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Best Conveyor Belt Sushi in Tokyo for Tourists (2026): A Chain-by-Chain Decision Table

You’re standing in Shibuya, jet-lagged, and there are six conveyor belt sushi chains within a ten-minute walk. One has a line out the door. One is suspiciously empty. The menus are in Japanese, the ¥110 signs look identical, and you have no idea which one serves real sushi versus rubbery tourist-bait — and whether that 40-minute queue at the Shibuya Sushiro is buying you anything at all.

I’m Reo, I live in Tokyo, and I eat at these places constantly. Here’s the part nobody tells you: kaiten (conveyor belt) sushi in Tokyo is a solved problem for tourists — almost every major chain has an English touchscreen and a published price, so there’s no surprise bill and no language anxiety. The only real question is which chain is worth your time, and which queues to skip entirely. This guide is one decision table that answers exactly that.

MiaMia
Okay there are like five sushi places on this one Shibuya street and they all say ¥110. How do I know which one isn’t a tourist trap?
YukiYuki
Good news: at this price tier there’s almost no “trap” in the scary sense — they all have English touchscreens and fixed prices, so you can’t get hustled. The split is more boring: cheap-and-fine vs genuinely-good-fish.
MiaMia
So is the place with the huge line just better? The empty one scares me.
YukiYuki
Not always. The Shibuya Sushiro line is partly just “famous chain + tourist density,” not better fish. Meanwhile a quiet Hokkaido-style place near Tokyo Station can be the best sushi of your trip. Line length ≠ quality.
MiaMia
Then just tell me which chain to walk into and which lines to ignore.
YukiYuki
That’s literally the table below. Two tiers: tourist-safe-local (cheap, reliable, zero stress) and worth-the-fish (slightly pricier, actually excellent). Skip nothing else.
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The two tiers, before the table

Every chain here gives you fixed prices and an English touchscreen, so I’m not ranking on “will I survive ordering.” You will. I’m ranking on what you actually get for your time:

  • Tier 1 — Tourist-safe-local (the ¥110–¥165 chains): Sushiro, Kura, Hama, Uobei/Genki. These are the big national value chains. Fish is fine-to-good, the experience is fun and gimmicky, and the price is unbeatable. This is where Japanese families and salarymen actually eat. Not a trap — just not gourmet.
  • Tier 2 — Worth-the-fish (the regional/premium kaiten): Nemuro Hanamaru, Kaiten Sushi Toriton, Mawashizushi Katsu Midori. Slightly higher per plate (often ¥150–¥500+) but the seafood — much of it Hokkaido-sourced — is genuinely a step up. This is where the queue can actually be worth it.

The decision table: 7 Tokyo kaiten chains compared

Prices are per plate as of 2026 and vary by location and market price. Most Tier-1 plates hold two pieces; Nemuro Hanamaru notably prices per single piece.

Chain Tier English touchscreen? Price / plate (2026, varies) Quality verdict Peak queue Walk-in odds Worth lining up?
Sushiro 1 Yes — multilingual touch panel (EN/CN/KR) From ~¥120 Best all-rounder of the cheap chains; solid daily specials Bad at Shibuya/tourist branches: 30–60 min Fri–Sun Good off-peak; rough at famous branches at dinner Only via the app ticket, never by standing in line
Kura Sushi 1 Yes — full English tablet + capsule-prize gimmick From ~¥115 Fun for families/kids; additive-conscious; fish is fine Moderate–bad; flagship branches busy on weekends Good with EPARK reservation; mediocre as a walk-in Reserve on the app instead of queuing
Hama Sushi 1 Yes — English tablet; famously cheap From ~¥110 (cheapest) Lowest price, fish is acceptable; great if budget is #1 Lower than Sushiro; more suburban locations Usually good — often the easiest walk-in Rarely worth a long wait; just walk in off-peak
Uobei / Genki 1 Yes — tablet only, food on a “bullet train” lane From ~¥110–¥165 Fish is so-so; you go for the fast, no-staff, gadget vibe Shibuya Dogenzaka busy but turns over fast Good — quick turnover keeps the line moving Worth a short wait for the experience, not the fish
Nemuro Hanamaru 2 English paper/tablet menu; counter-style ordering ~¥150–¥500+ (priced per piece) Excellent — Hokkaido seafood, a real step up Heavy: 1–2 hrs at KITTE Marunouchi & Ginza on weekends Low at peak; take a ticket and leave Yes — best value-for-quality on this list
Kaiten Sushi Toriton 2 English menu available; touch ordering ~¥150–¥500+ Excellent — Hokkaido fish, Skytree/Solamachi branch Heavy at Tokyo Skytree on weekends Low at peak; better on weekday afternoons Yes, if you’re already at Skytree
Katsu Midori 2 Yes — English-capable menu ~¥150–¥500+ Very good — generous cuts, wide daily selection Brutal at Seibu Shibuya: easily 60–90 min weekends Very low at peak; great mid-afternoon weekday Worth it once — but go off-peak, the line is real

How to read it in one sentence

If you just want cheap, easy, and zero-anxiety: Sushiro or Hama, off-peak, walk in. If you want the sushi to actually be memorable: Nemuro Hanamaru or Toriton, and yes, that queue is the one worth tolerating.

YukiYuki
Want me to just tell you which branch near where you’re standing right now is the move — and whether to queue or skip it? That’s exactly what OnlyLocal does in two taps. Try the concierge here →

How to skip the queue (the part that saves your evening)

The single biggest mistake tourists make is physically standing in line. Almost every busy kaiten in Tokyo uses a ticket or app system, so you can put your name in and go shopping. Here’s how each works:

Sushiro

You do not need to install anything. You can reserve a time slot through the Sushiro website (no account required) — and the easiest route is often the reservation link straight from its Google Maps listing, or via LINE where you pick the branch, party size, time, and seat type. Booking ahead is the difference between walking past the Shibuya line and waiting 45 minutes in it.

Kura Sushi

Kura’s official app is powered by EPARK and lets you reserve up to ~15 days in advance. You can register inside the app or log in with an existing EPARK account. Reserve, show up, sit down — no line.

Nemuro Hanamaru, Toriton, Katsu Midori (the Tier-2 queues)

These use an on-site ticket machine: punch in your party size, take a numbered slip, and many branches (Nemuro Hanamaru included) let you track your number via LINE so you can wander Tokyo Station, Ginza, or Solamachi until you’re up. This is how locals “wait” two hours without actually standing for two hours.

The free trick that beats every app: timing

Weekday 14:00–17:00 is the golden window — you’ll often walk straight in even at famous branches. The worst slot everywhere is Friday/Saturday dinner, 18:00–20:30, when waits at Katsu Midori, Nemuro Hanamaru and the Shibuya Sushiro routinely stretch past 60–90 minutes. If your schedule has any flex, eat your kaiten sushi as a late lunch.

MiaMia
Wait, so the move is basically: book Sushiro/Kura on an app, and for the fancy Hokkaido ones just grab a ticket and go shopping?
YukiYuki
Exactly. And if you only do one thing: eat at 3pm on a weekday. Half the “Tokyo queues are insane” horror stories are just people showing up at 7pm on Saturday.

Branch-level warnings (where the lines are notorious)

  • Sushiro Shibuya — the most photographed line in Tokyo kaiten. It’s a fine meal but you’re queuing for the location, not better fish. Reserve or go elsewhere.
  • Katsu Midori, Seibu Shibuya (8F) — genuinely excellent, genuinely brutal queues on weekends. Worth it, but only mid-afternoon.
  • Nemuro Hanamaru Ginza & KITTE Marunouchi — both superb; the KITTE Marunouchi branch (5F, opposite Tokyo Station’s south exit) is usually a touch easier than Ginza.
  • Kaiten Sushi Toriton, Tokyo Solamachi (Skytree) — pair it with your Skytree visit and take a ticket the moment you arrive.

If you want to level up from kaiten

Conveyor belt sushi is the perfect low-stakes entry point — but if it gives you the confidence to go further, that’s the real win. A few honest next steps:

FAQ

Do all these conveyor belt sushi chains have English touchscreens?

Effectively yes. Sushiro, Kura, Hama, and Uobei/Genki all have multilingual touch-panel ordering (English, plus typically Chinese and Korean). The Tier-2 chains — Nemuro Hanamaru, Toriton, Katsu Midori — offer English menus and tablet/counter ordering. You will never need to speak Japanese to eat well at any of them.

Will I get a surprise bill?

No. Every plate’s price is fixed and shown on the touchscreen or by plate color, and the system tallies your total automatically. Tier-1 plates run from roughly ¥110–¥165; premium items at any chain can reach ¥300–¥500+. Note Nemuro Hanamaru prices per single piece, so its per-plate-looking numbers cover one piece, not two. (All prices as of 2026, varying by location and market price.)

Which chain has the genuinely best fish?

Among these, the Hokkaido-sourced regional chains — Nemuro Hanamaru and Kaiten Sushi Toriton — are a clear step above the national value chains, with Katsu Midori close behind for generous cuts. Among the cheap chains, Sushiro is the best all-rounder. If “best fish” is the goal, accept the slightly higher price and the queue.

Is the Shibuya Sushiro queue worth it?

Usually not on foot. The fish is the same as any other Sushiro, and the line is driven by location and tourist volume. Either reserve through the Sushiro site/LINE/Google Maps, or redirect that 45 minutes toward a Tier-2 chain where the queue actually buys you better sushi.

YukiYuki
Don’t want to memorize all this? Tell OnlyLocal where you are and how hungry you are — it picks the right kaiten near you, tells you the wait, and handles the booking. Start with the free concierge →

Bottom line: Tokyo’s conveyor belt sushi is one of the safest, friendliest meals you can have as a tourist. Walk into Sushiro or Hama off-peak when you want easy and cheap; take a LINE ticket for Nemuro Hanamaru or Toriton when you want the fish you’ll actually remember. The only genuine mistake is standing in a Saturday-night line you could have skipped.

— Reo Matsuda, Tokyo

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Author of this article

Reo Matsuda has spent 25 of his 29 years in Japan — the other four living in Dubai as the confused foreigner: misreading menus, getting turned away from restaurants he could not book. Back home in Tokyo, he realized visitors to Japan hit the same wall in reverse. So he founded OnlyLocal, analyzed 218,000 Tabelog restaurant records, and now personally calls Tokyo restaurants every week — navigating the exact no-show policies, deposits, and regulars-only doors he writes about. Previously founded and exited an inbound relocation company. More: reomazda.com

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