Skip to content
This site earns commission on bookings made through our links, at no extra cost to you. Learn how.
WhereToStayEurope

Best European Cities for Japanese Restaurants

By FredolinePublished 2026-05-04Reviewed 2026-05-0411 min read

The diaspora factor

Düsseldorf, London, and Paris have the largest Japanese expat communities in Europe — 8,000+ Japanese residents in Düsseldorf alone (centered around Immermannstraße). Restaurants serving expats by definition serve more rigorously authentic food than tourist-targeted sushi.

Düsseldorf

Düsseldorf "Little Tokyo" along Immermannstraße — Naniwa (ramen), Takumi, Maruyasu (sushi). Family-run lunch counters serving udon and tonkotsu at €10–14. Dinner izakayas €30–50.

Paris

Paris Sushi B (3 Michelin stars), Jin (1 star), Ze Kitchen Galerie. Rue Sainte-Anne is the historic Japanese quarter — over 30 ramen and udon shops. Many tired tourist sushi bars exist; serious ones cluster near Opéra/Pyramides.

London

London Endō at the Rotunda (Michelin), Roketsu, Sushi Tetsu, Koya (handmade udon), Ippudo. Dense Japanese-restaurant map; quality varies enormously. Soho and Mayfair dense.

Berlin

Berlin ramen-and-izakaya scene matured rapidly — Cocolo Ramen, Cocoro, Saigaiya. Lower prices than London or Paris (€11–15 ramen). Mitte base.

Frankfurt

Frankfurt business-Japan diaspora — sushi at Iwase, ramen at Tako (small). Smaller than Düsseldorf but day-trip distance.

Strategy

Lunch-set strategy at high-end sushi (€30–80) far cheaper than dinner counter (€150–400). Reserve omakase counters 2–4 weeks ahead. Michelin guide for the splashy companion.

Best European Cities for Japanese Restaurants & Sushi · WhereToStayEurope