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Best Sushi Restaurants in New York 2026

Twelve seats at Sushi Sho. Eight at Sushi Noz. Six at Shion 69 Leonard. The serious sushi counters in New York are smaller than the omakase rooms in most Tokyo neighbourhoods, and they book a comparable two to three months out. Eight chefs in the city actually trained in Japan, brought their hinoki, brushed their own nikiri, and held their shari at body temperature. The eight rooms below are the ones the bureau books without thinking. One of them ($950) is in a different conversation entirely. One is a Nikkei fusion empire we include only to talk you out of going for the wrong reason.

Eight Sushi Rooms in New York Worth the Wait

Chef: Shion Uino (formerly Sushi Saito, Tokyo — three Michelin stars)
Cuisine: Edomae omakase
Neighborhood: TriBeCa · 69 Leonard Street
Price: ~$495 omakase, before sake pairing (~$275)
Shion Uino brought the Saito playbook to TriBeCa in 2021 — the tightest Edomae room in New York and the hardest 18-seat reservation. Book it for the meal you will remember next year.

Shion Uino spent eight years at the right hand of Takashi Saito in Tokyo before opening 69 Leonard at the end of 2021. The room is hinoki, the counter is six seats on one side and a private alcove on the other, and the progression is twenty courses of which roughly twelve are nigiri. The kohada (gizzard shad) lands third — vinegar-cured to a five-day window, the kind of fish that exposes whether a chef has trained at Saito or trained on YouTube. The aged otoro is brushed with nikiri, not poured. The shari is warmer than New York is used to.

Not for: first dates. The counter faces forward, the kitchen runs a strict ninety-minute pace, and conversation across the room is functionally impossible.
Chef: Keiji Nakazawa (founder, Sushi Sho Yotsuya, Tokyo, 1989)
Cuisine: Edomae omakase
Neighborhood: NoMad · The Ritz-Carlton, 1185 Broadway
Price: ~$425 omakase; opened in New York in 2021
The Tokyo legend's first overseas counter, on the second floor of the Ritz-Carlton NoMad. Reserve weeks ahead for a quieter, longer evening than 69 Leonard delivers.

Keiji Nakazawa ran the original Sushi Sho in Yotsuya for thirty-one years before the New York counter opened in 2021. The lineage is consequential — Daisuke Nakazawa (Sushi Nakazawa, West Village) is his protégé, and roughly a third of the Edomae chefs in Manhattan have studied under one of the two. The signature is the layered chirashi he developed in Tokyo in the early 1990s: ten or eleven small piles of seafood, each dressed differently, that the chef will tell you to eat in a specific order. The shari is older than at any other New York counter — closer to four hours of fermentation than two.

Not for: a $185-omakase budget. The bill clears $700 a head with sake pairing and tax.
Chef: Masayoshi Takayama
Cuisine: Edomae and kaiseki tasting
Neighborhood: Columbus Circle · 10 Columbus Circle, 4th floor (Time Warner Center)
Price: $950 prix-fixe omakase (excl. tax, tip, drinks)
Three Michelin stars since the 2009 New York guide — the longest-running three-star sushi room outside Japan. Fly in for it once if the bill is not the point of the evening.

Masa is the most expensive serious restaurant in North America. The room is twenty-six seats around a hinoki counter so wide and so empty it has its own gravity; the menu is whatever Masa Takayama feels like preparing, drawn from a fish list that arrives from Toyosu twice a week and from a wagyu programme that includes a private cut not sold elsewhere in the city. The toro tartare with caviar has been on the menu since the room opened in 2004 and it remains the test course. Three Michelin stars, year after year, since the inaugural New York guide.

Not for: anyone who can't ignore the bill. A real evening — sake pairing, premium add-ons, twenty percent tip — clears $1,500 a head.
Chef: Nozomu Abe
Cuisine: Edomae omakase
Neighborhood: Upper East Side · 181 E 78th Street
Price: ~$345 omakase; one Michelin star since 2020
Hinoki counter shipped from Japan, eight seats, no music. The Upper East Side's quietest serious sushi room — book it for a solo evening or a dinner of two.

Nozomu Abe imported the actual counter from Japan when he opened on 78th Street in 2018: hinoki cypress, hand-finished, two hundred years old. The room seats eight and runs two seatings a night. Abe came up under Tomoharu Nakamura at Hatsuhana before his own counter; the discipline shows in his cure schedule — saba (mackerel) brined for forty minutes precisely, kohada cured five days, anago simmered in the morning and served at body temperature in the evening. One Michelin star since the 2020 guide; in our scoring it sits a hair below Sho and 69 Leonard on the strength of a slightly less ambitious tuna programme.

Not for: groups. The room is small enough that a four-top breaks the choreography for everyone else at the counter.
Chef: Daisuke Nakazawa (formerly Sukiyabashi Jiro, Tokyo)
Cuisine: Edomae omakase
Neighborhood: West Village · 23 Commerce Street
Price: ~$185 counter omakase; one Michelin star earned in opening year (2013)
The Jiro protégé who became the protagonist of Jiro Dreams of Sushi — and built the most generous-value serious sushi counter in Manhattan. Pencil it in for an early-week solo dinner.

Daisuke Nakazawa is the apprentice from Jiro Dreams of Sushi who, after a decade at Sukiyabashi Jiro and a stint at Sushi Sho with Keiji Nakazawa, opened a 23-seat counter on Commerce Street in 2013. It earned the Michelin star in its opening year. The omakase at the counter is $185 — a number that has not moved meaningfully in three years and is genuinely the best price-to-rice ratio in Manhattan for serious Edomae. The signature is the warm-rice course: shari held just below skin temperature, served with anago glazed in a tsume that Daisuke reduces from heads and bones each morning.

Not for: diners expecting Daisuke at the counter every night. He's now at the door more than the case — the lieutenants run the omakase, and they are very good but they are not him.
Sushi Ichimura at Uchu
#6
Chef: Eiji Ichimura
Cuisine: Edomae omakase (the upstairs sushi room at Uchu)
Neighborhood: Lower East Side / Bowery · 38 Bowery
Price: ~$445 omakase; Uchu carries two Michelin stars (2024 guide)
Eiji Ichimura's third New York counter, hidden upstairs from the Uchu tasting room. Try it once for the aged-tuna programme alone.

Eiji Ichimura was the original sushi chef at Brushstroke and ran Ichimura at Brushstroke through its Michelin-starred years; in 2022 he reopened upstairs at Uchu, in a ten-seat hinoki room that operates almost independently of the downstairs French-Japanese tasting menu. His tuna ageing programme — chu-toro held in salt for between three and ten days before service — is the most ambitious in the city and the reason to come. The shari is vinegared with red akazu, not white, which is unusual in New York and a meaningful difference if you've eaten in Ginza. Uchu carries two Michelin stars in the 2024 guide.

Not for: a first-time omakase diner. The aged tuna is acquired-taste territory; start at Nakazawa and graduate up.
Chef: Max Natmessnig (since 2023); previously César Ramirez
Cuisine: French-Japanese tasting menu — included here because half the menu is sushi
Neighborhood: Hell's Kitchen · 431 W 37th Street
Price: ~$395 tasting; three Michelin stars (carried since 2014)
Not a pure sushi room, but the eighteen-seat counter has held three Michelin stars longer than any other New York kitchen. Worth a flight if you eat both French and Edomae.

The Chef's Table has held three Michelin stars since 2014 — a tenure that survived a kitchen change in 2023 when Max Natmessnig took over from César Ramirez. The format is a roughly twenty-course French-Japanese tasting at an eighteen-seat hinoki counter, with the second half of the menu — eight to ten courses — built around nigiri and Edomae preparations. Sourcing comes from Toyosu twice weekly. The price is gentler than Masa for what is, arguably, more ambitious cooking; the only reason it doesn't outrank the pure sushi counters above is that purists come for rice, and half this menu is consommé and confit.

Not for: a guest who only wants nigiri. The first ninety minutes are French; if that's the wrong evening, book Sho instead.
Chef: Nobu Matsuhisa (founder); kitchen run by team
Cuisine: Nikkei (Japanese-Peruvian) — not Edomae
Neighborhood: TriBeCa · 195 Broadway
Price: ~$175–220 per head for à la carte; tasting from ~$185
The most-Googled sushi name in New York. Skip it if you came for Edomae — book it for a long, loud, beautifully designed dinner where the sushi is the side, not the point.

Nobu Downtown is in this list to be talked out of. Nobu Matsuhisa's New York rooms — Downtown, 57, the Park Avenue branch — have been built around miso black cod, yellowtail tiradito, and a wood-fire programme that owes more to Lima than to Tokyo. The sushi case is competent and properly sourced; it is also the third-best reason to come. If a colleague pitches "let's do sushi tonight" and means the kind of evening where ten people share six dishes and three bottles of Brunello, Nobu Downtown is correct. If they mean "let's eat nigiri," book Sushi Nakazawa.

Not for: the Edomae purist. The shari is fine. The shari is also not the point.

How New York Sushi Stacks Up Against Tokyo

A genuine answer, from the desk: in 2026, the top three or four New York counters belong in the same conversation as a mid-tier Ginza or Roppongi room. They do not yet belong in the conversation with Sushi Saito, Mizutani, or Sukiyabashi Jiro Honten — but Shion Uino, who came up at Saito, is the closest argument anyone has made for that bridge. The lineage has been imported chef by chef. The fish arrives twice a week from Toyosu on the same Japan Airlines cargo route as Hong Kong's serious counters. The shari recipes survive the move. The mid-market still lags Tokyo by a wide margin — there is no New York equivalent of a $90 neighbourhood omakase in Setagaya — but the top end has closed the distance further than any other city.

The trade-off is volume. A Tokyo chef may serve four people at a seating; the equivalent New York room serves eight. The economics of Manhattan rent require it. If you have eaten ten-seat Edomae in Tokyo and find the eighteen-seat counter at Brooklyn Fare distracting, that is not a Brooklyn Fare problem. It's a square-footage problem.

How to Pick Which Counter

If the budget is uncapped and the evening is the point: Masa. Three stars for a reason. Bring someone you love or a client you want to win for life.

If you want the best pure sushi meal you will eat in New York and you can plan twelve weeks out: Shion 69 Leonard, then Sushi Sho. Either one. They are different evenings — 69 Leonard is tighter and faster; Sho is slower and more conversational.

If you want serious Edomae at an honest price and you can book three weeks ahead: Sushi Nakazawa. The $185 omakase is the best ratio in the city.

If you are a solo diner or a counter-loving two-top: Sushi Noz. The eight-seat room is built for it.

If you want sushi as part of something else — French technique, wine programme, theatre: Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare. Three stars, eighteen seats, and an honest answer to the "where do we eat tonight" problem when the table includes one person who does not eat raw fish.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best sushi restaurant in New York?
For Edomae purists, the answer is a coin flip between Shion 69 Leonard (Shion Uino, ex–Sushi Saito Tokyo) and Sushi Sho (Keiji Nakazawa, founder of the original Sushi Sho in Yotsuya). Both run small, expensive counters with shari held at body temperature and nikiri brushed on the rice. If the budget is uncapped, Masa keeps its three Michelin stars for a reason — but $950 a head is a different conversation.
How far ahead do you need to book sushi in New York?
Eight to twelve weeks for the headline counters — Masa, Shion 69 Leonard, Sushi Sho, Sushi Noz. Tock drops the new month at midnight Eastern on a set day; for Shion the window has closed in under three minutes for Friday and Saturday seatings. Sushi Nakazawa is more forgiving — three to four weeks. Sushi Ichimura at Uchu sometimes has a same-week counter seat if you call Tuesday or Wednesday.
How much should I expect to pay for omakase in New York?
The serious Edomae rooms sit between $345 and $525 per head before drinks: Sushi Noz $345, Sushi Sho about $425, Sushi Ichimura $445, Shion 69 Leonard around $495. Sake or wine pairing adds $185 to $275. Sushi Nakazawa undercuts the field at $185 omakase. Masa is the outlier at $950 — and the $950 does not include tax, tip, or the sake list, so a real bill clears $1,400 a head.
Is omakase in New York as good as Tokyo?
At the top end, yes — and that is a 2026 sentence that would not have been true ten years ago. Shion Uino trained at Sushi Saito (three stars, Tokyo). Keiji Nakazawa ran the original Sushi Sho in Yotsuya for two decades. Nozomu Abe shipped his hinoki counter from Japan. The lineage is now imported, the fish is air-freighted from Toyosu twice a week, and the shari recipes survive the move. The mid-market still lags Tokyo by a wide margin.
What should I order at a New York omakase counter?
At a strict Edomae counter, you don't order — the chef sets the progression and you eat in sequence. What you can do: tell the host on booking if you skip uni, raw shellfish, or fish skin, and they will substitute. The kohada (gizzard shad), aged tuna otoro, and the anago are the test pieces — if those land at the right temperature with nikiri properly brushed, the rest of the meal will too.
Is Nobu Downtown a serious sushi restaurant?
Nobu is a serious restaurant — just not a serious sushi restaurant. Nobu Matsuhisa's cuisine is Nikkei: Japanese technique through a Peruvian lens, with miso black cod and yellowtail tiradito doing more of the work than the sushi case. Book Nobu Downtown for a long, loud, charming dinner with people who don't want a counter. Book Sushi Noz if you came for the rice.

Editorial independence: RFK accepts no payment for inclusion. Some links may pay an affiliate commission on completed reservations; this does not affect rank order or whether a restaurant is included. See methodology for our scoring rubric and revisit cadence.