Dietary guide

Is teriyaki gluten-free? The soy sauce problem

Is teriyaki gluten-free? The soy sauce problem

© Choo Yut Shing · Public domain

The short answer

Teriyaki — the glossy sweet-savoury glaze on chicken, salmon or yellowtail — is usually not gluten-free. The glaze is a reduction of soy sauce, mirin, sugar and often a little sake, and the wheat comes from the soy sauce: standard Japanese shoyu is brewed from soybeans and wheat in roughly equal parts. So the very thing that defines teriyaki is what makes it unsafe for a coeliac.

What is and isn't the issue

The protein underneath — chicken thigh, a fillet of fish — is naturally gluten-free. The problem is entirely the sauce. Mirin and cooking sake add no gluten (they are rice-based), though they do add alcohol, which matters for halal diners more than gluten-free ones. Bottled supermarket teriyaki and izakaya house glazes are wheat-based unless stated otherwise. This is the same wheat-in-soy-sauce trap behind is sushi gluten-free? and our gluten-free Tokyo guide.

How to get gluten-free teriyaki

In theory it is easy: swap regular soy sauce for tamari, which is brewed with little or no wheat. In practice, few standard restaurants keep tamari behind the counter, so your reliable route is a dedicated gluten-free kitchen that cooks everything wheat-free (our picks below), or making it at home with certified tamari. Naturally safe alternatives in a normal restaurant are grilled fish or chicken ordered shio (salt) rather than tare (sauce).

What to ask

Say "komugi arerugi" and ask if the sauce uses tamari or regular shoyu, or request it shio (salted, no sauce). Recipes vary, so confirm with the venue when it matters.

Places we’ve confirmed

Roppongi · Gluten-free comfort food · ¥¥

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
Last verified Jun 2026
  • Casual
  • Solo

Yoyogi-Hachiman · Dedicated gluten-free Japanese cafe (gyoza, karaage, ramen) · ¥¥

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
Last verified Jun 2026
  • Casual
  • Solo

Sources

  1. Gluten Free T's Kitchen (official)

FAQ

Does mirin contain gluten?
No. Mirin and cooking sake are rice-based and gluten-free. They do contain alcohol, which matters for halal rather than gluten-free diets.
Is bottled teriyaki sauce gluten-free?
Almost never, unless the label specifically says so or lists tamari instead of soy sauce. Standard teriyaki is made with wheat-brewed soy sauce.
Misaki Honda
  • 12y food writing
  • Inbound dining specialist
  • Sommelier

Tokyo food editor covering inbound dining — 300+ meals a year, chosen by the moment and the menu.