Japan has changed for Muslim travellers. A decade ago, eating well often meant settling for plain rice and a hunt for a single kebab stand. Today, Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto have dozens of halal-certified and Muslim-friendly restaurants serving everything from rich ramen to melt-in-your-mouth wagyu — and the tools to find them have caught up too.

This guide covers what to eat, where to find it, and how to plan around prayer times, so that food becomes one of the joys of your trip rather than a daily worry.

First, the two apps to download

Before anything else, install two directories that Muslim residents and visitors rely on: Halal Gourmet Japan and Halal Navi. Both list certification status, whether prayer facilities are on-site, and whether alcohol is served. The Tokyo Metropolitan Government also publishes a free Tokyo Muslim Travellers’ Guide. Because certifications lapse and small restaurants sometimes close, always reconfirm a venue is open and still certified before travelling across a city to reach it.

Tokyo: the easiest city for halal food

Tokyo has the densest cluster of halal options in Japan. Shin-Okubo, one stop from Shinjuku, is the best-value area — a street locally known as “Islam Yokocho” lined with halal grocers and small eateries serving Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Indonesian, Turkish and Malaysian food, much of it ¥500–800. Asakusa is the most convenient base: Naritaya, minutes from Senso-ji, has served halal ramen since 2013 and is certified by the Japan Halal Association, and nearby Asakusa Sushi-Ken offers halal sushi. For Japanese barbecue, Gyumon in Shibuya serves halal-certified wagyu — book ahead.

Kyoto: plan a little more

Kyoto is Japan’s most beautiful historic city, but it has fewer halal restaurants and prayer rooms than Tokyo or Osaka — so you plan around it. Base yourself near Kyoto Station, where hotels such as Granvia Kyoto offer halal-certified dining. In Arashiyama, Yoshiya is a Muslim-friendly lunch option. Carry a travel prayer mat and schedule prayer breaks at meals or your hotel.

Osaka: the underrated halal city

Osaka is the easiest Kansai city for halal dining — denser, broader and generally cheaper than Tokyo. In Dotonbori, CHIBO runs a dedicated Muslim-friendly okonomiyaki branch with halal-certified meat and an on-site prayer room. Several major venues installed prayer rooms in the run-up to Expo 2025.

A few practical phrases

In smaller eateries, showing Japanese text on your phone is more reliable than pronunciation and entirely accepted. Save phrases for asking whether a dish contains pork, alcohol (including mirin and cooking sake), or lard. Staff in tourist areas generally speak some English and are genuinely helpful.

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