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Traditional Japanese Izakaya
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Fukuoka, Japan

Akasaka Komikan

PriceJPY 6,000 - JPY 7,999
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceCasual
NoiseLively
CapacitySmall
Tabelog

Akasaka Komikan belongs to Fukuoka’s serious izakaya tier: compact, fish-led, sake-minded, and recognised in Tabelog’s Izakaya WEST 100 selection for 2024 and 2025. The appeal is not formality but concentration, with seafood, tempura, counter seating, and a Daimyo setting that suits solo diners as well as small groups.

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Address
1F, 1 Chome-7-10 Daimyo, Chuo Ward, Fukuoka, 810-0041, Japan
Phone
+81 92-734-3090
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Akasaka Komikan restaurant in Fukuoka, Japan
About

Daimyo’s evening dining culture works at a lower register than the city’s ramen mythology suggests. Behind the fashion stores and late-drinking streets, Fukuoka’s stronger izakaya rooms tend to be compact, ingredient-led, and closer to specialist counters than casual taverns. Akasaka Komikan sits in that register: fish, tempura, sake, counter seating, and a room small enough for the cooking rhythm to matter.

The useful way to read this address is as part of Fukuoka’s middle-to-upper izakaya band, where the meal is built around seafood and drink rather than a long tasting-menu arc. The Tabelog Izakaya WEST 100 selections in 2024 and 2025 put it in a competitive western Japan category, not just a local neighbourhood list. That matters in a city where everyday eating is unusually strong, and where an izakaya has to do more than pour well and fry competently to hold attention.

Fish, tempura and sake define the room more than ceremony

Fukuoka’s geography gives its izakaya culture a useful advantage: seafood is not a luxury signal here, it is part of the city’s everyday grammar. The better rooms treat fish as the centre of gravity, then use frying, simmering, grilling, pickles, and sake to build pace around it. Akasaka Komikan’s listed categories, izakaya, seafood, and tempura, place it inside that tradition rather than in the chef’s-counter kaiseki lane.

That distinction matters for the traveller choosing a dinner style. At a formal Japanese restaurant, the evening often asks for surrender to sequence. At a serious izakaya, the pleasure comes from calibrated informality: counter seats, smaller plates, a sake list with intent, and enough kitchen range to let the table move between fish and fried dishes without becoming heavy. This is a dining format where sound and sight carry part of the experience: the closeness of the counter, the timing of plates, the room’s shift from early orders to late pours.

The restaurant’s emphasis on fish and nihonshu also places it apart from Fukuoka meals built around a single staple. Kamakiri Udon works in a leaner noodle register, Sabatarou sits in a more casual price band, and Oryori Uchiyama occupies a more formal Japanese dining tier. Akasaka Komikan lands between those poles, with enough structure for a planned dinner but without the social stiffness of a ceremonial meal.

For readers mapping the city beyond one dinner, Our full Fukuoka restaurants guide gives the wider context. Nearby and related city references include 106 South Indian Fukuoka tenjin ten, Afterglow, Aji Dokoro Taro Gen Sougyou ten, Aji Furai Shokudo Kaba, and Aji no Katsueda, each pointing to a different version of Fukuoka’s appetite.

A compact Daimyo izakaya with award-level scrutiny

The 28-seat scale is central to the experience. Fukuoka has larger drinking rooms that trade on energy and group volume, but a smaller izakaya changes the contract: reservations matter, solo dining becomes plausible, and the counter can function as part of the meal rather than overflow seating. The non-smoking policy and absence of private rooms also tell the reader what kind of evening this is, a shared-room dinner rather than a sealed corporate arrangement.

Tabelog’s score of 3.71 is useful context in Japan, where ratings compress tightly and mid-3 scores can indicate serious local confidence. The stronger signal, though, is the repeated Tabelog 100 selection for the Izakaya WEST category. Awards in this format are not the same as Michelin stars, but they are practical markers for travellers trying to separate a casual tavern from a room with regional pull.

Daimyo also shapes the decision. The area is central, young, and restaurant-dense, with easy spillover into bars after dinner, but it is not a museum district built around visitor convenience. That helps explain why a fish-and-sake izakaya can feel grounded rather than staged. The surrounding neighbourhood supports repeat local use, which is the harder test for this category.

There is no need to force Akasaka Komikan into a luxury frame. Its value is more precise: a seafood-leaning izakaya in a city that understands fish, recognised in a regional awards category, with counter seating and enough intimacy for the kitchen’s tempo to register. In Fukuoka, that is often the smarter dinner than chasing spectacle.

How to place it within a Fukuoka night

Akasaka Komikan suits a dinner built around sake and shared plates rather than a quick prelude to something else. It is also a better fit for pairs, solo diners, and small groups than for anyone seeking private-room insulation. Payment flexibility is stronger than at many small Japanese rooms, with major credit cards and PayPay accepted, while electronic money is not part of the setup.

The broader itinerary can stay compact. For lodging context, use Our full Fukuoka hotels guide; for post-dinner drinking, Our full Fukuoka bars guide; for producer-led detours, Our full Fukuoka wineries guide; and for cultural planning around the meal, Our full Fukuoka experiences guide. Travellers comparing Japanese dining styles across cities can also look at -Grilled beef Sukiyaki- KAMAKURA TANUKIAN 鎌倉 たぬき庵 in Kamakura,. 鮪と炭火焼き うお炭 秋葉原店 in Tokyo,.cafe in Osaka,.know in Kumamoto, (Shoku) Vietnam in Kawasaki, [Curry Senmon Ten] Maruyama Kyoju. in Sapporo, Jōdo Saké Bar in Los Angeles, and Onigiri Time in Pasadena.

Signature Dishes
seafood dishestempuramentaiko claypot riceinari sushi appetizer
Frequently asked questions

How It Stacks Up

Comparable venues by category and price.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Lively
  • Romantic
  • Hidden Gem
Best For
  • Date Night
  • After Work
  • Group Dining
  • Solo
  • Casual Hangout
  • Late Night
Experience
  • Chefs Counter
  • Standalone
Drink Program
  • Sake Program
  • Craft Cocktails
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacitySmall
Service StyleCasual
Meal PacingStandard

A small, non-smoking izakaya with a warm, relaxed atmosphere and counter-focused seating, offering an intimate yet lively feel that works well for dates or solo dining.

Signature Dishes
seafood dishestempuramentaiko claypot riceinari sushi appetizer