City guide
First time eating in Kyoto: a calm, plant-friendly city

Why Kyoto is the easy city
Kyoto built its food culture around Buddhist temples, and that history still shows on the plate. Shojin ryori — the temple cuisine that gave Japan its first refined vegetarian cooking — and the city's obsession with tofu and yuba mean that eating plant-first here is genuinely traditional, not a modern accommodation. The pace helps too: Kyoto is quieter than Tokyo, distances are walkable or a short bus ride apart, and kitchens are used to careful diners. The one trap to remember is the same everywhere in Japan — dashi made from bonito (katsuo). Even a 'vegetable' dish may sit in fish stock, so always confirm.
Where to eat
Start with the real thing: Shigetsu, the temple-run Zen vegetarian dining room inside Tenryu-ji in Arashiyama (a Michelin Bib Gourmand), where the broth is kombu and shiitake, never bonito — strict vegans should just confirm egg and honey when reserving. For dinner, Tousuiro is an upscale riverside tofu-kaiseki house in central Kyoto with a full English menu and a dedicated fish-free vegan course (ask for the 'Rokuhara' set — the standard tofu courses likely use bonito dashi). Two ramen specialists cover the trickier diets: Gion Soy Milk Ramen Uno Yukiko uses rice-flour noodles and gluten-free soy sauce, one of Kyoto's most reliably gluten-free and fish-free bowls (celiac diners should confirm cross-contamination directly), and Towzen in quiet Shimogamo has been fully vegan since 2018 with a clean kombu-and-soy-milk broth. Muslim travellers have Ayam-Ya Karasuma, a third-party halal-certified chicken-ramen counter with a prayer room and English menu.
Planning your days
Group by district: Arashiyama (Shigetsu, temples, bamboo grove) for a half-day in the west; Gion and Kiyamachi (Uno Yukiko, Tousuiro) for the centre and evening; Karasuma for a quick certified-halal lunch. Several of these shops close midweek and a few are lunch-only, so check days and hours before you set out, and filter the directory to Kyoto to map your route.
확인된 맛집
Shigetsu (Tenryu-ji)
Seasonal multi-course shojin set served in lacquerware
Temple-run Zen vegetarian dining inside Tenryu-ji, one of Arashiyama's great Zen temples (Michelin Bib Gourmand, Kyoto-Osaka 2025), served as a seasonal multi-course set in lacquerware. Traditional shojin uses kombu and shiitake rather than fish dashi, so there is no bonito broth; the menu does not publicly itemise egg or honey, so strict vegans should confirm when reserving. A garden admission fee applies on top of the course.
- 채식
- 비건
- 유제품 프리
- Date
- Anniversary
- Casual
- Private room
Tousuiro Kiyamachi
Silky oboro tofu and yuba in a seasonal multi-course meal
An upscale riverside tofu-kaiseki house in central Kyoto serving silky oboro tofu and yuba in seasonal multi-course form, with a full English menu and summer riverside (kawayuka) seating. It offers a dedicated fish-free vegan course ('Rokuhara') with no meat, shellfish, egg, dairy or fish — but you must order that specific course, since the standard tofu courses likely use bonito dashi.
- 페스코
- 채식
- 비건
- 유제품 프리
- Date
- Anniversary
- Business
- Private room
Gion Soy Milk Ramen Uno Yukiko
Creamy soy-milk ramen with rice-flour noodles and gluten-free soy sauce
A vegan and gluten-free ramen specialist in Gion run by patissier Yukiko Uno, using rice-flour-and-kelp noodles and gluten-free soy sauce in a soy-milk broth — one of Kyoto's most reliably gluten-free, fish-dashi-free ramen options. The strongest 'dedicated kitchen' claims come from third-party listings rather than the venue itself, so celiac diners should confirm cross-contamination protocol directly with staff.
- 비건
- 채식
- 글루텐프리
- 유제품 프리
- Casual
- Solo
- Date
Towzen (Mamezen)
Creamy soy-milk ramen with a kombu-and-soy broth (no fish dashi)
A small fully-vegan soy-milk ramen shop in quiet Shimogamo, vegan since 2018, with a creamy kombu-and-soy-milk broth and no fish dashi at all — one of the cleanest strict-vegan ramen options in Kyoto. It also avoids the Buddhist five pungent spices (onion and garlic). The noodles contain wheat, so it is vegan but not gluten-free; closed midweek, so check days before visiting.
- 비건
- 채식
- 유제품 프리
- Casual
- Solo
Ayam-Ya Karasuma
Spicy shoyu chicken ramen with halal-verified ingredients
A halal chicken-ramen counter near Karasuma/Shijo from the Ayam-Ya group, third-party halal-certified (by the Malaysia Halal Corporation), fully pork- and alcohol-free with separate halal storage and tableware, an English menu and a prayer room. It is effectively a lunch-only shop and closes midweek, so check hours before visiting.
- 할랄
- Solo
- Casual
FAQ
- Is Kyoto really more vegetarian-friendly than Tokyo?
- For plant-based eating, yes — Kyoto's temple food (shojin ryori) and tofu/yuba tradition mean fully vegetarian multi-course meals are part of the local culture, not a special request. The one thing to confirm everywhere is bonito (fish) dashi, which can hide in otherwise vegetable dishes.
- Can I find halal food in Kyoto?
- Yes, though the options are fewer than Tokyo. Ayam-Ya Karasuma is a third-party halal-certified chicken-ramen shop with a prayer room and English menu. Confirm hours before visiting, as it is effectively lunch-only and closes midweek.
