Ever hesitated at the door of a Japanese pub, unsure how to walk in without feeling awkward — why does a dish you didn't order turn up? How do you order? Where do you pay? This page sorts it all out, from otoshi · your first beer · shared small plates · nomihodai · etiquette, right through to the legendary drinking alleys.
Picture the end of a workday: people in Japan aren't rushing straight home, they're stopping off at an izakaya — somewhere that's half pub, half restaurant, where you sit with a cold beer, order little dishes that land in the middle of the table, and pick at them together while the conversation stretches on. This is the heart of how Japan eats and drinks, and it's nothing like a restaurant back home. It's also where you'll taste the widest range of Japanese food in a single sitting, because everything is built to be ordered in quantity and shared.
But plenty of first-timers feel a little self-conscious walking in for the first time — why is there a small dish I didn't order? Do I order one plate at a time or all at once? What is nomihodai? Where do I pay? On this page we walk you through it step by step, as if a Japanese friend were sitting beside you talking you through it, from your first step inside to the moment you leave — and you'll be enjoying izakaya with total ease.
"Izakaya" is just one of several kinds of drinking spot in Japan, each with its own atmosphere, price, and way of sitting. Knowing them first helps you pick the right one — whether you want to settle in for a long evening, drink quickly standing up, or work your way through a drinking alley.
| Type | Atmosphere | What it's like | Price/person | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IzakayaIzakaya | Sit & dine | Full sit-down venue with tables/counters, a long menu, and otoshi | ~2,500–4,000 yen | Long meals in a group |
| YataiYatai · stall | Roadside | Roadside stalls with just a few seats, most famous in Fukuoka (Nakasu/Tenjin) | ~2,000–3,500 yen | Local atmosphere |
| TachinomiTachinomi · standing | Standing | Standing bars, no chairs, quick in and out, often no otoshi or very little | ~1,000–2,000 yen | A quick drink on a budget |
| YokochoYokocho · drinking alley | Narrow alley | Alleys packed with dozens of tiny bars, such as Omoide Yokocho · Golden Gai | Varies by bar | Bar-hopping, moving around |
An izakaya menu runs on forever, but start with these 8 dishes and you won't be disappointed — they're the classics almost every place has, they go beautifully with beer, and they're built to be ordered and shared around the whole table.
The star of the izakaya — bite-size chicken threaded onto skewers and grilled over charcoal, brushed with a sweet-savoury tare sauce or simply salted (shio). There are plenty of cuts to choose from, from thigh (momo) and crispy skin (kawa) to liver (reba). Order a few skewers, pair with a cold beer, and you've got the legendary combo.
Tokyo Food Guide →Japanese-style fried chicken marinated in soy sauce, ginger, and garlic, then coated and fried until crisp outside and juicy within. A squeeze of lemon before you bite makes it even better. It's the dish that keeps kids and anyone who skips raw food happy, and it usually arrives as a big plate to share. Order it with a highball — that's the classic.
What to Eat in Japan →Japanese soybeans boiled and sprinkled with salt — pop the beans straight into your mouth and keep going. It's the first thing Japanese diners tend to order while they decide on the rest of the menu, and it goes brilliantly with beer. Cheap, easy to order, on practically every menu — the dish a first-timer can point at without a second thought.
What to Eat in Japan →Dumplings filled with minced pork, cabbage, and garlic, crisped on the bottom while staying soft on top (yaki-gyoza), dipped in a mix of vinegar, soy sauce, and rayu chilli oil. A little plate that always disappears fast when shared, and it works as well with beer as it does with rice.
Japanese Chain Restaurants →Freshly sliced raw fish, dipped in a touch of soy sauce with wasabi. Many izakaya offer an assorted platter (moriawase) so you can taste several kinds on one plate. At coastal spots or the yatai of Fukuoka the fish is especially fresh. If you don't eat raw, just tell the staff — there's plenty else on the menu.
Fukuoka Food Guide →Soft tofu lightly coated and fried for a thin crust, then sat in a warm dashi broth and topped with spring onion, grated ginger, and bonito flakes. The inside stays silky and soft — a light dish that cuts through all the fried and grilled plates, and one that keeps non-meat-eaters happy and full.
What to Eat in Japan →
🐙 Osaka7
Round balls of batter with octopus inside, grilled in a dimpled pan, then topped with sauce, mayonnaise, and bonito flakes that flutter in the heat — crisp outside, almost molten within. You'll find them often in Osaka-area izakaya. Eat them hot (mind your mouth!) — a fun dish that gets everyone smiling when it's shared.
Osaka Food Guide →
🥞 Osaka8
A savoury pancake of cabbage-laced batter with pork, prawn, or cheese to taste, grilled on a teppan and finished with a thick sauce, mayonnaise, and bonito flakes. At some places you grill it yourself at the table, which is good fun. It's a filling dish that's just right ordered and cut up to share at the end of the meal.
Osaka Food Guide →No need to stress about the order of things — follow these 6 steps and you'll look like a regular, from telling them your group size at the door to walking up to pay at the counter.
As you enter, a server will greet you — just say how many you are. Holding up fingers works, or say "futari" (2 people) or "sannin" (3 people). They'll seat you at a table or the counter. Popular spots in the evening may mean a queue or booking ahead.
As soon as you sit, an otoshi often arrives — a small dish you didn't order, maybe beans, tofu, or pickles. This is the normal table/seating charge, ~300–700 yen per person, not a scam — a custom at most izakaya (called tsukidashi in Kansai). Tuck in.
The custom is that drinks always come first. The whole table usually kicks off with the legendary line "toriaezu nama" (a draft beer to start) so everyone can clink a kampai together. Not drinking? Order oolong tea or a soft drink, then move on to the food menu.
No need to order everything at once. Order 2–3 dishes at a time into the middle of the table and share, then order more in rounds as they go. Ordering a variety and tasting a little of each is the most fun — and the best value — way to do it.
Nomihodai = time-limited all-you-can-drink (usually 90–120 minutes, around 1,500–3,000 yen per person · check the latest at the venue). Worth it if you plan to drink several glasses. The conditions: everyone takes the same package, and last orders are often 20–30 minutes before time is up.
Want more? Call out "sumimasen" (excuse me). When you're ready to leave, you mostly pay at the counter by the entrance, not at the table; some places leave the bill on the table for you to carry over. No tipping, and keep cash handy because many small spots don't take cards.
It's not so strict that a slip gets you stared at, but knowing these makes the evening flow and helps you feel part of the group — especially the custom of pouring for one another, which Japanese diners treat as a kindness.
Fancy drinking somewhere with a bit of atmosphere? Try wandering a yokocho (drinking alley) — dozens of tiny bars lined up where you can move from one to the next all night. These are the 4 districts drinkers around the world have their eye on.
You don't need full sentences — these short words alone will see you through the night, and staff will understand. For most of the menu you can just point at a picture or a sign.
A guide to the must-try dishes across Japan, how to order, and table etiquette — the starting hub for hungry travellers.
Japan Food Guide →The 6 broth styles, each city's regional ramen, and how to order at the ticket machine without getting lost.
Ramen Guide →Types of sushi, how to eat it the proper way, and which kind of restaurant to choose — from conveyor belt to chef's counter.
Sushi Guide →Izakaya, the Omoide Yokocho drinking alley, signature bites, and the best eating districts in the Tokyo metropolis.
Tokyo Food Guide →The street-food capital — takoyaki, okonomiyaki, Dotonbori, and the izakaya of the Kansai region.
Osaka Food Guide →The yatai capital — riverside stalls at Nakasu/Tenjin, Hakata ramen, and the food of Kyushu.
Fukuoka Food Guide →Tokyo is the biggest playground for izakaya and drinking alleys — open the Tokyo Food Guide for eating districts like Omoide Yokocho and the city's signature bites, or start lining up a place to stay near the food districts.