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Best Wagyu in Tokyo 2026

Wagyu in Tokyo is not a single restaurant experience — it is six different cuisines that happen to share an ingredient. Sukiyaki at Asakusa Imahan, family-run since 1895, is one of them. Shabu-shabu at Seryna in Roppongi, since 1962, is another. Yakiniku at a counter where the chef trims and grills A5 cuts in front of you (Nakahara, Ushigoro Bambina) is a third. Sumibi-yaki Tajima beefsteak at Aragawa, the Shinbashi institution since 1967, is a fourth — and at ¥60,000 for the steak alone, the most expensive single dish on this list. The Wagyumafia phenomenon, with its ¥35,000 Chateaubriand Cutlet Sandwich, is a fifth. Below: seven rooms across all of those formats, ranked by what a serious eater in Tokyo actually books in 2026.

Seven Tokyo Wagyu Rooms Across the Six Formats

Aragawa
#1
Lineage: Founded by the Aragawa family in 1967; family-operated
Cuisine: Sumibi-yaki (white-oak charcoal) Sanda Tajima beefsteak
Neighborhood: Shinbashi · Hankyu Kotsusha Building B1F, 3-23-11 Shinbashi, Minato
Price: ¥60,000 for the steak alone; full dinner ¥80,000–¥110,000; founded 1967, the longest-running serious beef room in Tokyo
The most expensive steak room in Tokyo, by some margin — Sanda Tajima beef over white-oak charcoal since 1967. Fly in for it once.

Aragawa opened in 1967 in the basement of the Hankyu Kotsusha Building in Shinbashi and has been one of the most expensive and most-cited steak rooms in Japan ever since. The beef is Sanda Tajima — a single-source Hyogo strain that is the most carefully-handled wagyu in the country — cooked over a sumibi-yaki charcoal grill fired with white binchu oak from the Aragawa family's own contracted source. The steak is a thick block of marbled Tajima sirloin, salted, grilled, sliced into thick fingers, and served with grated mountain wasabi and fleur de sel. The room is dark wood, white tablecloths, twelve seats, suit-required dress code. Service is in Japanese (English available with notice). Reservations through a Tokyo hotel concierge are the reliable foreigner route; six weeks ahead minimum for any prime night.

Not for: a guest who reads the price and wants a full tasting menu of equivalent value. Aragawa is one course — a single piece of meat — and the rest of the meal is supporting.
Wagyumafia
#2
Founders: Hisato Hamada and Takafumi Horie
Cuisine: Wagyu omakase — Ozaki and Kobe beef, plus the famous Chateaubriand Cutlet Sandwich
Neighborhood: Multiple — Nakameguro flagship (1-2-13 Kamimeguro), Hamadaya (Roppongi)
Price: Omakase ¥35,000–¥60,000; Chateaubriand Cutlet Sandwich ~¥35,000; founded 2016
Hisato Hamada's wagyu omakase and the world's most-expensive sandwich — the Tokyo wagyu room that became a global brand. Try it once for the Chateaubriand Cutlet Sandwich.

Hisato Hamada and Takafumi Horie launched Wagyumafia in 2016 as a members-only wagyu experience and have built it into the most-recognisable Tokyo beef brand outside Japan — with outposts in London, Hong Kong, and Dubai. The flagship in Nakameguro runs a wagyu omakase course of ten to fourteen dishes, all built around Ozaki beef (Miyazaki Prefecture) and certified Kobe beef. The Chateaubriand Cutlet Sandwich — A5 Ozaki tenderloin, panko-fried in lard, between two slices of toasted milk bread, sliced into eight finger-sized pieces — runs about ¥35,000 for the sandwich alone and is, by a comfortable margin, the most-photographed wagyu dish on social media. The room is dark, the music is loud, the photo culture is part of the meal.

Not for: a quiet wagyu purist. Wagyumafia is a branded experience as much as a meal; if the Tokyo tradition is what you want, eat at Aragawa or Imahan.
Ushigoro Bambina
#3
Operator: Ushigoro group (multiple Tokyo yakiniku counters)
Cuisine: Yakiniku omakase — A5 wagyu counter
Neighborhood: Hiroo · 5-15-25 Hiroo (plus Ginza, Nishi-Azabu, Ueno branches)
Price: Omakase ¥25,000–¥38,000; Ushigoro group founded mid-2010s
Ushigoro Bambina's Hiroo counter is the easiest entry into serious Tokyo yakiniku — A5 omakase, a chef trimming cuts in front of you, no menu decisions. Book it for a wagyu-curious dinner.

The Ushigoro group runs four counters across Tokyo (Ginza, Nishi-Azabu, Ueno, Hiroo); Bambina, the Hiroo branch, is the most-accessible and the most-bookable of the four. The course is a chef-driven yakiniku omakase: ten to fourteen cuts of A5 wagyu (chuck flap, tongue, skirt, sirloin, fillet, ribeye, plus offal sections like reba and tan moto) trimmed in front of you, grilled briefly on a smokeless tabletop grill, and served with a small set of seasoning options (salt, tare, ponzu, wasabi). The pacing is faster than a kaiseki and closer to sushi omakase — fifteen pieces in seventy-five minutes is normal. Reservations through Tablecheck or by phone; one month ahead is comfortable.

Not for: a guest who wants to grill their own meat across a leisurely two-hour dinner. Bambina is paced; the chef controls the grill timing.
Sumibiyakiniku Nakahara
#4
Chef: Tomohiro Nakahara (中原 知宏)
Cuisine: Charcoal yakiniku — single-farm wagyu, a one-man counter
Neighborhood: Shirokanedai · 3-1-1 Shirokanedai, Minato
Price: Omakase ¥28,000–¥38,000; Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition; small counter (8 seats)
Tomohiro Nakahara runs a single-counter binchotan yakiniku room — the most disciplined wagyu cookery at this price band in Tokyo. Read the verdict for the rare-cut omakase alone.

Tomohiro Nakahara opened Sumibiyakiniku Nakahara in Shirokanedai with a one-man-counter premise: eight seats, single-farm wagyu (Iwate Prefecture and Saga), binchotan-only grilling, and a chef-driven omakase that the diner does not influence. The course runs ten to twelve cuts and concentrates on the harder-to-source rare sections — zabuton (chuck flap, the marbled saddle), misuji (top blade, the fan-shaped centre), ichibo (rump cap), sankaku (triple-tipped chuck flap). The seasoning is restrained — coarse sea salt for the first half, a single tare for the heavier cuts. This is the wagyu equivalent of a serious sushi omakase: the chef is the meal. Reservations one to two months ahead by phone.

Not for: a group of more than four. The eight-seat counter does not split into private parties; if you book three seats out of eight, you eat alongside other guests.
Yakiniku Jumbo Shirokanedai
#5
Lineage: Yakiniku Jumbo group, founded 1979; Shirokanedai branch is the upscale flagship
Cuisine: Premium yakiniku — A5 wagyu, large à-la-carte menu
Neighborhood: Shirokanedai · 4-7-12 Shirokanedai, Minato (Hakusan original)
Price: Per-person ~¥15,000–¥22,000 à la carte; group founded 1979
Yakiniku Jumbo's Shirokanedai branch is the bookable wagyu counter when the omakase rooms are full — large menu, A5 grade, sit-down comfort. Pencil it in for a Wednesday with friends.

The Yakiniku Jumbo group has been a serious Tokyo wagyu operator since 1979, with the Hakusan original and the Shirokanedai upscale branch as the two flagship rooms. Shirokanedai is the bookable answer when the omakase counters (Nakahara, Ushigoro Bambina) are full or feel too formal — it is a proper sit-down yakiniku restaurant with a long à-la-carte menu and A5 grade across the standard cuts. Order the tongue cuts (tanmoto, the thicker midsection), the chuck flap (zabuton), and the chateaubriand. The room is generous in size (around fifty seats), the lighting is brighter than the omakase counters, and the pace is in your hands. Reservations one to two weeks ahead through Tablecheck.

Not for: the chef-driven omakase experience. Jumbo is à la carte and the diner runs the grill — that's the trade-off for the easier booking.
Asakusa Imahan
#6
Lineage: Founded by the Yamashita family in 1895; family-operated
Cuisine: Sukiyaki and shabu-shabu — Tajima beef
Neighborhood: Asakusa · 3-1-12 Nishi-Asakusa, Taito
Price: Sukiyaki course ¥15,000–¥30,000; founded 1895; lineage room for sukiyaki in Tokyo
Asakusa Imahan has been serving sukiyaki since 1895 — the lineage room for the format and a properly serious wagyu meal at a fraction of the omakase price. Book it for a winter Sunday dinner.

The Yamashita family opened the original Imahan in 1895 — for context, that's three years before the Spanish-American War — and Asakusa Imahan, in the original building on Nishi-Asakusa, remains the lineage sukiyaki room in Tokyo. The format: a low table with a heated cast-iron pan, a kimono-clad server who portions raw Tajima beef and the supporting vegetables (shungiku chrysanthemum greens, enoki and shiitake mushrooms, grilled tofu, shirataki), and a sauce of soy, sugar, mirin, and dashi (the warishita). The beef is dipped in raw egg and eaten in stages. The room is tatami-floored, the service is formal, and the meal runs ninety minutes. This is the format Tokyo lays its older guests, its business dinners, and its end-of-year gatherings.

Not for: a guest who cannot sit on a tatami floor for ninety minutes. Table seating is available on request — note it when booking.
Seryna Roppongi
#7
Lineage: Seryna group, founded 1962 in Roppongi; family-operated since
Cuisine: Kobe beef teppanyaki and shabu-shabu
Neighborhood: Roppongi · 3-12-2 Roppongi, Minato
Price: Teppanyaki or shabu-shabu course ¥30,000–¥55,000; founded 1962
Seryna Roppongi has served Kobe beef shabu-shabu and teppanyaki since 1962 — the most-traditional Kobe-beef room in central Tokyo. Book it for a business dinner that calls for formality.

Seryna opened in Roppongi in 1962 and has been a Kobe-beef institution in the neighbourhood ever since. The restaurant runs two principal formats: shabu-shabu in the main Mon Cher Ton Ton room, and teppanyaki at separate counters where a chef sears Kobe sirloin and fillet on a hot plate in front of you. Both formats use certified Kobe beef (Tajima cattle, Hyogo, BMS 6+) — the sourcing is the longest-running in Tokyo by some margin. The room is dark wood, formal lighting, suit-and-tie expected; service is in Japanese and English. The shabu-shabu sauces (ponzu, sesame) are the most carefully composed in the city. Reservations one month ahead via the website or by phone.

Not for: a low-key date. Seryna is a formal-dress, business-dinner room — that's the format.

The Six Wagyu Formats, Mapped

Sumibi-yaki (charcoal steak): Aragawa — Sanda Tajima, white-oak binchu charcoal.

Yakiniku (counter grill): Sumibiyakiniku Nakahara for the omakase, Ushigoro Bambina for the more accessible omakase, Yakiniku Jumbo Shirokanedai for à la carte.

Sukiyaki: Asakusa Imahan — Tajima beef, tatami room, since 1895.

Shabu-shabu: Seryna Roppongi — Kobe beef, the longest-running in central Tokyo.

Teppanyaki: Seryna Roppongi or the Wagyumafia Hamadaya counter.

Wagyu omakase as performance: Wagyumafia — Ozaki and Kobe, the Chateaubriand Cutlet Sandwich.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best wagyu restaurant in Tokyo?
Depends entirely on the format. For grilled steak in the European sense, Aragawa in Shinbashi — Sanda Tajima beef over white-oak sumibi charcoal, the most-cited steak room in Japan since 1967 and a regular Tabelog top-five entry. For yakiniku counter omakase, Sumibiyakiniku Nakahara in Shirokanedai is the technical answer; Ushigoro Bambina the more accessible one. For sukiyaki, Asakusa Imahan, family-run since 1895, is the lineage room. There is no single wagyu meal — there are six different cuisines.
How much does wagyu cost in Tokyo?
At Aragawa, the Sanda Tajima steak alone is roughly ¥60,000 per person; full dinner with starters and wine, ¥80,000–¥110,000. Wagyumafia's wagyu omakase course is ¥35,000–¥60,000. Ushigoro Bambina and Nakahara run ¥25,000–¥38,000 yakiniku courses. Sukiyaki at Asakusa Imahan is ¥15,000–¥30,000 depending on cut. Seryna Roppongi sits at ¥30,000–¥55,000 for shabu-shabu or teppanyaki with Kobe beef. The Wagyumafia Chateaubriand Cutlet Sandwich, à la carte, is around ¥35,000 for the sandwich alone.
What is the difference between Kobe beef, Tajima beef, and A5 wagyu?
All three sit inside a hierarchy. Wagyu is the umbrella term for four Japanese breeds (Kuroge, Akage, Mukaku, Tankaku — over 90% of premium wagyu is Kuroge / Japanese Black). Tajima is a strain of Kuroge raised in Hyogo Prefecture. Kobe beef is a sub-designation: it must be Tajima cattle raised, slaughtered, and graded within Hyogo Prefecture, with strict marbling scores (BMS 6+). A5 is the top grade on a separate axis — yield (A) plus quality (5). A5 Kobe is the apex; A5 Ozaki, A5 Matsusaka, A5 Omi, and A5 Yonezawa are equally rare named cattle from other prefectures.
What is yakiniku and how is it different from a steakhouse?
Yakiniku — literally "grilled meat" — is the Japanese counter-and-grill format adapted from Korean barbecue and refined into its own discipline. Diners cook small portions of pre-cut wagyu over a tabletop grill (gas or charcoal), eat them immediately, and progress through ten to twenty cuts in a sitting. A serious yakiniku room is closer to a sushi omakase counter than to a Texas steakhouse: small portions, careful pacing, single-farm sourcing, the chef controls the order. Western-style steaks are not on the menu at top yakiniku rooms.
How hard is it to book Aragawa or Wagyumafia?
Aragawa takes phone-only reservations one month ahead — Japanese-language preferred but the dining manager handles English requests; a Tokyo concierge desk is the foreigner-friendly route. Wagyumafia uses Tablecheck and the website with an English booking flow; reservations open four to six weeks ahead and prime time clears in under a day for Friday and Saturday at the Nakameguro flagship. For Aragawa, plan minimum six weeks ahead; for Wagyumafia, three to four weeks ahead is usually sufficient outside cherry-blossom season.
Is wagyu in Tokyo worth the price?
Yes — when the room respects the ingredient. The case against is real: ¥60,000 for a steak at Aragawa, ¥35,000 for a sandwich at Wagyumafia, and the eating experience is intense rather than long. The case for: the marbling, sourcing, and cooking technique in Tokyo's top wagyu rooms cannot be replicated outside Japan — A5 export is highly restricted, single-farm sourcing is uncommon abroad, and the breadth of formats (sukiyaki, shabu, yakiniku, sumibi, teppanyaki) is the meal.

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.