Dietary guide
Is Japanese Curry Vegan? The Roux Trap, Explained

Usually no. The Japanese curry you meet at a diner or from a supermarket roux block is rarely vegan: those glossy blocks are bound with beef, pork or chicken fat, and often carry honey and dairy. Even a plain "vegetable curry" is typically cooked in that same animal-based roux. Fully vegan curry does exist in Japan — you just have to seek it out.
The roux is the trap
The reason is structural. Home-style and chain Japanese curry gets its thick, mellow body from a solid roux block, and that block almost always starts with rendered animal fat — beef tallow, lard, or chicken fat — plus, frequently, honey for sweetness and milk solids for that creamy finish. So the fat is baked into the flavour before a single vegetable goes in. Ordering the "vegetable" option swaps out the meat topping, not the base. Unless a kitchen makes its curry from scratch with plant oil, or uses a labelled vegan roux, assume standard curry is off the table. This is one of the everyday surprises we cover in can vegans eat in Japan.
Watch the dashi, too
Even a curry built without meat can hide the classic trap: dashi. Bonito (katsuo) and sardine (niboshi) stock slip into a lot of savoury Japanese cooking, and a soup curry or a "washoku-style" curry may lean on fish stock for depth. The vegan exception is kombu (kelp) or dried shiitake dashi, which many plant-based kitchens use on purpose. Never assume a brown, vegetable-looking sauce is fish-free — ask. We go deeper in is dashi vegan in Japan.
Where to actually eat vegan curry
The reliable route is a kitchen built around plants. For Indian-style vegan curry, Nataraj in Ogikubo and its Shibuya branch run genuinely vegetarian menus with clearly marked vegan dishes and English support — the dal and vegetable curries are a safe, warming default. In Shimokitazawa, Chabuzen does a vegan soup curry, brothy and gently medicinal, with an English menu. For something quieter, Komaki Shokudo in Akihabara serves shojin-ryori, the Buddhist temple cooking that is vegan by tradition and often includes a curry, while Gopinatha in Nakano plates simple vegetarian and vegan sets.
How to eat curry well as a vegan
Chains help but need checking: CoCo Ichibanya offers a separately-cooked veggie curry in some branches — verify at the counter, since availability and preparation vary by location. Off the shelf, look for roux boxes explicitly labelled ヴィーガン or 植物性. And when in doubt, choose a plant-based kitchen over a compromise: the curry you seek out is usually the one you enjoy most. If you eat egg, the fried-cutlet world of katsudon is a separate conversation.
Places we’ve confirmed
Nataraj Ogikubo
Organic vegetable curries with tandoor naan; vegan, vegetarian and halal menus
A pioneering natural Indian vegetarian restaurant (the brand dates to 1989) serving spice-forward curries and tandoor naan in a spacious basement near Ogikubo Station. Vegan, vegetarian, halal and five-allium-free menus make it unusually accommodating.
- Vegetarian
- Vegan
- Halal
- Casual
- Private room
Nataraj Shibuya
Organic vegetable curries and tandoor naan with vegan, vegetarian and halal options
The Shibuya outpost of the long-running Nataraj natural-Indian vegetarian group, offering spice-rich organic vegetable curries, tandoor naan and clearly labelled vegan, vegetarian and halal menus in the heart of Shibuya.
- Vegetarian
- Vegan
- Halal
- Casual
- Business
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
Komaki Shokudo
Kuchifuku set — nine seasonal vegan sides with rice and miso soup
A casual, affordable vegan cafeteria run by a Kamakura temple lineage beneath the Akihabara rail arches, where even garlic and onion are forsaken in true shojin style.
- Vegetarian
- Vegan
- Solo
- Casual
Gopinatha
Daily plant-based set of vegetable dishes, brown rice and soup
A tiny counter near Nakano Broadway serving carefully made vegetarian set meals, with vegan options and homemade sweets.
- Vegetarian
- Vegan
- Solo
- Casual
Sources
FAQ
- Is CoCo Ichibanya's vegetable curry vegan?
- Not automatically. Some branches offer a separately-cooked veggie curry, but availability and preparation vary by location, so confirm at the counter that the roux and cooking are free of animal fat, dairy and honey.
- Can I just order the vegetable curry at a normal curry shop?
- Usually not safely. The 'vegetable' option typically swaps the topping while keeping the same animal-fat roux base. Unless the kitchen uses a plant-based or vegan-labelled roux, the sauce itself is not vegan.
- Does Japanese curry contain fish stock?
- It can. Roux-based curry rarely does, but soup curries and washoku-style curries may use bonito or sardine dashi for depth. Ask specifically, and look for kombu or shiitake dashi if you need it plant-based.



