Best Japanese Restaurants in Dubai (2026)
A ranked guide to Dubai's best Japanese restaurants for 2026, from Zuma and Clap in DIFC to SushiSamba, Nobu, Akira Back and Mimi Kakushi across the Palm and Jumeirah.
Why we wrote this guide
Dubai treats Japanese dining as a marquee category, and the competition is fierce enough that the best rooms double as the city's most-wanted tables. The range is wide: DIFC power-dining izakayas like Zuma and Clap, skyline rooms perched over Palm Jumeirah, and design-led dining that leans as much on mood and music as on the sushi counter. Several are not purely Japanese either, running the nikkei and izakaya spectrum and crossing into Peruvian and Brazilian technique on the same menu. What ties the list together is a register: robata grills and sushi counters worked in full view, deep sake lists, and bars that carry the night well past dinner. We have ranked the six by demand, the rooms Dubai asks for most, starting with Zuma. This is Dubai, not Las Vegas, so the reservation sits with each venue rather than with us. What we do is point you to the right room, help you time it, and build the rest of the trip around it. Last updated July 2026.
The ranked guide
1. Zuma (DIFC)
Zuma set the template for modern Japanese dining in Dubai and still commands its corner of Gate Village in DIFC. The idea is izakaya, Japanese informal dining built for sharing: plates leave three open kitchens as they are ready rather than in fixed courses, so the table moves at its own pace. The room runs across levels in wood, stone and glass, with the sushi counter and the robata grill both worked in full view. It is warm and textured rather than showy, and it holds a big room without losing the feel of a counter seat. One flight up, the bar and lounge carry the night well past dinner, with a deep sake list and a full cocktail program. It is the DIFC default for a reason: consistent, high-energy, and equally at home for a business lunch or a long dinner with a group. See Zuma.
Best for: the benchmark Dubai izakaya, business lunch through late dinner.
2. Clap (DIFC)
Clap is a modern Japanese restaurant, bar and terrace on the upper floors of Gate Village Building 11, billed as the largest rooftop dining room in DIFC. The terrace wraps the skyline with a clear line to the Burj Khalifa, which makes the sunset and evening hours the ones to book. The concept splits into three connected spaces: the main dining room with its open kitchen, a bar, and Ongaku, a speakeasy tucked behind the restaurant. The look is dark, textured and moody, tuned for evening rather than daylight, and the terrace and the room trade the view back and forth as the night goes on. The menu is broad modern Japanese, well over a hundred items spanning robata, sushi and more, so it suits both a focused dinner and a longer, drinks-led night that ends in the speakeasy. See Clap.
Best for: a rooftop dinner with a Burj Khalifa view and a hidden bar to finish.
3. SushiSamba (Palm Jumeirah)
SushiSamba brings its Japanese, Brazilian and Peruvian mash-up to the 51st floor of The St Regis Dubai on Palm Jumeirah. The concept traces back to the communities of Japanese immigrants who settled in Brazil and Peru, and the kitchen crosses all three cuisines on a single menu, so it reads as much nikkei and izakaya sharing as it does a straight sushi bar. The other half of the draw is the near 360-degree view over the Palm, the Arabian Gulf, Ain Dubai and the Dubai skyline. The room is high-energy and design-forward, with an open kitchen, a sushi counter, and a bar and terrace built for the view and the sunset hour. It runs late, the music comes up as the evening goes on, and the mood tips from dinner toward a party without ever leaving the table. See SushiSamba.
Best for: a loud, view-first dinner that turns into a night out.
4. Nobu (Palm Jumeirah)
Nobu is Chef Nobu Matsuhisa's Japanese-Peruvian restaurant at Atlantis, The Palm on Palm Jumeirah, part of the global family that made the style famous. It was one of the first marquee restaurants to open with the resort, and it remains one of the longest-running fine-dining rooms on the Palm. The room is warm and low-lit in wood and stone, with a sushi bar at its center and a lounge that carries drinks before and after the meal. It sits inside the Atlantis resort rather than out on the beach, so it pulls hotel guests and Dubai regulars in equal measure across a long service. The menu is the Nobu canon, the same dishes that built the name worldwide: black cod miso, yellowtail sashimi and the rest of the signatures. If you want the original Japanese-Peruvian template done to standard, this is it. See Nobu.
Best for: the classic Nobu canon in a long-running Palm dining room.
5. Akira Back (Palm Jumeirah)
Akira Back sits on the fifth floor of W Dubai The Palm, on the West Crescent of Palm Jumeirah, with floor-to-ceiling glass and a wraparound terrace that looks across the Palm and back to the Dubai Marina skyline. The restaurant comes from Akira Back, the snowboarder-turned-chef whose modern Japanese cooking carries clear Korean and international accents. The food is built for sharing and for showing off the technique: the signature tuna pizza on a crisp cracker with umami aioli and a whisper of white truffle oil, the AB taco, robata skewers, sushi and maki, and larger plates off the grill, with a sake and cocktail list built to match. It is precise cooking wrapped in a room that trades on the view and the sunset hour. See Akira Back.
Best for: modern Japanese with Korean accents and a Palm-skyline terrace.
6. Mimi Kakushi (Jumeirah Beach)
Mimi Kakushi runs in the Restaurant Village at the Four Seasons Resort Dubai at Jumeirah Beach, a Japanese restaurant and bar built around the mood of 1920s Osaka. The name points to a bobbed haircut from that decade, an asymmetrical cut favored by the era's modern girls and read at the time as a small act of independence. The room takes that spirit of old meeting new and commits to it fully, from the styling to the soundtrack. Design does a lot of the work here: dark woods, deep emerald green, hand-painted murals and vintage lampshades set a low, cinematic light, with a sake counter at the center of the room and live music on the busier nights. It is dressed-up and deliberately dim, the most mood-driven room on this list. See Mimi Kakushi.
Best for: a dressed-up, mood-led Japanese dinner with live music.
How MyRSVP helps
We eat in these rooms, and we know how they differ: which one suits a business lunch, which turns into a night out, which one earns the trip out to the Palm. The reservation itself sits with the restaurant, so we do not hold your table. What we do is point you to the right room, help you time it around sunset or the late seating, and build the rest of the trip, the beach club before and the nightlife after, around it. Tell us the night, the group and the vibe over WhatsApp and we plan it end to end.
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