In Japan, every season has its own flavour — grilled eel to beat the summer heat, smoky grilled sanma in autumn, steaming hot pot and snow crab in winter, and pink sakura sweets in spring. We've rounded up the seasonal dishes worth chasing, with the timing, real prices, and the restaurants and neighbourhoods where you can find them.
Picture walking into a Japanese restaurant in November and finding an entire menu booklet devoted to nothing but snow crab — that's how the Japanese eat. There's a word for it, shun (旬), meaning "the time of year when an ingredient tastes its best," and restaurants, supermarkets, cafes, and even convenience stores all rotate their menus to match the season together. Seasonal produce in Japan is almost always fresher, cheaper, and tastier than the out-of-season version.
Honestly, if you go to Japan and eat only ramen and sushi for every meal, you're missing half the fun — because the real magic of eating here is that "whenever you go, you get to eat something only available right then." On this page we've split it into four seasons, each with its standout dishes, telling you which months they appear, roughly what they cost, and the cities or neighbourhoods where you can find them.
Tap the season that matches your trip and see what's worth chasing while you're there.
Japanese summers are hot and humid, so people eat dishes that give energy and cool you down — grilled eel to recharge, chilled noodles that slide right down, and the fluffy shaved ice that defines a Japanese summer.
🔥 Summer Highlight
Freshwater eel grilled and glazed in a sweet-savoury sauce, laid over hot rice — tender, smoky, and aromatic. The Japanese believe eating unagi in summer helps you recharge against the heat thanks to its rich vitamins. The annual eel-eating day (Doyo no Ushi no Hi) in 2026 falls on 26 July.
🍜 Chilled Noodles
Very thin wheat noodles, boiled and then iced until perfectly cold, dipped in chilled mentsuyu sauce — they slide right down on the hottest days. Some places serve them as "nagashi somen," where the noodles flow down a bamboo flume for you to catch — one of the most fun summer activities around.
🍑 Summer Fruit
Summer is the season of juicy fruit — white peaches (especially from Okayama) are so silky and sweet that people happily pay a premium. The signature summer dessert is kakigori, shaved ice as fluffy as snow, topped with fruit syrups or concentrated matcha. It dates back to the Heian era and is an icon of the Japanese summer.
🍶 Summer Dinner
Once the sun dips, big cities open rooftop beer gardens on department stores and hotels — eating and drinking in the cool breeze under the city lights, paired with edamame, yakitori, and fried snacks. It's a summer ritual that Japanese office workers look forward to all year; some venues run all-you-can-eat-and-drink with a time limit.
The Japanese call autumn "aki — the season of appetite," because the rich, fragrant ingredients all arrive at once: fatty fish, aromatic mushrooms, chestnuts, and ripe fruit. It's the season serious eaters look forward to most.
🐟 Fish of the Season
A long, slender fish that fattens up in autumn — grilled whole with salt until the skin crisps and the smoke fills the air, eaten with grated daikon and a squeeze of sudachi citrus. As the Japanese say, "the moment you smell sanma grilling, you know autumn has arrived."
🍄 King of Mushrooms
The most expensive mushroom in Japan, because it can't be cultivated — it grows wild only in certain pine forests, and only for a short window. It's typically cooked as matsutake rice (matsutake gohan) or in a clear dobin-mushi broth to capture its full aroma. It's one of autumn's three iconic foods, alongside sanma and persimmon.
🌰 Autumn Sweets
As the leaves start to turn, chestnuts (kuri) arrive — both as kuri gohan (chestnut rice) and as sweets. The biggest hit is Mont Blanc, a mountain-peak cake piled high with threads of chestnut cream. Every cafe and depachika rolls out chestnut desserts at the same time — warm and sweet, just right for the cool weather.
🍂 Harvest Season
Sweet, ripe orange persimmons (kaki) are the iconic fruit of the harvest season, piled high on stalls nationwide. The other thing the Japanese wait for is shinmai, the newly harvested rice of the year, which cooks up fragrant, glossy, and sticky. Many rice shops and restaurants put up signs boasting "now using new-crop rice" around this time.
When the cold sets in, families gather around a hot pot together, and this is also the golden season for luxury seafood — snow crab and pufferfish at their fattest of the year. If you love eating in the cold, don't miss it.
🍲 Hot Pot
The heart of a winter meal — a simmering pot in the middle of the table filled with vegetables, tofu, mushrooms, meat, and seafood, cooked fresh as you go. There are many styles: shabu-shabu (swish-and-dip), sukiyaki (simmered in a sweet-savoury sauce), and miso- or seafood-based nabe. It warms you through and through, and it's the dish Japanese families eat together.
🦀 King of Winter Seafood
The ultimate luxury of a Japanese winter — zuwai (snow crab) from the Sea of Japan coast, known by different names depending on where it's caught: matsuba crab (Tottori/Shimane) and echizen crab (Fukui). The meat is sweet and juicy, eaten as sashimi, boiled, grilled, or in a hot pot. The season opens precisely on 6 November every year.
🐡 The Legendary Dish
The pufferfish famous for its poison — but in the hands of a licensed chef it's perfectly safe. It's served as sashimi sliced so thin you can see the plate through it (tessa), as fugu hot pot, and deep-fried. The flesh is firm and springy with a delicate flavour, and winter is when fugu is at its fattest and finest.
🏮 Comfort Food
A pot of clear dashi broth slowly simmering fish cakes, boiled eggs, daikon, tofu, and konnyaku until they soak up all the flavour — the easiest winter food to find, from convenience stores (ladled yourself from the counter) to specialist oden shops. It warms both body and soul, and it's wonderfully wallet-friendly.
Spring is the season when everything feels fresh — sakura-flavoured sweets and snacks fill the shops, strawberries are juicy and sweet, and the first young shoots of the season bring a distinctive bitterness that the Japanese consider the very taste of spring.
🌸 Sakura Sweets
Pink mochi filled with red-bean paste and wrapped in a pickled sakura leaf, with a distinctive sweet-salty flavour — the signature spring sweet eaten around the Hina Matsuri festival (3 Mar). At this time of year every brand rolls out sakura-flavoured things at once — sakura lattes, ice cream, sweets, even limited-edition convenience-store snacks.
🎍 Early-Season Greens
Spring bamboo shoots (takenoko) are crisp and gently sweet, simmered in soy sauce or cooked into bamboo-shoot rice (takenoko gohan). There are also wild mountain greens (sansai) like fukinoto, with a slight bitterness that the Japanese consider "the taste of spring" — said to wake the body up after winter.
🦐 Spring Seafood
Tiny, translucent pink shrimp the colour of sakura petals, caught around Suruga Bay (Shizuoka), with a short catching season in spring. Eaten fresh as sashimi, fried into crisp kakiage, or sprinkled over rice — sweet and crunchy with a sea aroma, a celebrated delicacy you can only get fresh for part of the year.
🍓 Juicy Fruit
Japanese strawberries are grown in temperature-controlled greenhouses — large, intensely sweet, and barely tart. Late winter into spring is the peak, appearing in shortcakes, parfaits, and ichigo daifuku (soft mochi wrapped around a strawberry and red-bean paste). Many hotels also run strawberry dessert buffets at this time of year.
A summary table of standout dishes by season · scroll on mobile · prices are approximate ranges — always check the latest with the restaurant.
| Season / Months | Standout Dishes | Peak | Approx. Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spring Mar–May | Sakura mochi · bamboo shoots · sakura ebi · strawberries | Late Mar–Apr | Sweets ¥200–500 · strawberry buffet ¥3,500–5,500 |
| Summer Jun–Aug | Unagi · somen · kakigori · white peach | Jul–Aug (unagi 26 Jul) | Una-don ¥800–3,000+ · kakigori ¥300–1,500 |
| Autumn Sep–Nov | Sanma · matsutake · chestnut/Mont Blanc · persimmon | Sep–Oct | Sanma set ¥1,000–1,800 · Mont Blanc ¥600–900 |
| Winter Dec–Feb | Nabe · snow crab · fugu · oden | Dec–Feb (crab opens 6 Nov) | Nabe ¥1,500–4,000 · onsen crab course ¥24,000+ |
Ramen, sushi, yakitori, tempura, and many more Tokyo dishes — with recommended spots and real prices.
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Preparation Info →Open the Tokyo food guide to find the city's best restaurants, or open the complete Japan travel guide to plan your route, visa, and accommodation around the season you most want to eat in.