Area guide
Vegan Restaurants in Kyoto: Shojin Ryori, Soy-Milk Ramen & Tofu Kaiseki (4 Verified Spots)

© Jpatokal / CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0
Why Kyoto is the easiest city in Japan to eat vegan
Kyoto was Japan's imperial capital for over a thousand years and the historical centre of Japanese Buddhism, so its most famous food — shojin ryori, the meat-, fish- and five-pungent-spice-free cuisine developed by Zen temples — is naturally vegan at its base. That history still shows up on the plate today: tofu, yuba (soy-milk skin) and seasonal vegetables carry the city's cooking in a way they don't in meat-forward Osaka or Tokyo. The one thing that doesn't change just because you're in a temple town is dashi — most Japanese stock is made from katsuobushi (bonito flakes), so a "vegetable" dish can still be sitting in fish broth. If you haven't already, start with can vegans eat in Japan and is dashi vegan in Japan before ordering anywhere that isn't on this list, and see our first-time Kyoto food guide for the wider city picture.
We've verified the four restaurants below are currently operating (checked 2026).
Temple cuisine: Shigetsu, inside Tenryu-ji (Arashiyama)
Shigetsu is run directly by Tenryu-ji, one of Arashiyama's great Zen temples, and was awarded a Michelin Bib Gourmand in the Kyoto-Osaka 2025 guide. The seasonal multi-course shojin set is served in lacquerware overlooking the temple garden — kombu and shiitake carry the broth, not bonito, so there's none of the fish-dashi risk that's almost everywhere else in Japan. One honest caveat: the menu doesn't publicly itemise egg or honey, so a strict vegan should confirm when reserving. Courses run from ¥3,800, plus a separate ¥500 garden admission.
Fully vegan ramen: Towzen and Uno Yukiko
Two shops, two different vegan ramen styles, both genuinely 100% plant-based:
Towzen in quiet Shimogamo has been vegan since 2018, ladling a creamy kombu-and-soy-milk broth with no fish dashi at all and no onion or garlic (the Buddhist five pungent spices). It's one of the cleanest strict-vegan bowls in Kyoto — but the noodles are wheat, so it's vegan, not gluten-free. It closes midweek, so check before you go.
Gion Soy Milk Ramen Uno Yukiko does the rare double: vegan and gluten-free, using rice-flour noodles and gluten-free soy sauce in its soy-milk broth. It's run by a patissier, Yukiko Uno, and sits right in Gion. Third-party sites describe it as having a dedicated kitchen, but that claim comes from those sites rather than the venue itself, so if you're celiac (not just avoiding gluten by preference), confirm cross-contamination protocol with staff directly. We cover it in more depth in our gluten-free restaurants in Kyoto guide.
Tofu kaiseki with a dedicated vegan course: Tousuiro
Tousuiro Kiyamachi is an upscale riverside tofu-kaiseki house — silky oboro tofu and yuba served as a seasonal multi-course meal, with kawayuka riverside seating in summer. It has a named vegan course, "Rokuhara," with no meat, shellfish, egg, dairy or fish. The catch: you have to order that specific course. The standard tofu courses likely use bonito dashi like most kaiseki in Japan, so don't assume "tofu restaurant" automatically means vegan-safe here.
The trap that doesn't disappear: dashi
Even in the most vegetarian-friendly city in Japan, the same rule applies as everywhere else: a dish built from vegetables can still be simmered in bonito stock. Kombu-only dashi (no bonito) is the safe version, and it's what all four places above use for their core vegan dishes. When in doubt anywhere else in Kyoto, ask directly: "Kore wa katsuo dashi o tsukatte imasu ka?" (Does this use bonito dashi?)
If you're travelling with people on different diets, see our companion guides to gluten-free restaurants in Kyoto and halal restaurants in Kyoto.
我们已确认的餐厅
Shigetsu (Tenryu-ji)
以漆器盛装的时令多道式精进套餐
岚山名刹之一天龙寺内由寺院经营的禅意素食(米其林必比登推介,京都·大阪2025),以漆器呈上时令多道式套餐。传统精进料理以昆布与香菇取代鱼高汤,故无鲣鱼汤底;菜单未公开标注蛋或蜂蜜,严格纯素者预约时请确认。课程之外另需庭园门票。
- 素食
- 纯素
- 无乳制品
- 约会
- 纪念日
- 休闲
- 包间
Towzen (Mamezen)
昆布大豆汤底的奶香豆乳拉面(无鱼高汤)
位于宁静下鸭的一家全纯素豆乳拉面小店,2018年起即为纯素,奶香昆布豆乳汤底完全不含鱼高汤——是京都最纯粹的严格纯素拉面之一。也避用佛教五辛(葱与蒜)。面含小麦,故纯素但非无麸质;周中休息,前往前请查营业日。
- 纯素
- 素食
- 无乳制品
- 休闲
- 一人用餐
Gion Soy Milk Ramen Uno Yukiko
米粉面与无麸质酱油的奶香豆乳拉面
祇园一家由甜点师宇野幸子主理的纯素兼无麸质拉面专门店,用米粉海带面与无麸质酱油配豆乳汤底——是京都最可靠的无麸质、无鱼高汤拉面之一。最强的“专用厨房”说法多来自第三方而非店家本身,乳糜泻食客应直接向店员确认防交叉污染流程。
- 纯素
- 素食
- 无麸质
- 无乳制品
- 休闲
- 一人用餐
- 约会
Tousuiro Kiyamachi
丝滑朧豆腐与湯叶组成的时令多道式料理
京都中心一家高档的河畔豆腐怀石店,以时令多道式呈上丝滑朧豆腐与湯叶,备有完整英文菜单及夏季河畔(川床)座位。设有专门的无鱼纯素套餐(“六波罗”),不含肉、贝、蛋、乳或鱼——但须特别点这一套餐,因标准豆腐套餐很可能用鲣鱼高汤。
- 鱼素
- 素食
- 纯素
- 无乳制品
- 约会
- 纪念日
- 商务
- 包间
Sources
FAQ
- Is Kyoto vegan-friendly?
- Yes — more so than most Japanese cities, because its signature cuisine, shojin ryori, was built as meat-and-fish-free Buddhist temple food. We've verified four spots serving genuinely vegan meals: a temple hall (Shigetsu), two vegan ramen shops (Towzen, Uno Yukiko), and a tofu-kaiseki house with a dedicated vegan course (Tousuiro).
- Is Kyoto tofu automatically vegan?
- No. Kyoto is famous for tofu and yuba, but most tofu-kaiseki courses use bonito (fish) dashi as their base broth, even when the centrepiece is tofu. At Tousuiro, for example, you need to specifically order the "Rokuhara" course for a genuinely vegan meal — the standard courses are not guaranteed fish-free.
- Which Kyoto vegan ramen is also gluten-free?
- Gion Soy Milk Ramen Uno Yukiko is the one to know — it uses rice-flour noodles and gluten-free soy sauce, unlike Towzen's wheat-noodle broth. Celiac diners should still confirm the kitchen's cross-contamination handling directly with staff before ordering.




