Where to eat
Gluten-free ramen in Tokyo: where coeliacs can actually slurp

Why ramen is usually off the table
For a coeliac diner, a normal bowl of ramen is a double problem. The noodles are wheat — that is what gives ramen its bite — and the tare seasoning base and many broths use soy sauce, which is wheat-brewed. Even a 'lighter' shio ramen is built on wheat noodles. This is the same wheat-everywhere reality as our gluten-free Tokyo guide and is sushi gluten-free?.
The good news
Tokyo now has genuine gluten-free ramen. A small group of kitchens make rice-flour (kome-ko) noodles, swap in tamari or wheat-free seasoning, and — crucially for coeliacs — cook in a setup that keeps wheat away. The venues below are our verified picks:
- Gluten Free T's Kitchen (Roppongi) — Asia's first GIG-certified kitchen; the miso-butter corn ramen is entirely safe, as is everything else on the menu.
- Soranoiro Nippon (Tokyo Station) — a mainstream ramen-ya that offers a dedicated gluten-free shio ramen with rice noodles.
- Gluten-Free Cafe Little Bird (Yoyogi-Hachiman) — a fully gluten-free Japanese kitchen doing ramen, gyoza and karaage.
- Chabuzen (Shimokitazawa) — vegan, gluten-free curry-ramen built on sprouted brown rice.
How to order safely
Say "komugi arerugi" (wheat allergy). At a dedicated gluten-free venue the whole kitchen is safe; at a mainstream shop offering a GF option (like Soranoiro), confirm the noodles are rice flour, the tare uses tamari, and ask about a separate pot to avoid cross-contamination. Standards vary, so always confirm with the venue before you order — they will appreciate the heads-up.
This month’s rankings
Gluten Free T's Kitchen
Rice-flour gyoza and miso-butter corn ramen
Asia's first GIG-certified gluten-free kitchen, where every dish — from rice-flour gyoza to miso-butter ramen — is safe for coeliac diners.
- Gluten-free
- Vegan
- Vegetarian
- Dairy-free
- Nut-free
- Casual
- Solo
Soranoiro NIPPON
Gluten-free shio (salt) ramen with rice-based noodles; veggie 'Vegisoba'
A popular Tokyo Ramen Street shop offering a gluten-free salt ramen made with rice-based noodles, plus its colorful vegetable 'Vegisoba'. It is a has-options shop, not a dedicated GF kitchen — the official site warns of possible cross-contamination, so it is not celiac-safe.
- Gluten-free
- Vegetarian
- Casual
- Solo
Gluten Free Cafe Little Bird
Gluten-free gyoza, karaage and yakisoba
A dedicated gluten-free cafe whose entire kitchen is wheat-free, serving GF Japanese comfort food such as gyoza, karaage, ramen and yakisoba with English-marked menus. Its Tabelog listing is currently status-undetermined, so confirm hours via its Instagram before visiting.
- Gluten-free
- Vegetarian
- Dairy-free
- Casual
- Solo
Chabuzen Shimokitazawa
Vegan curry ramen with sprouted brown rice
A tiny tatami-floored diner on the Shimokitazawa backstreets where every bowl of rich, medicinal-herb ramen is 100% plant-based and built on sprouted brown rice.
- Vegetarian
- Vegan
- Gluten-free
- Solo
- Casual
Sources
FAQ
- Are there really gluten-free ramen shops in Tokyo?
- Yes. A handful of dedicated venues such as Gluten Free T's Kitchen and Little Bird make rice-flour ramen in wheat-free kitchens, and Soranoiro Nippon offers a gluten-free option.
- Is shio (salt) ramen gluten-free?
- Not by default — the noodles are still wheat. It's only gluten-free at a shop that uses rice noodles and tamari, like the venues listed here.
