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Artisanal Neapolitan Pizza Omakase

Google: 4.4 · 454 reviews

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Tokyo, Japan

The Pizza Bar on 38th

CuisinePizza
Executive ChefDaniele Cason
Price¥¥¥
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceOmakase Bar
NoiseConversational
CapacityIntimate
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining
50 Top Pizza
Pearl
Tabelog

Occupying just eight counter seats on the 38th floor of the Mandarin Oriental Nihonbashi, The Pizza Bar on 38th applies omakase discipline to Roman-style pizza, running a prix fixe format through eight successive slices. Ranked #11 in the Opinionated About Dining Casual Japan list for 2025 and holding a Michelin Plate, it sits in a narrow tier of Tokyo dining that treats pizza as a serious tasting format rather than a casual proposition.

Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.

The Pizza Bar on 38th restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
About

The Case for Making This Your One Mandatory Booking in Tokyo

Tokyo has a documented habit of importing a cuisine, stripping it to first principles, and rebuilding it under the discipline of Japanese craft culture. The city has done this with French technique, with Neapolitan pizza, with New York-style bagels. What makes the 38th floor of the Mandarin Oriental Nihonbashi worth your reservation is not novelty for its own sake, but the logical conclusion of that process applied to a format — the omakase counter — that Tokyo already executes with more precision than almost anywhere on earth. If you eat one pizza in Japan, it should be here, not because the city lacks alternatives, but because nothing else in the category asks the same questions about what pizza can be.

Counter Format and the Architecture of the Room

The physical reality shapes everything. Eight seats arranged at a counter on the 38th floor means that sightlines, scale, and sound operate at an register closer to Harutaka or any serious sushi-ya than to a conventional pizzeria. The room's elevation above Nihonbashi places the city's grid below and at a remove, which changes the acoustics as much as the view , the ambient din of street-level dining is replaced by a controlled stillness that lets you hear the crust as it's cut. There are no walk-ins, no shared tables, no incidental noise from a pass. All eight diners start simultaneously, which is the structural decision that makes the prix fixe format coherent: two pizzas emerge from the oven, each divided into four slices, so every guest receives a matching portion of every variation. The sequence continues through eight pizza tastings in total, framed by a vegetable-based welcome course and a dessert, borrowing the arc of a kaiseki menu and applying it to a cuisine whose default register is the opposite of contemplative.

The Sensory Logic of the Format

Roman-style pizza baked in rounds, served in sequence at a counter , the sensory experience this creates is worth describing in structural terms, because the format is not incidental to the flavour. Organic Italian wheat, hydrated to a high ratio and given an extended rest before baking, produces a crust with distinct textural layers: a bite that resists briefly on the outside and then opens into something softer and more yielding within. The smell of a freshly cut slice across an eight-seat counter carries further than it would at a four-leading in a larger room. Each successive pizza arrives at a different temperature from the last, which means the experience of the meal involves reading slight variations in crust char, topping set, and ingredient release , the kind of attention that a seated counter enforces but a conventional dining room rarely requires.

The ingredient sourcing divides between Japanese producers, primarily small-scale, and Italian imports for the components where the provenance cannot be approximated domestically. The menu changes with ingredient seasonality, which, in practice, means the pizza you eat in autumn will differ materially from the one served in spring , a rhythm that aligns the kitchen with the same seasonal logic governing the kaiseki houses and sushi counters a few floors below in Tokyo's restaurant hierarchy. Chef Daniele Cason, from Rome, oversees the kitchen; his provenance matters here as a credential situating the style within Roman tradition rather than Neapolitan or New York lineages. For comparisons within the Neapolitan canon, 3.0 Ciro Cascella and 50 Kalò in Naples represent the source tradition against which Tokyo's interpretation reads most clearly.

Where It Sits in Tokyo's Dining Hierarchy

Tokyo's upper tier of restaurants is heavily weighted toward French and Japanese formats. The city's most-discussed counters , kaiseki rooms like RyuGin, French tasting menus at L'Effervescence and Sézanne, or innovative formats like Crony , operate at the ¥¥¥¥ price tier. The Pizza Bar on 38th occupies ¥¥¥, which places it in a distinct bracket: more expensive than the city's casual pizza options but priced below the city's major tasting-menu rooms. That gap makes it accessible to a different audience from the full-evening commitment of a multi-Michelin counter while still requiring a planning horizon and a degree of intention that casual dining does not.

Recognition across multiple frameworks confirms its position. The Opinionated About Dining Casual Japan ranking has placed it at #14 (2023), #16 (2024), and #11 (2025) , a consistent upward trajectory across three years. The Michelin Plate (2025) and Pearl Recommended designation add two separate critical endorsements to that. Among the city's broader dining scene, documented in our full Tokyo restaurants guide, the combination of consistent ranking movement and cross-framework recognition places it among the stronger-performing casual-tier venues in the city.

For readers building a wider Japan itinerary, comparable precision-driven counter formats operate across the country: HAJIME in Osaka, Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, akordu in Nara, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa each operate within their own regional dining traditions, but share the counter-format discipline that makes this tier of Japanese dining function as it does.

Planning Your Visit

The address is Mandarin Oriental Tokyo, 2 Chome-1-1 Nihonbashimuromachi, Chuo City , the 38th floor of the hotel, accessible through the lobby. Nihonbashi sits between Tokyo Station and the Ginza corridor, well-served by multiple subway lines, and the hotel itself is a practical base for exploring either area; more on accommodation options in our full Tokyo hotels guide. The Google rating of 4.4 across 392 reviews is consistent with the recognition profile. Advance reservations are essential: with a fixed seating of eight, availability runs tight, and the popularity the venue has accumulated across three years of OAD recognition means the booking window should be treated as seriously as any major Tokyo counter. The prix fixe format removes the question of what to order , the kitchen sequences the menu, accommodates allergies and intolerances, and the drink list draws from the Mandarin Oriental's hotel programme. For bars worth visiting in the same neighbourhood, our full Tokyo bars guide covers the relevant options. Those with an interest in the broader wine and sake scene can also consult our Tokyo wineries guide and our Tokyo experiences guide for context beyond the table.

Signature Dishes
DiavolaMarinara with AnchoviesPorcini Mushroom PizzaCarbonara Pizza
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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Intimate
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Scenic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Celebration
Experience
  • Chefs Counter
  • Open Kitchen
  • Panoramic View
  • Hotel Restaurant
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Beer Program
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Farm To Table
  • Local Sourcing
  • Organic
Views
  • Skyline
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleOmakase Bar
Meal PacingExtended Experience

Intimate marble-furnished L-shaped counter overlooking an open exhibition kitchen with panoramic Tokyo skyline views; refined, theatrical atmosphere with personalized service.

Signature Dishes
DiavolaMarinara with AnchoviesPorcini Mushroom PizzaCarbonara Pizza