Best Date Night Restaurants in Fukuoka (2026)
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The 2026 date-night pick in Fukuoka is Sushi Sakai. Editorial runners-up: Sushi Gyoten, Imoto, Goh, Akasaka Fujita, Aji Takebayashi.
Two three-Michelin-star sushi counters. One city. Twelve Fukuoka rooms sit in our directory, and six make a date — from a hinoki counter in Nishinakasu to a two-star kaiseki table at 15,000 yen.
Six Fukuoka Tables for a Date Night
Three Michelin stars under chef Daigo Sakai in Nishinakasu, on a hinoki counter designed by sukiya architect Shinji Maeda. The omakase runs around 30,800 yen. Booking opens three months ahead and closes within minutes. The milestone date, if you can get the seat.
Five seats. Three Michelin stars held since 2014, plus a World's 50 Best Discovery listing. Chef Gyoten trained in Shimonoseki and cooks near Yakuin Station for 18,000 to 26,000 yen — the most affordable three-star sushi on earth. A date for two who reroute trips around dinner.
Tatsuya Imoto opened his ten-seat counter in Yakuin in 2015 and held two Michelin stars within five years. The menu turns on one owan — a clear dashi from Rishiri kombu and Aso spring water. Around ten courses for 10,000 to 15,000 yen. The best-value serious date in the city.
Chef Tsuyoshi Fukuyama's Goh holds one Michelin star and eight appearances in Asia's 50 Best, on a fourteen-seat communal table in the 010 Building near Canal City Hakata. Franco-Japanese courses change with the season, around 20,000 yen. A theatrical date that turns the room into an audience.
A Michelin Bib Gourmand since the 2019 Fukuoka edition. Self-taught chef Fujita cooks a monthly ten-course omakase built on aroma and texture, Kyushu seafood at its centre, for around 16,500 yen. A locals' reservation, not a tourist one. The relaxed, affordable counter date.
Yuzuru Takebayashi trained at Osaka's Aji Kitcho, opened in Fukuoka in 1993, and has held a Michelin star since 2014. Seasonal kaiseki at 1-3-14 Maizuru near Akasaka Station — summer hamo, winter fugu, French touches on a classical frame — from about 16,500 yen. The quiet counter date.
How to Book
Sushi Sakai and Sushi Gyoten open bookings months ahead and close within minutes; plan the date around the reservation, not the other way round. Imoto, Akasaka Fujita and Aji Takebayashi want one to three weeks. Goh seats fourteen a night, so book early.
One seating a night at most of these counters. Confirm the date before anything else, ask for two seats together at the counter, and tell Imoto or Aji Takebayashi if it is an occasion — the chefs cook to the season and the table.
Frequently Asked Questions
The 2026 editorial pick is Sushi Sakai in Nishinakasu, a three-Michelin-star counter where chef Daigo Sakai's omakase runs around 30,800 yen, if you can land the seat. For a more bookable date, Tatsuya Imoto's two-star kaiseki counter in Yakuin pours ten courses for 10,000 to 15,000 yen on its famous owan dashi.
Sushi Gyoten near Yakuin Station is widely called the most affordable three-Michelin-star sushi on earth, a five-seat counter held at three stars since 2014, for 18,000 to 26,000 yen. Imoto runs two stars at 10,000 to 15,000 yen, and Akasaka Fujita carries a Bib Gourmand omakase for around 16,500 yen.
Sushi Sakai and Sushi Gyoten open reservations roughly three months in advance and fill within minutes, so secure the seat before booking flights or a hotel. Imoto, Akasaka Fujita and Aji Takebayashi are more forgiving at one to three weeks, and Goh's fourteen-seat table also wants early booking for a weekend date.
Imoto and Aji Takebayashi are the most intimate, small counters where the chef cooks the season directly in front of two seats placed together. Sushi Sakai's sukiya-style room is the most beautiful. Goh, by contrast, seats fourteen at one communal table, so it reads more as a shared performance than a private dinner for two.