Skip to content

Best Sushi in Sydney 2026

Sydney's Japanese dining runs more to robata and modern izakaya than to pure Edomae, so the serious sushi is concentrated in a handful of rooms. At the top sits Ryuichi Yoshii, close to four decades at the counter, whose ten-seat omakase at Crown Sydney is the city's most expensive sushi seat at AU$398. Below him, Chase Kojima works a robata grill and a sushi counter at The Star, a Kyoto-trained chef runs a disciplined kappo tasting on Bridge Street, and two hatted neighbourhood rooms grill first-rate yakitori. Five counters and kitchens define serious Japanese dining in Sydney in 2026, from a once-a-month omakase to a AU$60 izakaya. Ranked below by what a serious eater books this year.

Five Sydney Sushi and Japanese Counters Worth Booking

Chef: Ryuichi Yoshii
Format: Omakase, 10-seat counter
Neighbourhood: Barangaroo · Crown Sydney, Level 2, 1 Barangaroo Avenue
Price: AU$398 per person; two Good Food Guide hats; otoro nigiri, Hokkaido uni, A5 wagyu
Ryuichi Yoshii's ten-seat counter at Crown Sydney is the city's pure-sushi apex, two Good Food hats, AU$398. Book it for the occasion.

Ryuichi Yoshii has cooked sushi across Japan and Australia for close to four decades, and his omakase now runs from a ten-seat counter at Crown Sydney in Barangaroo, holding two hats in the Good Food Guide. The sitting is AU$398 a head, built on signatures the regulars order without a menu: otoro nigiri, Hokkaido uni, a course of A5 wagyu. It is the purest and most expensive sushi counter in the city, and its hardest seat to secure. Bookings release at noon on the first of each month for the month ahead. Reserve the moment the calendar opens.

Not for: a casual walk-in or a budget night. This is a ten-seat, AU$398 counter released once a month, built for a milestone rather than a spontaneous dinner.
Chef: Chase Kojima
Format: Robata grill, sushi counter, tasting menu
Neighbourhood: Pyrmont · The Star, 80 Pyrmont Street
Price: AU$130–200 per person; a standing Good Food Guide hat
Chase Kojima's flagship at The Star runs robata and a sushi counter, a Good Food hat. Book it to impress a client.

Sokyo is Chase Kojima's modern-Japanese flagship inside The Star in Pyrmont, a room that has held a hat in the Good Food Guide for years running. The kitchen works two strengths in parallel: robata flights from an open grill and sushi from a counter set with rice handled correctly and fish drawn from East Coast and Tokyo wholesalers. Dinner runs about AU$130 to AU$200 a head, with a tasting menu for a full read of the room. The sushi counter is the seat to take, and the most polished Japanese dining room in the city for a client night. Book one to two weeks ahead.

Not for: a purist after a silent Edomae temple. Sokyo is a lively hotel flagship built for robata and a scene, not a hushed sushi-only counter.
Chef: Kyoto-trained chef-owner
Format: Kappo tasting, ~12 courses, 8 hinoki seats
Neighbourhood: Sydney CBD · 50 Bridge Street
Price: AU$185 per person; steamed egg custard with sea urchin, wagyu shabu-shabu, donabe-rice nigiri
A Kyoto-trained chef runs Sydney's most disciplined kappo counter, eight hinoki seats, AU$185 for twelve courses. Book it for a solo seat.

Kappo Yama sits on Bridge Street in the CBD, an eight-seat hinoki counter in pale wood and washi screens run by a Kyoto-trained chef as a kappo project rather than a strict sushi bar. The AU$185 tasting runs about twelve courses across ninety minutes: a seasonal sashimi platter, a steamed egg custard with sea urchin, a wagyu and seasonal-vegetable shabu-shabu, and a closing nigiri progression on rice cooked in donabe. The room is built for one or two diners, not a party, and the chef works directly in front of the counter. Book three to five weeks ahead.

Not for: a group dinner or a menu of choices. Kappo Yama is a set eight-seat tasting for solo and two-person diners, with no à-la-carte and no room for a party.
Format: Robata grill and seasonal small plates
Signature: Robata-grilled black cod
Neighbourhood: Surry Hills · 490 Crown Street
Price: AU$60–100 per person; the value serious-Japanese seat in the city
Surry Hills' izakaya centres on a robata grill and its black cod, priced for the neighbourhood. Book it for a first date.

Toko on Crown Street is Surry Hills' long-running modern-Japanese izakaya, a robata grill at the centre and a careful seasonal small-plate programme around it. The robata-grilled black cod is the dish the room is built on; sashimi flights come from the cold kitchen, and the cocktail list is unusually serious for the format. Dinner lands at about AU$60 to AU$100 a head, the value seat among the city's serious Japanese rooms. The dining room takes bookings while the bar handles walk-ins. It is the right first-date table for a diner who wants Japanese cooking without a tasting-menu commitment. Reserve a few days ahead.

Not for: a pure sushi counter. Toko is a robata-first izakaya, and the grill, not a nigiri progression, is the reason to book.
Chef: Jonathan Barthelmess
Format: Open-kitchen yakitori and sashimi
Neighbourhood: Potts Point · 73 Macleay Street
Price: AU$60–100 per person; a Good Food Guide hat
Jonathan Barthelmess's Potts Point room grills a proper yakitori flight and holds a Good Food hat. Book it for a neighbourhood dinner.

Cho Cho San on Macleay Street is Jonathan Barthelmess's small modern-Japanese room in Potts Point, an open kitchen along the bar and a hat in the Good Food Guide for the cooking off its grill. The draw is the yakitori flight, a proper progression through chicken parts and vegetables, alongside considered sashimi, seasonal small plates and a donburi for a heavier finish. The room is intimate and busy, priced at about AU$60 to AU$100 a head, and the sake list rewards a confident order. It is a neighbourhood dinner done at restaurant standard. Book a few days ahead for a prime table.

Not for: a formal omakase occasion. Cho Cho San is a busy, casual open-kitchen room built on yakitori, not a quiet counter tasting.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best sushi in Sydney?
Yoshii's Omakase is the best pure-sushi counter in Sydney; Ryuichi Yoshii's ten-seat room at Crown Sydney holds two Good Food Guide hats and runs a AU$398 sitting on signatures like otoro nigiri and Hokkaido uni. For a more accessible seat, Chase Kojima's Sokyo at The Star runs a strong sushi counter alongside its robata. See the full Sydney restaurant directory for the wider Japanese picture.
Where is the best omakase in Sydney?
Yoshii's Omakase at Crown Sydney is the city's benchmark omakase, a ten-seat counter from Ryuichi Yoshii at AU$398 a head. Kappo Yama on Bridge Street is the disciplined mid-price alternative, a AU$185 kappo tasting of about twelve courses. Bookings for Yoshii's release at noon on the first of each month; Kappo Yama takes reservations three to five weeks out.
How much is Yoshii's Omakase?
Yoshii's Omakase is AU$398 per person in 2026, the most expensive sushi seat in Sydney. The ten-seat counter at Crown Sydney releases bookings at noon on the first of each month for the following month, and they clear quickly. Chef Ryuichi Yoshii builds the sitting around otoro nigiri, Hokkaido uni and a course of A5 wagyu. Expect a sitting of around two hours.
What is the best Japanese restaurant in Sydney?
For pure sushi, Yoshii's Omakase; for a full modern-Japanese dining room, Chase Kojima's Sokyo at The Star, which has held a Good Food Guide hat for years. For a chef-paced tasting, Kappo Yama's kappo counter on Bridge Street; for a casual neighbourhood dinner, Jonathan Barthelmess's Cho Cho San in Potts Point or Toko in Surry Hills. Each answers a different evening.
Which Sydney sushi counters take walk-ins?
The casual rooms are the walk-in options: Toko in Surry Hills seats walk-ins at its bar, and Cho Cho San in Potts Point can fit a couple at short notice midweek. The counter seats, Yoshii's Omakase, Kappo Yama and Sokyo's sushi bar, need bookings, in Yoshii's case weeks ahead. For a spontaneous Japanese dinner, aim for the izakaya rooms.

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.