Best First Date Restaurants in Fukuoka: 2026 Guide
By Kenji Watanabe · Published · Updated
Fukuoka is built around its counters. The kappo bars in Akasaka, the sushiya in Hirao and Nishinakasu, and the Hakata kaiseki rooms have all calibrated themselves to seat parties of two with a kitchen on the other side of the wood. These are the seven that work for a first date that needs the chef in the room and the conversation in the mood.
At a glance
The top first-date pick in Fukuoka is Sushi Kijima — Chef Eitaro Kijima's Akasaka counter, where Hakata-mae sushi runs alongside kappo small plates and the pace lets two people actually talk. Editorial runners-up: Goh, Akasaka Fujita, Ippongi Ishibashi.
It is 18:55 on a Thursday in Akasaka. Behind the noren curtain at Sushi Kijima, Chef Eitaro Kijima is finishing the prep on a tray of Genkai-Sea kuruma-ebi, a pot of dashi from this morning's kombu has gone down to its second pour, and the seven counter seats are about to fill with the four bookings the kitchen takes per service. Two of them are first dates. For the first-date framework across the rest of the world, see the global first-date guide on RestaurantsForKings.com; for the wider Fukuoka picture, the Fukuoka dining guide covers the city across every occasion.
Chef Eitaro Kijima's hybrid sushi-kappo counter in Akasaka — twenty years at Yamanaka, conversation-ready pacing. Reserve weeks ahead.
Food9.5/10
Ambience9.5/10
Value9/10
Sushi Kijima sits on the second floor of a quiet Akasaka building at 3-12-9 Akasaka, Chuo-ku, eight minutes' walk from the Akasaka subway station. Chef Eitaro Kijima trained for twenty years under the founder of Yamanaka, the canonical Fukuoka sushiya, before opening his own counter in 2018 with a deliberate concept that no other restaurant in the city has replicated: a hybrid of Hakata-mae sushi tradition and kappo small-plate cuisine, served as a single integrated omakase. For a first date, this is the rare counter in Japan where talking through the meal is the format rather than the breach.
The seven-seat counter is the booking. Kijima opens the meal with two or three kappo courses — a tile fish carpaccio with citrus, an autumn matsutake clear soup, a grilled karasumi appetiser — which establishes the kitchen's voice and gives a date thirty minutes of conversation before the sushi sequence starts. The sushi run that follows is twelve to fifteen pieces, sourced from the Nagahama market that morning, with Genkai Sea isaki, akami tuna from Chiba's Misaki port, and the local kuruma-ebi that Hakata sushiya treat as the regional specialty. Omakase runs ¥22,000 to ¥28,000 with sake pairings adding ¥8,000.
Direct booking only via phone or the restaurant's Tabelog page. Three to four weeks ahead is standard; weekends require six weeks. English handled at the desk.
Address: 3-12-9 Akasaka, Chuo-ku, Fukuoka
Price: ¥22,000–¥28,000 per person; sake pairing ¥8,000
Sumiyoshi · Innovative Japanese-French · ¥¥¥¥ · One Michelin star, Asia's 50 Best
First DateBirthdayImpress Clients
Chef Tsuyoshi Fukuyama's fourteen-seat communal table — Asia's 50 Best, one Michelin star, the most theatrical Franco-Japanese meal in Kyushu. Fly in for it once.
Food9.5/10
Ambience9/10
Value8.5/10
Goh occupies the third floor of the 010 Building at 1-4-17 Sumiyoshi, Hakata Ward — a discreet address in a residential pocket south of Hakata station — and Chef Tsuyoshi Fukuyama runs it as a fourteen-seat communal table with a single nightly seating. The kitchen sits inside the counter U, every preparation is visible from every seat, and the format is closer to a dinner party than a restaurant. For a first date that wants to be part of a larger evening rather than isolated at a two-top, Goh's communal structure is the move — the conversation builds across the table, the chef participates as a fifth voice, and a quiet date is not the format the room enforces.
The menu is the chef's idiom: French technique applied to Kyushu ingredients with a theatrical sense of timing. The amuse-bouche sequence runs four to five small courses before the first sit-down dish; the lead protein course is typically a Saga beef or local seabass with a French-leaning sauce; the dessert is presented across multiple plates as a final-act movement. The full menu runs ¥30,000 to ¥36,000 with paired wines. Asia's 50 Best Restaurants list has placed Goh continuously since 2017; the Michelin star arrived in 2018 and has held.
Booking is through the restaurant's email reservation system, opens 60 days in advance, and is gone within hours for Friday and Saturday seatings. For first-date planning, target a Tuesday or Wednesday two months out. The communal format means you may sit next to anyone — a couple from Singapore on holiday, a Tokyo wine writer, a Fukuoka chef on his night off — which is the conversational case for the room.
Address: 3F, 010 Building, 1-4-17 Sumiyoshi, Hakata Ward, Fukuoka
Price: ¥30,000–¥36,000 per person; paired wines ¥15,000–¥22,000
Akasaka · Creative Japanese · ¥¥¥ · Michelin Bib Gourmand
First DateBirthdaySolo Dining
Chef Akihito Fujita's nine-seat counter — self-taught, daily-changing menu, the most playful kitchen in Fukuoka outside the starred rooms. Pencil it in for a relaxed midweek.
Food9/10
Ambience9/10
Value9.5/10
Akasaka Fujita sits on the ground floor of the Bengoshi Building at 1-7-23 Akasaka, Chuo-ku, in a narrow nine-seat counter room that opened in 2017. Chef Akihito Fujita is self-taught — a near-impossible claim in Fukuoka's sushi-and-kaiseki ecosystem, where lineage is everything — and his menu changes daily based on the morning's Nagahama market visit. The Michelin Bib Gourmand designation in 2021 recognised what local food writers had been arguing for three years: the most creative kitchen in Fukuoka outside the starred establishments is also one of the most accessible.
The format is the conversation case. Fujita cooks every course himself, talks the table through each preparation, and takes questions in stride. A first-date booking sees the chef as the natural conversation pivot, which removes the silent-counter pressure of a starred sushiya without losing the counter intimacy. Menus run ¥14,000 to ¥18,000 for ten to twelve courses, sake pairings add ¥6,000, and the wine list — Fujita is unusually curious about natural French — is the deepest in Fukuoka outside Goh.
Phone booking only. Two to three weeks ahead is sufficient mid-week; weekends require four weeks. The kitchen closes Sunday and one Monday per month — confirm when calling.
Hirao · Sushi-Kaiseki Hybrid · ¥¥¥¥ · One Michelin star
First DateBirthdayProposal
Chef Ishibashi spent five years in Kyoto kaiseki and five in Tokyo sushi, then merged both into a single multi-act dinner. Worth the flight.
Food9.5/10
Ambience9.5/10
Value8.5/10
Ippongi Ishibashi sits on a quiet residential street at 1-9-13 Hirao, ten minutes' walk from the Yakuin subway station, in a sukiya-style building that the chef commissioned specifically for the restaurant. Chef Ishibashi trained five years in a Kyoto kaiseki ryotei, then five years in a Tokyo Edomae sushiya, and built Ippongi as a deliberate synthesis of both traditions: a multi-act dinner that runs kappo-style kaiseki for the first half and Edomae sushi for the second, with a tea ceremony pause at the midpoint that the chef performs himself.
For a first date that wants the most considered meal in the city, this is the booking. The room is eight counter seats and a private tatami room for four — the counter is the first-date seat. Menus run ¥26,000 to ¥32,000 for sixteen to twenty courses, sake pairings add ¥9,000, and the meal pacing is built around three hours of conversation as much as around the dishes. The kitchen's signature is the synthesis itself: a kaiseki vegetable course flowing into a sushi sequence without a category change in the room's energy.
Phone booking only; Tabelog handles the wait list. Four to six weeks ahead for weekends; three weeks mid-week. The private tatami room is reserved for groups; the counter is what a first date should request.
Address: 1-9-13 Hirao, Chuo-ku, Fukuoka
Price: ¥26,000–¥32,000 per person; sake pairing ¥9,000
Akasaka · French-Kaiseki · ¥¥¥¥ · One Michelin star
First DateBirthdayImpress Clients
Chef Yuzuru Takebayashi trained at Osaka's Ajikitcho ryotei, then merged French technique into kaiseki form. Reserve weeks ahead.
Food9/10
Ambience9/10
Value8.5/10
Aji Takebayashi occupies a discreet ground-floor space in Maizuru, Chuo-ku, two minutes from the Akasaka station, with a six-seat hinoki counter and a private tatami room for four. Chef Yuzuru Takebayashi spent his formative years at Ajikitcho, the historic Osaka ryotei whose lineage goes back a century, before opening his own kitchen in Fukuoka in 2014. The Michelin star arrived in 2017 and has held continuously. The kitchen's distinguishing move is the integration of French weight — butter, cream, mustard, capers — into kaiseki structure, which is rarer in Japan than the marketing implies.
For a first date, the counter is the booking. Takebayashi works at a measured pace, talks through preparations in clear Japanese (English handled by the floor staff), and structures the menu as twelve to fifteen courses across two and a half hours. The shimofuri Saga beef with bordelaise jus, the Genkai sea-bream sashimi dressed with herb-and-yuzu vinaigrette, and the seasonal vegetable hassun arranged as a French-leaning composition are the signatures. Menus run ¥22,000 to ¥30,000 with sake pairings at ¥8,000.
Phone booking only; six weeks for weekends, three weeks mid-week. The counter is more first-date than the tatami room because the kitchen's pace is the date's pacing.
Address: Maizuru, Chuo-ku, Fukuoka (Akasaka area)
Price: ¥22,000–¥30,000 per person; sake pairing ¥8,000
Nishinakasu · Edomae Sushi · ¥¥¥¥ · Three Michelin stars
First DateBirthdayProposal
Chef Daigo Sakai's sukiya-style three-star counter — among the most coveted bookings in Japan, ¥30,800 omakase. Fly in for it once.
Food10/10
Ambience9.5/10
Value8.5/10
Sushi Sakai occupies a sukiya-style building at 3-20 Nishinakasu, designed by master architect Shinji Maeda for the restaurant's 2010 opening, and has held three Michelin stars continuously since 2016. Chef Daigo Sakai works the seven-seat hinoki counter himself, with a pace that allows two and a half hours for an omakase of approximately fifteen to seventeen courses. The room is silent by design — the kitchen's pacing is the conversation — and the format is closer to a tea ceremony than to a dinner. For a first date that wants the highest possible ceiling in the city and is ready for a counter-formal evening, this is the booking.
The omakase runs ¥30,800 — the most affordable three-star sushi experience on the planet by a measurable margin, given that Tokyo's three-star counters routinely run ¥60,000 to ¥80,000 — and the sake pairing at ¥6,800 is the considered route. The kuruma-ebi from the Genkai Sea, the akami nigiri from Misaki port, the season-driven white-fish sashimi compositions, and the chef's final tamago preparation are the signatures. For a first date that knows what it is signing up for — a quiet, ceremonial counter where the food does the talking — this is the most beautiful room in Kyushu.
Reservations through the chef's own platform open 60 days out; the entire month sells within ninety minutes most release windows. The first-date risk is the room's formality — a date who expects conversation will find the silent counter pressure unfamiliar. Pair this booking with a long aperitif at a Nishinakasu wine bar beforehand to give the relationship its talking-time before the counter.
Address: 3-20 Nishinakasu, Chuo-ku, Fukuoka
Price: ¥30,800 per person; sake pairing ¥6,800
Cuisine: Edomae sushi, three Michelin stars
Dress code: Smart, no perfume
Reservations: Chef's platform; 60 days out, instant sell-out
Hirao · Edomae Sushi · ¥¥¥¥ · Three Michelin stars
First DateBirthdaySolo Dining
Three Michelin stars since 2014, five seats, ¥18,000 omakase. The hardest first-date reservation in Kyushu. Skip it if you cannot book three months ahead.
Food10/10
Ambience9/10
Value10/10
Sushi Gyoten has held three Michelin stars continuously since 2014 from a five-seat counter at 1-2-12 Hirao, Chuo Ward, a residential pocket near Yakuin station that the international food press has visited so consistently for a decade that the restaurant is now a destination Fukuoka itself can claim. Chef Gyoten runs the counter himself; the omakase opens at ¥18,000, which is the lowest three-star price-per-head in Japan and possibly in the world. For a first date that already shares a love of sushi and is willing to plan three to four months ahead, this is the booking that is talked about for years afterward.
The format is the silent counter. Each piece is presented one at a time, brushed with nikiri, and eaten within seconds. The pace allows roughly two hours for fifteen to eighteen pieces, plus a few small kappo preparations at the opening and closing. The akami tuna from the morning's Toyosu auction, the cured shime-saba mackerel from the Genkai Sea, and the chef's tamago that closes the meal are the recurring signatures. The wine and sake list is short and the chef's own selection.
Reservation is via a tightly controlled phone system that opens monthly; the ¥18,000 price means demand is structurally higher than supply. Plan four months out for any non-weekday slot. The risk for a first date is the silent format — the room enforces a meditative pace that not every relationship is ready to share. For a date that knows the rules, this is the most extraordinary meal in the city; for a date that wants to talk, book Sushi Kijima or Akasaka Fujita instead.
Address: 1-2-12 Hirao, Chuo Ward, Fukuoka
Price: ¥18,000 per person; sake ¥4,000
Cuisine: Edomae sushi, three Michelin stars since 2014
A Fukuoka first date is solving for the same problem every counter-led Japanese city solves: the format of the meal sets the tone of the conversation. The three-star sushiya (Sakai, Gyoten) enforce a silent counter that not every first date is built for. The Michelin-starred hybrids (Goh, Aji Takebayashi, Ippongi Ishibashi) trade some of that ceremony for talking room. The Bib-and-selected counters (Kijima, Akasaka Fujita) are explicitly conversation-friendly and are the safer first-date choice for a relationship at its early stage. Match the room to the dynamic the date already has — a quiet couple who already speak the same culinary vocabulary belongs at Sushi Sakai; a couple still learning each other belongs at Sushi Kijima or Akasaka Fujita.
The neighbourhoods cluster cleanly. Akasaka (Sushi Kijima, Akasaka Fujita, Aji Takebayashi) is the most concentrated counter district and has the best post-dinner walk to the bars along Oyafuko-dori. Hirao (Ippongi Ishibashi, Sushi Gyoten) is the leafier residential pocket with stronger architectural settings. Sumiyoshi (Goh) and Nishinakasu (Sushi Sakai) require a short taxi but reward the destination framing. For a Fukuoka first date, the right strategy is a Tuesday or Wednesday at 18:00 (early counter seating) followed by a wine bar in Daimyo — Bar Higuchi or Bar Oscar — for the after-dinner act.
How to book a first date in Fukuoka
None of the picks on this guide handle bookings through OpenTable, Resy, or Tock. Fukuoka's serious counters book through restaurant-direct phone, Tabelog, or in two cases (Goh, Sushi Sakai) the chef's own reservation platform. The booking process matters for a first date because it tells you what kind of room you are walking into — restaurants that take phone-only bookings are restaurants where the kitchen runs the relationship, and the booking conversation establishes the credibility of the diner before they arrive. Have a Japanese-speaking colleague or a hotel concierge make the call for the Michelin-starred rooms; for Sushi Kijima and Akasaka Fujita, the floor staff handle English bookings competently.
Pre-dinner drinks at a Daimyo cocktail bar (Bar Higuchi, Bar Oscar, the Sammy Bar at the Kurogane Building) is the Fukuoka first-date opener. The post-dinner act is one of three: a yatai stall on Nakasu island for a late-night bowl of Hakata tonkotsu ramen; a digestif at Bar Oscar; or — for a date that wants to keep the conversation going past midnight — the Tsubakiya bar in Akasaka, which holds the city's deepest Japanese-whisky selection. Plan a Fukuoka first date around an 18:00 dinner start, three hours at the counter, and a 22:00 walk to the bar. The format does the work.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best first date restaurant in Fukuoka?
Sushi Kijima in Akasaka — Chef Eitaro Kijima's seven-seat hybrid sushi-and-kappo counter — is the strongest first-date room in Fukuoka. The format mixes Hakata-mae sushi tradition with kappo small plates served at conversation-friendly pacing, the counter is intimate without being silent, and the omakase at ¥22,000 to ¥28,000 sits well below the three-star sushiya tier without compromising on technique. For a more theatrical alternative, Goh's fourteen-seat communal table (Asia's 50 Best, one Michelin star) gives the date the energy of a dinner party rather than the intimacy of a two-top.
Is Fukuoka a good first date city?
Yes — and arguably better than any other Japanese city for the early-relationship case. Fukuoka has more counter restaurants per capita than Tokyo or Osaka, the food culture is built around shared meals rather than individual orders, and the city's compact geography puts every pick on this guide within a fifteen-minute taxi of any central hotel. The Nakasu and Daimyo nightlife districts give the date a natural post-dinner second act, and the yatai street-food stalls along Nakasu river handle the after-midnight third act for a date that wants to keep going.
How much should I budget per person for a Fukuoka first date?
Plan ¥14,000–¥18,000 per person at the Bib Gourmand tier (Akasaka Fujita) including sake. Plan ¥22,000–¥30,000 per person at the one-Michelin-starred kappo and hybrid kitchens (Sushi Kijima, Aji Takebayashi, Ippongi Ishibashi) including pairings. Plan ¥18,000–¥30,800 at the three-star sushiya (Sushi Gyoten, Sushi Sakai). Plan ¥30,000–¥36,000 at Goh including wines. Fukuoka's price-to-quality ratio is the country's strongest — a three-star sushi meal here costs roughly a third of the Tokyo equivalent.
How far in advance should I book a Fukuoka first date?
Three to four months for Sushi Gyoten and Sushi Sakai. Six to eight weeks for Goh, Sushi Kijima, and Ippongi Ishibashi on weekends. Three to four weeks for Aji Takebayashi and Akasaka Fujita. Mid-week bookings are routinely available inside two weeks at the Bib-tier kitchens and inside three weeks at the one-star hybrids. The booking window is the constraint that decides which restaurant you are taking the date to — work backwards from when the date is scheduled.
What should I order at a Fukuoka first-date counter?
Take the chef's omakase. The Fukuoka counter format is structured around the chef's reading of the day's Nagahama market visit, and the omakase price is set to deliver the kitchen's best work for the meal duration. Sake pairings (¥6,000–¥9,000 across the picks above) are the right add-on for a first date because the sommelier or chef talks through each pour and the conversation generates itself. Avoid à la carte orders at any Fukuoka counter — they are the format the kitchen does not want to run, and the date will feel the friction.
What's the best neighbourhood in Fukuoka for a first date?
Akasaka concentrates Sushi Kijima, Akasaka Fujita, and Aji Takebayashi within five minutes' walk of each other, with the Daimyo cocktail bars three minutes away for the post-dinner act — the cleanest first-date geography in the city. Hirao (Sushi Gyoten, Ippongi Ishibashi) is the residential pocket with stronger architectural settings and a short subway ride to Tenjin's nightlife. Sumiyoshi (Goh) and Nishinakasu (Sushi Sakai) require a taxi from the central hotels but reward the destination framing the date deserves.