Vegan Tokyo · Asakusa
Vegan restaurants in Asakusa: plant-based eating around Senso-ji

The short answer
Asakusa — the temple district around Senso-ji and the Kaminarimon — is one of the easier Tokyo neighbourhoods for vegan and vegetarian travellers, because it mixes modern plant-based kitchens with centuries-old Buddhist food culture. As always in Japan, the thing to watch is dashi: 'vegetable' dishes are often finished with bonito or sardine stock, so the safest choices are kitchens that are fully plant-based or that mark their plant dishes clearly. For the underlying rules, read the Can vegans eat in Japan? pillar guide.
Fully vegan kitchens
- Marugoto Vegan Dining Asakusa — near Asakusa Station, every dish is vegan, additive-free and gluten-free (so it is dairy-free by definition). A per-dish allergen chart is published; check it for nuts, which we have not confirmed.
- Veganic Monkey Magic — a tiny, reservation-only vegan restaurant serving a chef's 10–14 course tasting menu on a limited number of days; book well ahead.
- Sekai Cafe Asakusa — two minutes from the Kaminarimon, serving vegan and vegetarian dishes alongside halal meat, with no pork or alcohol. (It is Muslim-friendly rather than third-party halal-certified — useful for mixed groups.)
Temple cuisine & vegetarian classics
- Fucha Ryori Bon (near Iriya) is a 1959-vintage institution serving fucha-ryori, the Buddhist vegetarian temple cuisine, in garden-view tatami rooms — a calm, almost ceremonial plant-forward meal.
- Sometaro is Tokyo's oldest okonomiyaki house (since 1937); order the vegetable okonomiyaki and you grill it yourself, but confirm the batter and sauce if you are strictly vegan, as okonomiyaki commonly uses dashi and bonito flakes.
Sweets a vegetarian can trust
Finish at Suzukien, an 1848 tea house famous for matcha gelato in seven escalating intensities — a vegetarian treat (gelato contains dairy, so it is not vegan). For wagashi, traditional anmitsu and zenzai nearby are typically plant-based, but agar vs. gelatin is worth a quick check.
Practical tips
Many Asakusa plant-based shops are small and reservation-friendly — book the tasting-menu places ahead. For the city-wide playbook see vegan & vegetarian Tokyo, and if you want a bowl, the best vegan ramen in Tokyo. Curious about the temple-food tradition itself? Read our shojin ryori guide.
확인된 맛집
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
- Casual
- Solo
- Date
Veganic Monkey Magic
Multi-course vegan tasting menu
A small, reservation-only vegan restaurant in Asakusa serving a chef's 10–14 course tasting menu. It seats only a handful of guests and opens a limited number of days per week, so reserve ahead.
- 비건
- 채식
- Date
- Private room
Sekai Cafe Asakusa
Halal-meat burgers and matcha sweets
A cafe a 2-minute walk from Kaminarimon serving food without pork or alcohol, using halal meat alongside vegan and vegetarian dishes. Muslim-friendly / pork- and alcohol-free, not third-party halal-certified.
- 할랄
- 비건
- 채식
- Casual
- Solo
Fucha Ryori Bon
Multi-course fucha-ryori banquet in a private tatami room
A 1959-vintage temple-cuisine institution near Iriya where John Lennon and Yoko Ono once dined, serving 300-year-old fucha-ryori in garden-view tatami rooms.
- 채식
- 비건
- Anniversary
- Private room
Furyu Okonomiyaki Sometaro
Cook-it-yourself okonomiyaki
Since 1937, Tokyo's oldest okonomiyaki house lets you grill your own savory pancake at low tatami tables in a wonderfully creaky wooden shack.
- 채식
- Casual
- Solo
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
- Solo
- Casual
Sources
FAQ
- Are there vegan restaurants near Senso-ji in Asakusa?
- Yes — within walking distance of Senso-ji you will find fully vegan kitchens such as Marugoto Vegan Dining Asakusa and the reservation-only Veganic Monkey Magic, plus Sekai Cafe (vegan and Muslim-friendly) near the Kaminarimon. For temple-style vegetarian cuisine, Fucha Ryori Bon serves Buddhist fucha-ryori nearby.
- Is okonomiyaki vegan in Asakusa?
- Not by default. Even a vegetable okonomiyaki usually contains dashi and is often topped with bonito flakes (katsuobushi). At Sometaro you grill it yourself, so ask for the batter and sauce to be made without dashi and skip the bonito topping if you are strictly vegan; otherwise treat it as vegetarian rather than vegan.
