





Hajime holds three Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 94 points, placing it among Osaka's most decorated French-innovative tables. The 14-seat dining room in Higobashi frames a tasting menu built around the theme of Earth and nature, with a wine program ranked in Star Wine List's top three for Japan in 2025. Dinner runs JPY 80,000–100,000 per person before the 15% service charge.

Where French Technique Meets a Philosophy of the Natural World
Osaka's fine-dining scene occupies an unusual position in the national hierarchy. Tokyo draws the headline counts, but Osaka's concentration of serious kitchens per square kilometre is arguably more dense, and the city's appetite for innovation has produced a different kind of ambition — one less concerned with tradition for its own sake and more willing to push a single idea to its outer limit. At the leading of that spectrum sits a cohort of restaurants that use French classical structure as a scaffold, then rebuild the interior entirely. HAJIME, on a quiet stretch of Edobori in Nishi Ward, is the most examined example of that approach in the city.
The dining room seats 14 people. A sculptural artwork resembling a planet dominates the space — look closely and it resolves into layered images of food and landscape that together form a picture of the Earth. The theme is not decorative; it is structural. The tasting menu is organised around the concept of "Dialogue with the Earth," and that framework shapes the sequence, the ingredient sourcing, and the proportion of vegetable to protein across the courses. The room is calm, spacious, and dressed without visual noise beyond that central piece. The service runs in English, with multilingual menus available , a practical detail that matters more at this price tier than it might elsewhere.
The Tension That Defines the Genre
French haute cuisine arrived in Japan as a complete system , classical brigade, codified technique, sauce hierarchy , and the country absorbed it with characteristic precision. What happened next, across two or three decades, was more interesting: a generation of chefs who trained inside that system began feeding it with entirely different source material. Japanese seasonality, dashi logic, fermentation tradition, and a different relationship to vegetable as primary rather than supporting ingredient all entered the canon. The result is a category that Michelin and Tabelog both now classify as "Innovative/French" but which resists easy description from either direction.
HAJIME sits near the far end of that spectrum. The kitchen does not use French cuisine as a backdrop for Japanese flavours; it operates with the precision and structural ambition of a three-star European table while treating nature, ecology, and the full breadth of the planet's ingredients as its conceptual raw material. Chef Hajime Yoneda's background as a systems engineer before his culinary career is publicly documented, and it shows in the approach: menus are digitised, recipes are detailed to an unusual degree, and the architecture of a meal here reads less like improvisation and more like a scored composition.
The peer set this places HAJIME against is small. In Osaka, La Cime operates at the same price tier in French-innovative cuisine, and Fujiya 1935 takes a comparably serious approach to creative cooking. KAHALA works in the innovative register at a slightly different register of formality. For Japanese-rooted cooking at high formality, Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama and Taian occupy the kaiseki tier at a lower price point. HAJIME prices and positions itself against the international three-star field rather than against Osaka's broader fine-dining market.
Recognition Across Multiple Systems
The awards record here is worth reading in full because it maps the venue's standing across different critical frameworks simultaneously. Three Michelin stars, held through at least 2025, place it in a group of fewer than ten restaurants in Osaka. La Liste, which aggregates international critical sources, awarded 94 points in 2026 and 94.5 in 2025 , a score that positions the restaurant firmly in the global top tier rather than a regional one. Opinionated About Dining, which draws on a community of serious repeat diners rather than professional critics, ranked it at 87th in Japan in 2025 and 80th in 2024, suggesting consistent high-level performance across a reviewer base that eats widely. Asia's 50 Best placed it at 83rd in 2025.
Tabelog record adds a longitudinal dimension. Silver awards from 2018 through 2023, a Bronze in 2024, Silver again in 2025, then Bronze in 2026 , the slight movement between tiers is less significant than the sustained presence in the upper recognition band for nearly a decade. A Tabelog score of 4.33 (2026) against a peer group where 4.0 is already considered strong further anchors the positioning. The wine program has its own track record: Star Wine List ranked it first, second, and third among Japanese restaurants in 2025, which is unusual breadth of recognition for a single venue and signals a cellar with real depth rather than a competent supporting list.
What the Menu Structure Tells You
Two menu formats are available. The standard tasting menu is the full expression of the restaurant's concept and includes the "chikyu" course, a 100% vegetable dish that functions as a kind of manifesto within the meal. A shorter course is offered for guests with time constraints but omits the chikyu dish , worth knowing before booking. A dedicated all-vegetable menu is also available, which puts HAJIME in a different position from most European-style tasting-menu restaurants at this level, where vegetable-forward options are often accommodations rather than primary offerings.
Dietary flexibility extends to vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free options, and the kitchen's stated emphasis on fish and vegetable sourcing aligns with the menu's overall character. The beverage program crosses sake, shochu, wine, and cocktails, with the wine list receiving the most detailed outside attention. A sommelier is on staff. Service charge is 15%, applied separately from the listed menu price. Average spend based on diner reviews exceeds JPY 100,000 per person.
Across the region, the closest comparisons in approach , though not necessarily in output , are Narisawa in Tokyo, which similarly uses nature as conceptual organising principle within a French-trained framework, and Mora in Hong Kong, which works the French-Asian tension from the other direction. Within Japan more broadly, Harutaka in Tokyo, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, and akordu in Nara each operate at the serious end of their respective categories, though in different cuisines. Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa round out a national picture of restaurants working at a similar level of ambition in their respective cities.
Planning Your Visit
HAJIME opens Tuesday through Saturday, 17:00 to 23:00, with last food orders at 19:30 and last drinks at 22:30. Sunday and Monday are closed, though irregular closures apply , checking the venue's online calendar before finalising plans is necessary. The restaurant is three minutes on foot from Exit 7 of Higobashi Station on the Yotsubashi Line. One parking space is available in front of the restaurant.
Reservations: Accepted by phone (06-6447-6688, 10:00 AM Monday through Saturday) or online at hajime-reservation.com. The 14-seat format means availability at preferred dates is limited, and advance booking should be treated as essential rather than precautionary. Budget: JPY 80,000–99,999 listed; actual average per diner based on reviews exceeds JPY 100,000, plus a 15% service charge. Credit cards accepted (Visa, Mastercard, JCB, Amex, Diners). Dress: Jackets and leather shoes required for men; overtly casual clothing , trainers, shorts, T-shirts , is not permitted. Age policy: Guests must be 16 or older. Private use: The full restaurant is available for private hire for up to 20 people. Private rooms within the regular dining configuration are not available. Accessibility: Wheelchair accessible, with free Wi-Fi on site.
For a fuller picture of where HAJIME sits in the city's broader food scene, see our full Osaka restaurants guide. For accommodation near Higobashi, our Osaka hotels guide covers the full range. The Osaka bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide complete the picture for a longer stay.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I eat at HAJIME?
The standard tasting menu is the right choice for a first visit and the one that reflects the kitchen's full range. It includes the "chikyu" course, an all-vegetable dish that is central to the restaurant's concept of dialogue with the natural world, and omitting it via the shorter course means missing the most discussed element of the meal. The restaurant's awards record , three Michelin stars, a La Liste score of 94 points, and Star Wine List recognition across three rankings in 2025 , is built around this format. If your party has dietary restrictions, the all-vegetable menu is a primary offering rather than an afterthought, and the kitchen also accommodates vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free requirements with advance notice. The wine pairing, overseen by an on-site sommelier with a list that spans sake, wine, and cocktails, is worth the attention given the beverage program's own award standing.
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