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Best Yakitori in Tokyo 2026

The sori-resu — chicken oyster, the small disc of muscle behind the thigh, two per bird — arrives fifth at Torishiki, charred and bare and four bites long. Yoshiteru Ikegawa has been grilling it the same way over binchotan for eighteen years, single-farm chickens from a Kagoshima supplier, and the rest of Tokyo's yakitori conversation orbits this counter. Below: seven yakitori counters where a serious eater in Tokyo books in 2026, ranked by the discipline of the chicken sourcing, the binchotan management, and the willingness to grill the unflashy cuts (cartilage, neck, soft bone) as carefully as the loin and the breast.

Seven Tokyo Yakitori Counters Worth the Detour

Torishiki
#1
Chef: Yoshiteru Ikegawa (池川 義輝)
Cuisine: Counter yakitori — single-farm chickens, binchotan
Neighborhood: Kami-Osaki, Shinagawa · 2-14-12 Kami-Osaki
Price: Omakase ¥15,000–¥18,000; Michelin one star since 2010; opened 2007
Yoshiteru Ikegawa runs the most-imitated yakitori counter in Tokyo — single-farm Kagoshima chickens, binchotan, an eighteen-piece course. Reserve weeks ahead via concierge.

Yoshiteru Ikegawa opened Torishiki on a quiet street in Kami-Osaki in 2007 and was awarded a Michelin star in 2010. The counter is roughly ten seats over two nightly seatings, and Ikegawa is at the grill personally for every service. The chickens are single-farm — a Kagoshima supplier raises the entire bird run for the restaurant, slaughtered to order, delivered same morning — which makes Torishiki one of a handful of yakitori counters in Tokyo where the chicken biology is the menu rather than an afterthought. The standard course runs eighteen pieces: tsukune, sasami with wasabi, sori-resu (the chicken oyster), bonjiri, leg meat, liver, heart, skin, and a soft-bone close. The sake list is sharp and unshowy. Reservations open thirty days ahead by phone — concierge channel via Mandarin Oriental or Aman is the foreigner-friendly route.

Not for: a guest who needs an English menu and wide table. The counter is intimate, Japanese-language, and unapologetic about it.
Birdland
#2
Chef: Toshihiro Wada (和田 利弘)
Cuisine: Yakitori with serious wine pairing — Ginza counter
Neighborhood: Ginza, basement of Tsukamoto Sogyo Building · 4-2-15 Ginza
Price: Omakase ¥22,000–¥28,000; Michelin one star multiple editions; opened 1987
Toshihiro Wada built the only yakitori room in Tokyo with a real wine list — Burgundy and Champagne against binchotan-grilled chicken liver. Worth the flight for the pairing.

Toshihiro Wada opened Birdland in the basement of the Tsukamoto Sogyo Building in Ginza in 1987 and quietly built what is, in 2026, the most-considered drinks programme at any yakitori counter on earth. The room is a long zinc counter facing a closed-front grill; the chickens are single-farm and the binchotan is from Wakayama. The wine list is the differentiator — Burgundy whites against the lighter cuts, Beaujolais and red Burgundy against the liver and the tsukune, vintage Champagne against the skin-and-fat course. The chicken liver paste — a single slice, on warm sourdough — is the most-cited bite. Reservations one to two months ahead through the website (English available) or via Tablecheck.

Not for: a beer-only night. The wine programme is the meal at Birdland; if you do not want a wine pairing, eat at Torishiki instead.
Yakitori Imai
#3
Chef: Hiroshi Imai (今井 寛)
Cuisine: Counter yakitori — Nishi-Azabu
Neighborhood: Nishi-Azabu, Minato · 4-2-35 Nishi-Azabu
Price: Omakase ¥18,000–¥22,000; Michelin one star; opened 2014
Hiroshi Imai's Nishi-Azabu counter is the rising room in Tokyo yakitori — quieter than Torishiki, deeper sourcing notes on each piece. Fly in for it once before the wider world catches up.

Hiroshi Imai opened the Nishi-Azabu counter in 2014 after training under a respected yakitori master and has been building reputation steadily through Michelin's last five Tokyo editions. The course is fifteen to seventeen pieces; the chickens are sourced from a Tottori farm; the binchotan management is conspicuously careful. Imai spends a full minute talking through each cut as it lands — the cartilage section, the soft bone, the breast — and the running commentary is part of the meal in a way it is not at Torishiki. The wine list is small but serious; the sake list runs to roughly twenty bottles, all under ¥10,000. Reservations one month ahead through Tablecheck.

Not for: a silent meal. Imai talks throughout the course; the meal is structured as a tutorial in chicken anatomy.
Yakitori Ogawa
#4
Chef: Hideki Ogawa (小川 英樹) — Torishiki lineage
Cuisine: Counter yakitori — Yotsuya counter
Neighborhood: Yotsuya, Shinjuku · 3-7 Arakicho
Price: Omakase ¥15,000; Michelin one star
Hideki Ogawa apprenticed under Ikegawa at Torishiki and now runs the most-disciplined budget-tier counter in Tokyo. Read the verdict — this is the Torishiki alternative if Torishiki cannot be booked.

Hideki Ogawa spent his apprenticeship at Torishiki under Yoshiteru Ikegawa and opened his own counter in Yotsuya's Arakicho district in 2014. The technique is unmistakably Torishiki — single-farm chickens, binchotan management, eighteen-piece omakase pacing — but Ogawa has built his own character through tighter pricing (¥15,000 against Torishiki's ¥18,000), a less-formal room, and a sake list that punches above its run-rate. The Yotsuya Arakicho neighbourhood is a quiet warren of low-rise buildings and small restaurants; the counter is six seats. Reservations one month ahead. For diners who fail to land a Torishiki seat, Ogawa is the substitute and not in any meaningful sense a downgrade.

Not for: a guest who needs a Ginza or Roppongi address for a client dinner. Arakicho is a thirty-minute taxi from most central hotels and the neighbourhood is plainly residential.
Torishin
#5
Chef: Shoji Sugiyama (founder); Yotsuya counter, plus a Michelin-starred New York outpost
Cuisine: Counter yakitori — Yotsuya
Neighborhood: Yotsuya, Shinjuku · 2-3-18 Yotsuya
Price: Omakase ¥18,000–¥22,000; founded 2007; New York outpost 1 Michelin star
Shoji Sugiyama built Torishin in Tokyo and then a Michelin-starred outpost in Manhattan — the Tokyo room is the original. Try it once for the Sangokuro chicken from Tokushima.

Shoji Sugiyama opened Torishin in Yotsuya in 2007 and has been one of the most ambitious yakitori operators of his generation — the Manhattan outpost, opened later, holds a Michelin star and is the most-cited yakitori room in New York. The Tokyo counter is fifteen seats, larger than most of the competition, and the technique is deliberately broader: Sangokuro chickens from Tokushima, course pacing that runs to twenty pieces, a serious sake list and a small but careful wine programme. Reservations one to two months ahead through Tablecheck. The Yotsuya address is convenient from central Shinjuku hotels.

Not for: a guest after the small-counter intimacy of Torishiki or Ogawa. Torishin is a larger, more obvious restaurant — that's the point.
Toritama
#6
Concept: Whole-bird programme — one chicken broken into thirty cuts
Cuisine: Yakitori — Ginza, casual à la carte
Neighborhood: Ginza · 7-5-11 Ginza (plus Hiroo branch)
Price: ¥6,000–¥9,000 per person à la carte; founded 2007
Toritama runs the most-complete whole-bird programme in Tokyo — thirty cuts per chicken, every part on the menu. Pencil it in for a casual Ginza dinner.

Toritama's Ginza counter — and its Hiroo sister — is built around a simple idea: a single chicken produces thirty distinct yakitori cuts, and a serious yakitori room serves all of them. The menu lists thirty-plus skewers per night, including the cuts that more polished counters skip (kanmuri, the comb; chochin, the immature egg yolk; toriwasa, the rare-grilled breast). Prices are roughly a third of the omakase counters; the room is louder, more casual, beer is on tap. This is the right yakitori room for a guest who wants to see the breadth of the cuisine without the price commitment of Torishiki. Walk-ins easy on weeknights; reserve for Friday and Saturday via Tabelog. Multiple Tokyo locations.

Not for: a quiet counter night. Toritama is an izakaya-yakitori hybrid; the room is loud and the pace is fast.
Yakitori Hachibei
#7
Concept: Hakata-style yakitori — Fukuoka origins, expanded to Tokyo
Cuisine: Yakitori — Hakata pork-belly skewers and chicken counter
Neighborhood: Roppongi · 6-8-3 Roppongi
Price: ¥6,000–¥10,000 per person à la carte; Tokyo branch opened mid-2010s; Fukuoka original 1999
Yakitori Hachibei brought the Hakata pork-belly skewer to Tokyo — the bara (pork belly) and the cabbage chaser are the two-bite signature. Book it for a Roppongi pre-dinner.

Hachibei opened in Fukuoka in 1999 and the Tokyo branch on Roppongi-dori brings a slightly different yakitori vocabulary than the chicken-only Ginza counters. Hakata-style yakitori includes pork — the bara (pork belly) skewer is the signature, eaten with a wedge of raw cabbage as a chaser — alongside the more standard chicken cuts. The room is dark wood, low lighting, twenty-five seats, and the pace is brisk. The drinks list runs Kyushu shochu over Tokyo sake, which is the right pairing for the pork. Reservations one to two weeks ahead through Tabelog or the website.

Not for: a chicken-only purist. Hachibei is most worth ordering when the pork-belly cuts are part of the meal.

How to Eat Yakitori in Tokyo in 2026

One-meal yakitori-defining visit: Torishiki, Kami-Osaki. Book via concierge thirty days out.

With a wine programme: Birdland, Ginza. Order the chicken-liver pâté on sourdough.

Same technique as Torishiki at thirty percent less: Yakitori Ogawa, Yotsuya Arakicho.

Whole-bird education without the omakase price: Toritama, Ginza, à la carte.

For pork-belly yakitori (Hakata-style): Yakitori Hachibei, Roppongi.

Tokyo's rising room: Yakitori Imai, Nishi-Azabu.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best yakitori in Tokyo?
For the omakase counter experience, Torishiki in Kami-Osaki — Yoshiteru Ikegawa's binchotan-grilled single-farm chicken counter has held a Michelin star since 2010 and is the most-imitated yakitori room in the city. For the Ginza version of the same idea (plus the only serious wine pairing at any yakitori counter), Toshihiro Wada's Birdland in the basement of the Tsukamoto Sogyo Building is the room. For a third opinion, Imai in Nishi-Azabu is the rising counter.
How much does yakitori cost in Tokyo?
Counter omakase at the top rooms runs ¥15,000–¥32,000. Torishiki sits around ¥15,000–¥18,000 for an eighteen-piece course; Birdland is ¥22,000–¥28,000 including pairing options; Imai about ¥18,000–¥22,000; Yakitori Ogawa around ¥15,000. The more accessible rooms — Toritama, Yakitori Hachibei — run ¥6,000–¥10,000 per person ordering à la carte. Drinks add ¥3,000–¥6,000.
How hard is it to book Torishiki?
Hardest yakitori reservation in Tokyo, comfortably. Yoshiteru Ikegawa runs eight to ten seats over two nightly seatings; reservations open thirty days ahead by phone in Japanese and the line closes inside the first hour. Foreigner-friendly route: book via Pocket Concierge, TableCheck, or — most reliably — through a Tokyo hotel concierge with a standing relationship at the counter. Building plans an evening in Tokyo without confirmed Torishiki seats is the right move.
What's the difference between Torishiki and Birdland?
Torishiki is the more traditional counter — Yoshiteru Ikegawa sources single-farm chickens, grills over binchotan, and serves an omakase that runs eighteen pieces in roughly ninety minutes with sake and shochu as drinks. Birdland is the Ginza glass-and-steel version: Toshihiro Wada uses the same binchotan and single-farm chickens but pairs with wine (the only serious wine programme at any Tokyo yakitori counter), and the room is more obviously a restaurant rather than a neighbourhood counter. Torishiki for tradition; Birdland for the pairing. See also best sushi in Tokyo.
What should I order at a Tokyo yakitori omakase?
Take the omakase. The order is roughly: tsukune (chicken meatball) first, then the lighter cuts — sasami (tenderloin, sometimes with wasabi and dashi), bonjiri (tail), nankotsu (cartilage) — then the prized pieces: sori-resu (chicken oyster, two per bird), reba (liver), hatsu (heart). Skin (kawa) lands later in the course; uzura (quail egg) is often a closer. Drink shochu or sake unless the room (Birdland) builds a wine pairing into the meal.
What is the chicken oyster and why is it on every yakitori menu?
Sori-resu — written ソリレス, also called sorire — is the small disc of dark meat that sits behind the thigh, on either side of the spine, on every chicken. Two per bird. The French butcher term is sot-l'y-laisse, literally "the fool leaves it there." The texture is firmer than thigh, the flavour is denser, and a serious yakitori counter treats it as a rare ingredient — it appears once mid-course, never twice. If you only remember one cut name, this is the one.

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.