Gluten-free Tokyo · Asakusa

Gluten-free restaurants in Asakusa: tempura, vegan dining and what to confirm

Gluten-free restaurants in Asakusa: tempura, vegan dining and what to confirm

© 些細な日常 · CC BY-SA 4.0

The short answer

Yes — you can eat gluten-free in Asakusa, the temple district around Senso-ji, though the options are specialist rather than everywhere. The two anchors are a tempura counter that fries its entire menu in rice flour, and an all-vegan kitchen that is also fully gluten-free. As across Tokyo, the trap is soy sauce, which is normally brewed with wheat — so 'celiac-safe' depends on the shop using a gluten-free (tamari-style) soy and managing cross-contact. For what 'gluten-free' can and can't mean here, start with the Gluten-free Tokyo pillar guide.

Where to eat

Tempura Asakusa SAKURA is the standout: a counter two minutes from the Kaminarimon whose entire menu is gluten-free — the batter is rice flour, and the soy sauce and dipping broth are house-made gluten-free — and which is also halal-certified. Important caveat: it is not a separate dedicated gluten-free facility, so a highly sensitive coeliac should confirm cross-contact (shared oil and surfaces) directly before ordering.

For a full meal beyond tempura, Marugoto Vegan Dining Asakusa (near Asakusa Station) is all-vegan and all-gluten-free, with a per-dish allergen chart — a rare combination that also covers dairy-free by definition.

Naturally safer choices

Some traditional Asakusa foods are lower-risk by nature. Matcha and Japanese sweets are often gluten-free — Suzukien's matcha gelato, for instance, is wheat-free (confirm the cone if you take one). Sashimi and plain grilled fish are naturally gluten-free if you avoid the soy sauce or bring tamari. Be careful with the obvious wheat foods of the district: monjayaki, okonomiyaki, ramen, tempura at non-GF shops, and most soy sauce.

The question to ask

Two questions settle most situations: (1) Is the soy sauce gluten-free (tamari)? and (2) Is anything fried in oil shared with battered, wheat-coated food? At SAKURA the menu is gluten-free by design, but the dedicated-facility caveat still applies for coeliacs. For the broader city playbook see allergy-aware dining in Tokyo and, for the soy-sauce issue specifically, is sushi gluten-free?. Read the tempura basics too.

확인된 맛집

Iriya (Taito) · Gluten-free & halal tempura · ¥¥¥

Tempura Asakusa SAKURA

Tempura fried in 100% gluten-free rice-flour batter with house-made gluten-free soy sauce and broth; wagyu and seafood tempura bowls are highlights

A counter tempura restaurant whose entire menu is gluten-free (rice-flour batter plus house-made GF soy sauce and broth) and which is halal certified. It is not a separate dedicated GF facility, so highly sensitive celiacs should confirm cross-contact directly; vegetarian tempura courses are also offered.

  • 글루텐프리
  • 할랄
  • 채식
최종 확인 2026년 6월
  • Date
  • Anniversary
  • Solo
  • Business

Iriya (Taito) · Plant-based Japanese / vegan · ¥¥

Marugoto Vegan Dining Asakusa

Vegan tempura, waffles and seasonal plant-based plates

A fully plant-based restaurant near Asakusa Station where every dish is vegan, additive-free and gluten-free, so it is dairy-free by definition. A per-dish allergen chart is published, so check it for nut content; we have not confirmed it is nut-free and do not tag it as such.

  • 비건
  • 채식
  • 유제품 프리
  • 글루텐프리
최종 확인 2026년 6월
  • Casual
  • Solo
  • Date

Iriya (Taito) · Matcha gelato & Japanese tea · ¥

Suzukien Asakusa

No.7 Premium Matcha Gelato — the world's richest

This 1848-founded tea house teams up with Shizuoka's Nanaya to serve matcha gelato in seven escalating intensities, climaxing in a near-black No. 7 so concentrated it tastes like eating pure tea leaves.

  • 채식
최종 확인 2026년 6월
  • Solo
  • Casual

Sources

  1. Tempura Asakusa SAKURA (official)

FAQ

Are there gluten-free restaurants in Asakusa?
Yes. Tempura Asakusa SAKURA fries its entire menu in rice flour with house-made gluten-free soy sauce (and is halal-certified), and Marugoto Vegan Dining Asakusa is fully vegan and fully gluten-free. Both are within walking distance of Senso-ji. Highly sensitive coeliacs should confirm cross-contact, as neither is a separate dedicated gluten-free facility.
Is normal tempura gluten-free?
No — standard tempura batter is wheat flour, and the dipping sauce (tentsuyu) uses wheat-brewed soy sauce. Only a specialist shop like Tempura Asakusa SAKURA, which uses rice-flour batter and a gluten-free soy sauce, serves gluten-free tempura. Even then, confirm shared frying oil if you are coeliac.
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.