repsol 2 Soles | — |
| 2 | [Suto](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/suto) | Sants | €€€€ | Michelin 1-Star · Repsol 1 Sol | Mackerel escabeche tacos with shichimi |
| 3 | [Kamikaze](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/kamikaze) | l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€€ | Michelin 1-Star | Menu Kamikaze |
| 4 | [Yashima](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/yashima) | les Corts | €€€ | — | — |
| 5 | [Shunka](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/shunka) | el Barri Gòtic | €€ | Repsol Recomendado | Red mullet carpaccio with ponzu and wasabi leaf |
| 6 | [Ikoya Izakaya](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ikoya-izakaya) | Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera | €€€ | — | Bluefin tuna tartare |
| 7 | [Sensato](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/sensato) | el Putxet i el Farró | €€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol Recomendado | — |
| 8 | [Sato i Tanaka](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/sato-i-tanaka) | la Dreta de l'Eixample | €€€ | Repsol 1 Sol | Lunch set, 9 nigiri + 3 maki |
| 9 | [Carlota Akaneya](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/carlota-akaneya) | el Raval | €€€€ | — | Akaneya tasting menu (per person, min 2) |
| 10 | [Ramen-ya Hiro](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ramen-ya-hiro) | la Dreta de l'Eixample | € | — | Shoyu ramen |
| 11 | [Una Mica de Japó](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/una-mica-de-jap) | la Nova Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€ | — | Daily bento box |
| 12 | [Soluna](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/soluna) | l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol Recomendado | — |
| 13 | [Alapar](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/alapar) | el Poble Sec | €€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol Recomendado | — |
| 14 | [Robata](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/robata) | l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€€ | Repsol Solete | Toro Soasado |
| 15 | [Yoi Yoi Gion](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/yoi-yoi-gion) | La Dreta de l'Eixample | € | — | Udon |
| 16 | [Can Kenji](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-kenji) | la Dreta de l'Eixample | €€ | Repsol Solete | Sardine tempura with eggplant purée |

## The 16 best Japanese Restaurants in Barcelona

### 1. Koy Shunka

*The city's Japanese anchor, Michelin-starred and two Repsol Soles*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Barri Gòtic
- **Address:** Calle Copons, 7. 08002 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin 1-Star · Repsol 2 Soles
- **Website:** https://koyshunka.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/koy-shunka

If Barcelona has one Japanese restaurant that everyone orbits, it's Koy Shunka. Hideki Matsuhisa's counter in the Gothic Quarter holds a Michelin star and two Repsol Soles, and it's the kitchen that set the bar for serious Japanese cooking in the city. The menu is a tasting sequence that runs Japanese technique, precise knife work, umami-forward broths, careful curing of fish, straight into Catalan and Mediterranean ingredients. A central wood-fired kitchen sits at the heart of it, lending smoke and char to dishes that could otherwise be austere. It's a splurge, and worth booking well ahead, but if you want to understand why Barcelona takes Japanese food seriously, you start here.

### 2. Suto

*Michelin-starred seasonal omakase in Sants*

- **Neighbourhood:** Sants
- **Address:** C. de Violant d'Hongria Reina d'Arago, 134, 08028 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin 1-Star · Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://restaurante.covermanager.com/reservar-en-suto
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/suto

Suto is the omakase to book when you want a chef leading the whole meal. Yoshikazu Suto runs a single seasonal menu out of his Sants counter, a sequence of hot and cold dishes followed by a run of nigiri made with the best fish he can get that day. It holds a Michelin star and a Repsol Sol. The Michelin Guide singles out a mackerel escabeche served in small tacos with shichimi, and the meal closes with kakigori, traditional shaved ice made on an artisanal machine at the counter. Quality and seasonality drive everything, red mullet, mussels, bonito, oyster, corvina, worked with real precision. Seats are limited, so this is a plan-ahead dinner, not a walk-in.

**Order:**
- Mackerel escabeche tacos with shichimi
- Kakigori (shaved ice)

### 3. Kamikaze

*Michelin-starred author cooking through a Japanese lens*

- **Neighbourhood:** l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Roselló, 197, 08036 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin 1-Star
- **Website:** https://www.kamikazebarcelona.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/kamikaze

Kamikaze is the wildcard of the top tier, and it earned a Michelin star doing its own thing. Chef Enric Buendía works seasonal Catalan and Mediterranean produce through a Japanese lens, so this is less a sushi restaurant than an author kitchen that thinks in Japanese technique. Standout plates have included a beef tataki and razor clams with beans, and the menu keeps moving as ingredients change through the year. There are two formats: the Menu Kamikaze at 95 euros, or the same with a wine and sake pairing at 170 euros. If you like the idea of Japan as a method rather than a fixed set of dishes, this is the one to try.

**Order:**
- Menu Kamikaze (€95)
- Menu Kamikaze with wine and sake pairing (€170)

### 4. Yashima

*Classical, traditional Japanese cooking beyond sushi*

- **Neighbourhood:** les Corts
- **Address:** Av. Josep Tarradellas, 145, 08029 Barcelona Catalunya
- **Price:** €€€
- **Website:** https://www.yamashitagroup.com/yashima
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/yashima

Yashima in Les Corts is the pick for traditional Japanese cooking that rarely shows up elsewhere in Barcelona. The sushi is solid, but the reason to come is everything around it: the kitchen leans into regional Japanese dishes and careful, traditional preparations rather than chasing the roll-heavy crowd. It's a quieter, more classical experience than the buzzy counters downtown, and it rewards anyone who wants to eat the way you might in a neighbourhood restaurant in Japan rather than a tourist-facing sushi bar. Come curious, order beyond the nigiri, and let the kitchen show you the range.

### 5. Shunka

*The original Gothic Quarter counter that Koy Shunka spun off from, Repsol Recomendado*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Barri Gòtic
- **Address:** Carrer de Sagristans, 5, 08002 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Recomendado
- **Website:** https://koyshunka.com/KoyShunka/home_Shunka.html
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/shunka

Shunka is the original of the small Gothic Quarter group that later spun off the Michelin-starred Koy Shunka, and it's still one of the most reliable Japanese tables in the centre. The cooking is built around the sushi bar, nigiri, sashimi platters and raw-fish house salads, alongside heartier plates like udon kakiage. Repsol flags a red mullet carpaccio with ponzu and wasabi leaf as a signature, and the kitchen is known for prime toro nigiri when it's available. It carries a Repsol Recomendado nod. The dining room is busy and a little theatrical, with the counter doing the work in full view, and it's friendlier on the wallet than the starred tier. Book ahead, it fills fast.

**Order:**
- Red mullet carpaccio with ponzu and wasabi leaf

### 6. Ikoya Izakaya

*The city's izakaya anchor, Matsuhisa with Grupo Sagardi*

- **Neighbourhood:** Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera
- **Address:** Avinguda de Francesc Cambó, 23, 08003 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Website:** https://www.ikoyaizakaya.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ikoya-izakaya

Ikoya is the izakaya to know, and it captures the side of Japanese eating that sushi lists always skip. It pairs Hideki Matsuhisa, also behind Koy Shunka, with Grupo Sagardi co-founder Iñaki López de Viñaspre, and the menu blends Mediterranean market produce with Japanese technique across sashimi, nigiri and maki, robata-grilled meats and fish, ramen and shared plates. Signatures include a bluefin tuna tartare, a sashimi moriawase, the chef's moriawase sushi, and robata-grilled octopus. There's a sake corner with artisanal references. Reckon on around 60 euros a head without drinks. Go with a group, order broadly, and let the table fill up with small plates the way an izakaya is meant to work.

**Order:**
- Bluefin tuna tartare (€20)
- Sashimi moriawase (€25)
- Robata-grilled octopus (€25)

### 7. Sensato

*Six-seat omakase counter, Repsol Recomendado*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Putxet i el Farró
- **Address:** Carrer de Septimania 36, 08006 Barcelona Catalunya
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol Recomendado
- **Website:** https://www.sensatobarcelona.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/sensato

Sensato is intimate in the truest sense: a wooden counter that seats six, with chef Ryuta Sato working omakase in front of you. It carries a Repsol Recomendado nod, and the cooking is noted for its delicacy and precision. The format is a set omakase tasting, a sequence of sea appetisers, a sushi run and a soup-and-dessert close. With only half a dozen seats, this is as personal as Japanese dining gets in Barcelona, so book early and treat it as the evening's main event rather than a quick stop.

### 8. Sato i Tanaka

*Pure nigiri omakase with a Repsol Sol*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Dreta de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer del Bruc, 79, 08009 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://www.satotanaka.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/sato-i-tanaka

Sato i Tanaka is the nigiri specialist, and it holds a Repsol Sol to back it up. Aki Tanaka and Kazutoshi Komuta run a pure omakase where the chef decides everything and serves it piece by piece at the counter. Lunch sets start at 52 euros for 9 nigiri plus 3 maki, or 65 euros for 12 nigiri plus 3 maki, both with an appetiser, miso soup and dessert. The evening tasting is 85 euros. The fish reads like a wish list, turbot, toro, sea urchin, eel, red prawn, red mullet, and the sea urchin tofu and baby cuttlefish are recurring highlights. If you care most about the rice-and-fish craft itself, this is the counter for it.

**Order:**
- Lunch set, 9 nigiri + 3 maki (€52)
- Lunch set, 12 nigiri + 3 maki (€65)
- Evening tasting (€85)

### 9. Carlota Akaneya

*Barcelona's sumiyaki charcoal-grill specialist*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Raval
- **Address:** Carrer del Pintor Fortuny, 32, 08001 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€€
- **Website:** https://akaneyajapan.com/en/carlota-akaneya-barcelona
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/carlota-akaneya

Carlota Akaneya is the sumiyaki spot, built around a binchotan charcoal grill and seriously good beef: Japanese wagyu, A5 Kobe, A5 Matsusaka, Ito Ranch Matsusaka. The format is three fixed tasting menus, priced per person with a two-diner minimum, the Akaneya at 89 euros, the Matsusaka at 129, and the Matsusaka-Ito Ranch at 195 with whole Crown Melon. Each one moves through starters like duck-broth udon and beef gyoza, a hotpot, multiple grilled cuts of the day, a nigiri course, and desserts around Crown Melon and yuzu. It's a hands-on, charcoal-forward way to eat that almost nobody else in the city does at this level. Come hungry and bring someone to share the grill with.

**Order:**
- Akaneya tasting menu (per person, min 2) (€89)
- Matsusaka tasting menu (per person, min 2) (€129)
- Matsusaka-Ito Ranch tasting menu (per person, min 2) (€195)

### 10. Ramen-ya Hiro

*The city's ramen anchor, ten-hour broths*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Dreta de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer de Girona, 164, Local 2, Eixample, 08037 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €
- **Website:** https://www.ramenyahiro.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ramen-ya-hiro

Ramen-ya Hiro is the one ramen spot that earns its place on a broad Japanese list, the rest of the noodle scene lives in our ramen guide. The kitchen keeps it classic with three styles, shoyu, miso and seafood, and the broth is the whole point: ten hours of slow simmering builds the kind of umami depth that separates a real bowl from a quick one. Beyond ramen there's gyoza, rice bowls and a few sides to round things out. It's casual, well-priced and exactly what you want on a cold day or after a long one. No reservations drama, just a good bowl, the way ramen should be.

**Order:**
- Shoyu ramen
- Miso ramen
- Seafood ramen

### 11. Una Mica de Japó

*Homestyle teishoku and izakaya tapas, deliberately no sushi*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Nova Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer d'Aragó, 104, 08015 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Website:** https://www.facebook.com/unamicadejapo
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/una-mica-de-jap

Una Mica de Japó is the homestyle pick, and it makes a point of having no sushi at all. Run by Michiko out front with Shinya in the kitchen, it serves Japanese home cooking and izakaya tapas, the everyday food you'd actually eat in Japan. The signature is the daily bento box, a tray of small dishes that shifts with the kitchen's mood and the market. Around it you'll find gyoza, korokke, kushikatsu, tori teriyaki don, katsudon, salted mackerel, grilled sardines with rice, and beef sukiyaki, with matcha cake and castella sponge to finish. It's warm, personal and great value, the antidote to thinking Japanese food in Barcelona has to mean a counter and an omakase.

**Order:**
- Daily bento box
- Beef sukiyaki
- Katsudon

### 12. Soluna

*Contemporary Japanese-Mediterranean counter, Repsol Recomendado*

- **Neighbourhood:** l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer de Casanova, 157, 08036 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol Recomendado
- **Website:** https://solunabcn.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/soluna

Soluna is contemporary Japanese with a Mediterranean accent, and chef Teppei Nii runs it with real finesse. The format is tasting menus that weave Japanese technique through local Catalan produce, moving past the classic dishes toward something more delicate and balanced. It carries a Repsol Recomendado nod. Expect elevated sushi and wagyu beef plates handled with Japanese precision but warmed up by local ingredients. It's a calmer, more composed experience than the busy downtown counters, and a strong choice when you want the Japanese-Mediterranean crossover done with a light hand. Book ahead and let the menu lead.

### 13. Alapar

*Mediterranean-Japanese izakaya in Poble Sec, Repsol Recomendado*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Poble Sec
- **Address:** Carrer de Lleida, 5, 08004 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol Recomendado
- **Website:** https://www.alaparbcn.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/alapar

Alapar takes the izakaya idea and runs it through a Mediterranean-Japanese filter, in the Poble Sec space that food people will remember. Chef Jaume Marambio offers both an a la carte selection and two omakase menus, all built around seasonal produce with stocks and broths doing a lot of the heavy lifting. The range is broad and a little playful, nigiri, temaki, montaditos, stews and mochi, original plates that genuinely bridge the two traditions rather than just bolting them together. It holds a Repsol Recomendado nod. Go when you want Japanese technique with a clear Barcelona personality, and order across the menu to see how far the kitchen stretches the idea.

### 14. Robata

*Robatayaki charcoal grill plus sushi, Repsol Solete*

- **Neighbourhood:** l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer d'Enric Granados, 55, 08008 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Solete
- **Website:** https://robata.es
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/robata

Robata is the robatayaki pick, the traditional Japanese charcoal grill built into the name. The menu runs from sushi, sashimi, nigiri and uramaki to the grill itself, with chef Fabiola Lairet making bluefin tuna a particular specialty. Highlights include a Toro Soasado at 29 euros, an A5 wagyu tataki at 52, a Donburi de Anguila at 22, and a full run of robata brochettes from 5 to 10 euros each. If you want the full ride, the 'El Viaje Robata' tasting at 80 euros covers the classics through to dessert with drinks included. It carries a Repsol Solete nod. Sit where you can see the grill and build a meal around the charcoal.

**Order:**
- Toro Soasado (€29)
- A5 wagyu tataki (€52)
- El Viaje Robata tasting menu (€80)

### 15. Yoi Yoi Gion

*Barcelona's udon specialist*

- **Neighbourhood:** La Dreta de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Avinguda Diagonal, 383, La Dreta de l'Eixample, 08008 Barcelona
- **Price:** €
- **Website:** https://www.facebook.com/yoiyoigionudon
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/yoi-yoi-gion

Yoi Yoi Gion is the udon specialist, and it's the spot that fills the noodle gap most Japanese lists ignore. The focus is udon, the thick, chewy wheat noodles served hot or cold, in or alongside broth. Around that the menu runs to tempura, battered and fried vegetables and seafood, and katsu curry, the breaded cutlet with Japanese curry sauce. It's casual, affordable and exactly the kind of single-minded specialist that makes a city's Japanese scene worth knowing beyond sushi. Come for a proper bowl of udon and order the tempura on the side.

**Order:**
- Udon
- Katsu curry

### 16. Can Kenji

*Japanese izakaya with Catalan product, Repsol Solete*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Dreta de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer del Rossello, 325, 08037 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Solete
- **Website:** https://cankenji.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-kenji

Can Kenji rounds out the list as the neighbourhood izakaya that leans hard into local produce. Chef-owner Kenji Ueno serves Japanese izakaya cooking infused with Mediterranean ingredients, and it carries a Repsol Solete nod. The sushi runs premium cuts, toro, eel, yellowtail, turbot, but the personality is in the cooked plates: sardine tempura with eggplant purée, risotto onigiri, chicken karaage, duck with scallions in miso, udon, and a range of tataki. A lunch tasting offers three dishes plus a half portion of sushi, and you're looking at around 30 euros a head without drinks. It's the kind of relaxed, well-priced Japanese table you end up returning to.

**Order:**
- Sardine tempura with eggplant purée
- Risotto onigiri
- Duck with scallions in miso

## Honourable mentions

- **[Dos Palillos](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/dos-palillos)** (el Raval) — Albert Raurich's Michelin-starred, two-Repsol-Sol counter in El Raval. It's pan-Asian rather than strictly Japanese, applying elBulli-era technique across Japanese, Chinese and Thai ideas, which is why it sits here rather than in the main list, but it's one of the best counters in the city.
- **[Tempura-Ya](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/tempura-ya)** (L'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample) — A small kitchen covering a few corners of Japanese cooking at once, with tempura front and centre alongside nigiri and udon. A specialist worth seeking out for the lightly battered, deep-fried style done properly.
- **[Yatai](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/yatai)** (L'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample) — Japanese street-food and izakaya plates built for grazing with a drink in hand, the way yatai food stalls work in Japan. There are vegetarian options and a children's menu, so it's an easy one for families.
- **[Sun Taka](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/sun-taka)** (la Dreta de l'Eixample) — Mitsutaka Kawata's izakaya in the Eixample, with a broad ingredient-led carta of fish, seafood, sushi, meat and A5 wagyu. The sushi counter is the focus, with Taka working the bar himself.

## The Japanese scene in Barcelona

Barcelona has one of the deeper Japanese dining scenes in Spain, anchored by a real Japanese community and a cluster of chefs who trained in Japan before settling here. The Eixample holds the highest concentration of counters and izakaya, with more dotted through the Gothic Quarter, El Born, El Raval and Poble Sec. The range is wide: Michelin-starred sushi and Mediterranean-Japanese tasting menus at the top end, charcoal grills and homestyle bento in the middle, and ramen, udon and street-food formats at the casual end. Prices stretch from around 12 euros for a bowl of noodles to 195 euros for premium wagyu tasting menus.

## Glossary

- **Omakase** — A counter meal that translates as 'I leave it up to you'. The chef chooses and serves a set sequence built around the best fish available that day, usually a run of nigiri with hot and cold dishes around it.
- **Izakaya** — A casual Japanese tavern built around drinking and small shared plates. Expect to graze on dishes like gyoza, karaage, grilled skewers and tataki, ordered as you go rather than as a fixed menu.
- **Robatayaki** — A style of Japanese cooking centred on a charcoal grill, where meats, fish and vegetables are grilled to order. Often shortened to robata.
- **Sumiyaki** — Charcoal grilling, frequently over binchotan charcoal, used at specialist beef and meat restaurants. The clean, intense heat is prized for grilling premium cuts like wagyu.
- **Teishoku** — A Japanese set meal served as a tray of small dishes around a main, the everyday format of home-style and lunchtime eating in Japan. The bento box is a close cousin.
- **Nigiri** — Hand-pressed fingers of vinegared rice topped with a slice of fish or other ingredient, the core building block of a sushi omakase.
- **Udon** — Thick, chewy Japanese wheat noodles, served hot or cold, in or alongside broth. A specialty in its own right rather than a side dish.

## Frequently asked questions

### What's the best Japanese restaurant in Barcelona?

Koy Shunka is widely considered the top Japanese restaurant in Barcelona. Chef Hideki Matsuhisa's counter in the Gothic Quarter holds a Michelin star and two Repsol Soles, serving a tasting sequence that applies Japanese technique to Catalan and Mediterranean ingredients around a central wood-fired kitchen.

### Which Japanese restaurants in Barcelona have a Michelin star?

Three Japanese or Japanese-inspired restaurants on this list hold a Michelin star: Koy Shunka in the Gothic Quarter, Suto in Sants, and Kamikaze in the Eixample. Dos Palillos in El Raval also holds a star, though its menu is pan-Asian rather than strictly Japanese.

### What is omakase and where can I eat it in Barcelona?

Omakase means 'I leave it up to you', a counter meal where the chef serves a set sequence built around the best fish that day. In Barcelona you can eat it at Suto, Sensato, Sato i Tanaka, and as part of the menus at Alapar, among others. Counters are small, so book well ahead.

### Where can I eat at a Japanese izakaya in Barcelona?

For izakaya-style small plates and grazing, try Ikoya Izakaya in El Born, Can Kenji in the Eixample, Alapar in Poble Sec, and Sun Taka. Una Mica de Japó serves izakaya tapas and homestyle home cooking with no sushi at all, which is rare in the city.

### Is Japanese food in Barcelona only sushi?

No. Barcelona's Japanese scene runs much wider than sushi: charcoal grills like Carlota Akaneya for sumiyaki and Robata for robatayaki, ramen at Ramen-ya Hiro, udon at Yoi Yoi Gion, tempura at Tempura-Ya, and homestyle bento at Una Mica de Japó.

### Where is the best ramen in Barcelona?

Ramen-ya Hiro in the Eixample is the standout ramen anchor on this guide, with broths simmered for ten hours and three classic styles: shoyu, miso and seafood. Barcelona has a deeper ramen scene beyond it, which is covered in a dedicated ramen guide.

### Where can I find udon or tempura specialists in Barcelona?

Yoi Yoi Gion is Barcelona's udon specialist, focused on thick wheat noodles served hot or cold, plus tempura and katsu curry. Tempura-Ya covers tempura alongside nigiri and udon. Both are casual specialists rather than full-service sushi restaurants.

### How much does a Japanese meal cost in Barcelona?

Prices range widely. A bowl of ramen at Ramen-ya Hiro is around 12 euros, izakaya and homestyle meals run roughly 25 to 60 euros a head, and omakase counters sit around 52 to 85 euros. The premium wagyu tasting at Carlota Akaneya reaches 195 euros per person.

### Which Japanese restaurants in Barcelona are good for a special occasion?

For a special-occasion meal, the Michelin-starred counters lead: Koy Shunka, Suto and Kamikaze. Among the omakase counters, Sensato seats just six guests, and Sato i Tanaka holds a Repsol Sol for its pure nigiri omakase. All are small and need booking ahead.

### Where can I eat affordable Japanese food in Barcelona?

For lower-cost Japanese food, Ramen-ya Hiro does bowls from around 12 euros, Una Mica de Japó serves homestyle bento and izakaya tapas, Yoi Yoi Gion is a casual udon specialist, and Can Kenji runs around 30 euros a head without drinks.

### Are there Mediterranean-Japanese restaurants in Barcelona?

Yes. Several of Barcelona's best Japanese kitchens fuse Japanese technique with Catalan and Mediterranean produce, including Koy Shunka, Kamikaze, Soluna, Alapar, Ikoya Izakaya and Can Kenji. Many are run by chefs who trained in Japan before settling in the city.

## About the author

**Justin Mota** — Guidavera founder

Justin Mota is the founder of Guidavera. He has lived in Spain for over 10 years and runs a native AI agency alongside building this platform. Food has always been the way Justin connects with friends, and Guidavera started as the list he kept sending to everyone visiting Barcelona. He built it for himself and his friends first, and now hopes it can transform the way people discover great food experiences everywhere.

More: https://guidavera.com/about

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This guide is the canonical machine-readable version of https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/best-japanese. Every claim is verifiable against the linked restaurant profiles. Source: Guidavera (https://guidavera.com).
