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Asia’s most anticipated gastronomic event is just around the corner: on Thursday April 23, 2026, the official ceremony of the Michelin Guide Kyoto & Osaka 2026 takes place in Osaka, simultaneously unveiling the new selection to the world. And on April 24 and 25 — the very next day — the perfect opportunity arises to discover the newly crowned restaurants. Our 48-hour foodie itinerary takes you from the cobbled lanes of Pontocho to Osaka’s spectacular new openings, via century-old markets and Kyoto’s most discreet starred establishments.

The Michelin Guide Kyoto & Osaka 2026 ceremony takes place on April 23, 2026 in Osaka. The 2025 selection featured 469 restaurants (172 starred, 108 Bib Gourmand); 10 new addresses were added in January 2026. Our 48h foodie itinerary covers 11 destinations between Kyoto and Osaka — from Nishiki Market to the 2026 new openings (Shinka, SOA, Nelu, Sushi Kawaguchi). Plan 2 to 3 months ahead for starred tables.

Michelin Guide Kyoto & Osaka 2026: Context and Key Figures

The 2025 selection (16th edition) already set records: 469 restaurants in total, including 172 starred and 108 Bib Gourmand — Osaka alone accounted for 231 restaurants in the guide. In January 2026, inspectors revealed 10 new addresses as a preview ahead of the official April ceremony. Anonymous inspectors evaluate each restaurant on five criteria: quality of ingredients, mastery of technique, the chef’s personality, value for money, and consistency across visits.

The April 23, 2026 ceremony reveals the new star awards (1★, 2★, 3★) and new Bib Gourmand designations. Check guide.michelin.com/jp from April 24 for the full, up-to-date official list.

Nishiki Market: Kyoto’s Kitchen for 400 Years

Vendors selling snacks and culinary specialities at the stalls of Nishiki Market in Kyoto, Japan
Nishiki Market stalls, Kyoto — Photo by Perry Merrity II on Unsplash

Nicknamed « Kyoto’s Kitchen », Nishiki Market stretches over 400 metres along Nishikikōji Street. Its 120 shops and stalls — many run by the same families for generations — embody Kyoto’s gastronomy at its most authentic: marinated mackerel (saba-zushi), dashi-rolled omelette, pickled vegetables (tsukemono), Uji green tea. The renowned knife shop Aritsugu, founded in 1560, originally crafted swords for samurai before dedicating itself to kitchen knives.

Budget
¥500 to ¥3,000 per person for a strolling tour
Best time
Arrive between 10am and 11am — shops open, crowds still manageable
Insider tip
Bring cash: many stalls do not accept credit cards

Pontocho and Hyotei: The Gastronomic Soul of Kyoto

Narrow Pontocho alley in Kyoto, lit by traditional lanterns at night
Pontocho alley at night, Kyoto — Photo by Julien on Unsplash

Pontocho runs along a 500-metre corridor between Shijō-dōri and Sanjō-dōri, housing over 100 establishments along the Kamogawa river. From May to September, many restaurants set up terraces over the water — this is the kawayuka phenomenon, unique to Kyoto. At night, the lanterns of the machiya create an atmosphere of untouched Edo. Chef Motokichi Yukimura of Kichi Kichi, a web sensation for his spectacular omurice, works here — book weeks in advance.

A 10-minute walk away, in the Nanzenji district, Hyotei embodies the pinnacle of Kyoto kaiseki: 15 consecutive years under 3 Michelin stars (2010–2024). The cuisine, rooted in the ichiju-sansai model, has been serving its famous soft-boiled egg for decades. Reserve 2 to 3 months in advance.

Pontocho budget
From ¥2,000 (yakitori) to ¥30,000+ (ryōtei kaiseki)
Hyotei budget
Lunch from ¥12,000 — dinner ¥30,000 to ¥50,000
Kawayuka
May to September — riverside terraces on the Kamogawa

Shinka and Tenjaku: Kyoto’s New Tables to Watch

Elaborate kaiseki sushi platter with chopsticks, served in a Japanese starred restaurant
Kaiseki sushi in a starred Kyoto restaurant — Photo by Kouji Tsuru on Unsplash
  • Shinka (進化, « evolution ») — Opened in January 2026, the table of chef Asai — trained at several starred houses in Kyoto and Tokyo — is still accessible before the post-star rush. Omakase between ¥20,000 and ¥40,000. Tip: use the My Concierge Japan service to secure a table on priority.
  • Tenjaku — This family-heritage kaiseki stands out for its monolithic cypress counter and the rare inclusion of tempura in its menu, cooked in front of diners. Starred since 2024, courses from ¥15,000. Some tableware is handcrafted by the chef himself.

For both Shinka and Tenjaku, always request the counter when booking — watching the chef cook live transforms the experience into a live performance.

Home cooking class in Kyoto — near Fushimi Inari From €99
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Nishitenma and Kitashinchi: Osaka’s Gastronomic Strongholds

Busy Dotonbori canal in Osaka at night with its illuminated signs reflected in the water
Dotonbori canal at night, Osaka — Photo by Buddy AN on Unsplash

Long dominated by law firms, the Nishitenma neighbourhood (Kita-ku) has become within a few years Osaka’s new gastronomic cluster, far from the saturated Dotonbori. It was here that chef Akihiro Yamada earned a star in barely eighteen months with his restaurant Oryori Yamada, before relocating to more intimate premises in Nishitenma.

The neighbouring district of Kitashinchi — a bastion of high-end business — is home to Osaka’s great sushi houses, where a demanding clientele constantly drives quality upward. Nishitenma Ichigaya meanwhile perpetuates the traditions of Osaka merchant cuisine by incorporating French influences: ma-kombu kelp for stocks, traditional city vegetables and, occasionally, Gallic techniques.

Budget
From ¥8,000 to ¥30,000 per person depending on the restaurant
Access
Minamimorimachi Station (Tanimachi line) — 10 min walk from Osaka Station

SOA, Nelu and Sushi Kawaguchi: Osaka’s 2026 Revelations

The 2026 Michelin ceremony could crown three exceptional openings that made headlines at the start of the year:

  • SOA — Opened in January 2026 on the 30th floor of a tower overlooking Midosuji, SOA offers a philosophical cuisine built around the message « everything begins with the earth. » Panoramic views over Osaka’s grand boulevard, omakase between ¥25,000 and ¥40,000. Request a window table at sunset.
  • Nelu — In Koraibashi, inside a red-brick Meiji-era building (1868–1912) designed by Kingo Tatsuno (architect of Tokyo Station), Nelu offers innovative French menus with wine pairings. Recently selected for 2026. Lunch from ¥8,000, dinner ¥20,000 to ¥35,000. Combine with Pebble, the Italian restaurant next door on the 5th floor of a Tadao Ando building.
  • Sushi Kawaguchi — Opened in February 2026 in Kitashinchi. Trained for eight years at Sushi Harasho (two continuous stars) and five years at Sushi Saeki (two stars), chef Satoshi Kawaguchi offers an omakase (¥25,000 to ¥45,000) at two-star level, still priced as a first-star house in 2026.

Hozenji Yokocho: Authentic Osaka After Dark

Narrow Osaka alley at night, illuminated by neon signs and Japanese restaurant lanterns
Night alley in Osaka — Photo by Julien on Unsplash

Steps from Namba, Hozenji Yokocho is a cobbled alley lined with more than 60 traditional shops and restaurants that seem to have slipped from Kyoto into the heart of Osaka. When the threat of widening the alley loomed, 300,000 residents signed a petition to preserve it — a record that speaks volumes about Osakaites’ attachment to this space.

The alley is home to Wasabi, which earned its Michelin star for its kushiage (battered and deep-fried skewers) — a street food elevated to the rank of starred gastronomy. Local celebrities (Kansai comedians, writers) dine here regularly.

Budget
¥3,000 to ¥15,000 per person
Access
Namba Station, exit 14 (3 min walk)
Atmosphere
Must be experienced in the evening — between 7pm and 10pm

The Bib Gourmand Guide: Fine Dining for Everyone

The Bib Gourmand is the red guide’s lesser-known category: restaurants of remarkable quality, verified by anonymous inspectors, priced between ¥3,500 and ¥5,000 per person. In Kyoto-Osaka, the recent selection includes: a restaurant born out of a wakame (seaweed) shop in Kyoto’s Nishijin district, former sukiyaki establishments, and Franco-Japanese brick-walled tables in Osaka. Practical advantage: Bib Gourmand restaurants face less reservation pressure than starred ones — walk-ins are more feasible.

Check guide.michelin.com/jp from April 24, 2026 for the complete list of new 2026 Bib Gourmand — generally published simultaneously with the new stars.

Condensed 48h Post-Ceremony Itinerary (April 24–25, 2026)

How to string together the best of Kyoto and Osaka over two days, leaving Kyoto on the morning of April 24 and heading to Osaka in the afternoon:

TimeAddress / ActivityEstimated budget
Day 1 – 8:30amNishiki Market — walking breakfast (yuba, tamago, saba-zushi)~¥2,000
Day 1 – 12:30pmLunch at Tenjaku (kaiseki-tempura, lunch menu)~¥15,000
Day 1 – 3:00pmKyoto → Osaka by JR Rapid (30 min)~¥580
Day 1 – 5:00pmExploring the Nishitenma neighbourhoodFree
Day 1 – 7:30pmDinner at Hozenji Yokocho (starred kushiage, Wasabi)~¥8,000
Day 2 – 10:00amLunch at Nelu (French menu in a Meiji building, wine pairing)~¥15,000
Day 2 – 3:00pmNakanoshima district + Pebble (at Tadao Ando)~¥5,000
Day 2 – 7:30pmDinner at Sushi Kawaguchi, omakase Harasho school (Kitashinchi)~¥35,000
Day 2 – 10:00pmDigestif at a sake bar in Kitashinchi~¥3,000

Total 48h budget per person: from ¥30,000 (~€200) for the Bib Gourmand and street food version to ¥83,000 (~€550) for the full gastronomic itinerary.

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Practical Information for Your Trip to Kyoto & Osaka

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Frequently Asked Questions

When is the Michelin Guide Kyoto & Osaka 2026 ceremony?

The official Michelin Guide Kyoto & Osaka 2026 ceremony takes place on Thursday April 23, 2026 in Osaka. The full selection is revealed simultaneously around the world via the Michelin Guide website and app. Check guide.michelin.com/jp from April 24 for the official list.

How many restaurants does the Michelin Guide Kyoto & Osaka include in 2025?

The 2025 selection featured 469 restaurants in total, including 172 starred and 108 Bib Gourmand. Osaka alone accounted for 231 restaurants in the guide. In January 2026, 10 new addresses were added as a preview ahead of the official April 2026 ceremony.

Do you need to book far in advance for Kyoto’s starred restaurants?

Yes, absolutely. For starred restaurants like Hyotei, book 2 to 3 months in advance. For the 2026 new openings (Shinka, Sushi Kawaguchi), one to two months still suffices — but expect much longer waits once the new stars are officially announced on April 23. The My Concierge Japan service can help fast-track access to priority slots.

What is the Michelin Bib Gourmand and how does it differ from stars?

The Bib Gourmand recognises restaurants of remarkable quality, verified by Michelin inspectors, but without star attribution. In Kyoto-Osaka, a Bib Gourmand meal typically costs between ¥3,500 and ¥5,000 per person — compared to ¥12,000 to ¥50,000 for a starred kaiseki. It is the ideal option for experiencing the region’s gastronomic level without the price tag of a prestige restaurant.

Do Kyoto and Osaka have different culinary styles?

Kyoto embodies traditional kaiseki — seasonal cuisine, lightness, seasonal aesthetics and strict protocol. Osaka, nicknamed kuidaore (« eat until you drop »), blends high gastronomy and popular culture — from prestigious sushi (Kitashinchi) to takoyaki and kushikatsu in Dotonbori. The 2026 new tables (SOA, Nelu, Pebble) add a Franco-Japanese and contemporary dimension.

What is the best time for a gastronomic trip to Kyoto and Osaka?

Late April (after the Michelin ceremony on April 23) is ideal: late cherry blossom, spring vegetables (takenoko, nanohana) at their peak, still mild temperatures. Autumn (October–November) is a second window for matsutake mushrooms and crimson maple leaves. Avoid Golden Week (April 29 – May 5): hotels and restaurants are fully booked weeks in advance.

How do you travel between Kyoto and Osaka for this gastronomic circuit?

The simplest journey is the JR Rapid (30 min, ¥580) between Kyoto Station and Osaka Station. For speed, the Shinkansen Nozomi connects the two cities in 15 min (~¥1,400). With a Japan Rail Pass (€29/day), all these trips are included. Osaka’s metro easily serves Nishitenma, Kitashinchi, Namba and Hozenji Yokocho.

Are there Michelin restaurants in Osaka accessible to non-Japanese speakers?

Yes, many of Osaka’s starred restaurants offer service in English, particularly the new 2026 gastronomic establishments (SOA, Nelu). For more traditional addresses, the My Concierge Japan service can act as an intermediary for reservations and communication with the chef.

Sources

Research completed on April 19, 2026

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