Fukuho Gyoza
Photo: Kisa Toyoshima
Photo: Kisa Toyoshima

28 best cheap eats in Tokyo – all for ¥1,200 or less

Your ultimate guide to finding the best cheap restaurants and good value food in Tokyo – all for ¥1,200 or less (including tax)

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Want to feast in one of the world’s best food cities without breaking the bank? No worries – Tokyo’s got you covered. While life in the capital may not be getting any cheaper, the city hasn't lost the appetite for quality food at a great prices. Tokyoites love to eat out – a lot – and this makes Tokyo one of the best cities in the world for a great meal at a low price.

Whether you’re feeling like a comforting bowl of ramen, soba, some sushi or even a fresh pizza, we’ve scoured Tokyo to pick out the top restaurants where you can get your fix, whatever you might be craving. Plus, many of these meals can easily cost you less than ¥1,200 (including tax), so you can eat a big meal and save some cash.

RECOMMENDED: the best Tokyo ramen of 2025

Meat

  • Toranomon

At Yakitori Nonotori in Toranomon Hills Tower, the lunchtime-only grilled chicken rice bowl turns upscale yakitori goodness into an approachable lunchtime meal. While multicourse dinners cost upwards of ¥6,000, this rice bowl set will only set you back a measly ¥890.

But don’t let that price fool you. Expect juicy raised-in-Japan chicken smoked over premium binchotan charcoal and paired with greens and a boiled egg over steaming rice. The lunchtime set comes with a side of pickles and a torigara soup made with chicken-based soup stock for filling mid-day replenishment. In a rush? The restaurant also serves the dish in a takeaway bento box for a little over ¥1,200.

  • Shimokitazawa

Frequented by up-and-coming musicians, comedians and youth trying to get the best bang for the buck, this small teishoku eatery in Shimokitazawa has been feeding locals for over 50 years.

It’s run by an elderly but tireless husband-and-wife team who turn out hearty set meals with a clear focus on deep-fried meats. Standouts include freshly fried tonkatsu cutlets, with fillet priced at ¥1,100 and loin at a wallet-friendly ¥950. Each main comes with generous portions of rice, shredded cabbage and pickled vegetables, plus the occasional bonus of a deeply flavoured slice of simmered daikon. If you’re in the mood to mix things up, the chicken cutlets, cheese and ham cutlets and classic katsudon are equally satisfying – comforting, filling and exactly what you want after a long day of thrifting in Shimokitazawa.

To be mindful of the elderly proprietors, this location is best visited alone or enjoyed as a bento takeaway.

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  • Shinbashi

Said to have been the precursor to the 24-hour gyudon restaurant chains you can now find all over Tokyo, Nandokiya’s second Ginza restaurant simmers its juicy, generously cut beef slices, onion and tofu in a sweet and salty broth for an almost sukiyaki-like look. The gyudon – or gyumeshi as it’s called here – starts from ¥650 and can be customised to have more beef on top (¥850) or a filling combination of more rice and slightly more beef (¥800). Top off the bowl with a raw egg (¥50) for a true Shinbashi salaryman meal while keeping the bill well under ¥1,000. Note that space is very limited, with only a few counter seats, so expect to queue outside – and leave your luggage elsewhere.

  • Shibuya

On days when you’re craving something substantial and a little greasy – don’t worry, we’ve all had them – it’s hard to beat katsu over rice. Pork fillet crumbed with panko and deep-fried, and then drizzled with a generous amount of sweet, mildly tangy katsu sauce, is irresistibly moreish. While most katsu joints offer pork and not much else, here you can pick your own katsudon toppings from classic pork katsu to shrimp and even assorted vegetables like aubergine, shiitake mushroom and pumpkin. A four-piece pork katsudon or a two-piece katsudon with breaded veggies are ¥1,040 each (¥1,100 for veggies).

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  • Shibuya

This hidden gem of a restaurant looks like it’s stuck in the ’70s, from its location in a forgotten back-alley building and old-school interior to its surprisingly low prices. It specialises in cutlets – meat and vegetables breaded with panko and deep-fried.

The popular set meal, which comes with a chicken cutlet, ham cutlet and croquette plus rice, miso soup and shredded cabbage, is only ¥900. Or pay an extra ¥250 for an extra cutlet. It’s arguably the best-value meal in central Shibuya.

  • Shibuya

While yakiniku (grilled meat) restaurants mostly cater to group dining, the multi-branch Yakiniku Like chain offers solo-diner grills – with great success. Today, it has restaurants across Tokyo, including Shinbashi, Shibuya, Shinjuku, Akihabara and Ueno; most outlets also offer a few tables for two.

The menu is highly customisable: choose your cut of beef (or that one pork option) and the quantity, with prices starting from just ¥370 per 50g. Add another ¥380 for a bowl of rice, soup and kimchi. The set meals are even more affordable; the cheapest of which is only ¥840 for 100g of meat plus the aforementioned accompaniments.

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  • Japanese
  • Ginza

For more than 20 years, Ginza Shabutsu has been a local favourite for shabu-shabu (Japanese hotpot), thanks to its fresh ingredients and excellent value for money. At lunch, ¥1,050 will get you a plate of finely sliced domestic pork, with assorted vegetables, pickles, and soup. The staff will fire up your pot of light chicken broth, then bring you your banquet: a plate piled high with tofu, cabbage, carrots and bean noodles; an array of condiments like ponzu (citrus and soy dipping sauce) and the signature sesame sauce made from no fewer than 20 ingredients; your selected meat; and a bowl of steamed rice...

Rice meals

  • Japanese
  • Shibuya

At this unassuming Shibuya Stream restaurant, a branch of the original in Ebisu founded 40 years ago, you can expect homely dishes at an affordable price. Classic Japanese fare such as deep-fried chicken karaage will only set you back ¥1,200, while other set meals such as salt-grilled mackerel, pork and aubergine stir-fry can be had for a little extra. The main dishes are accompanied by rice (cooked in a claypot, no less), miso soup, pickles and a side dish. 

  • Japanese
  • Zoshigaya

This rice ball speciality store is run by a chef who trained at the popular Onigiri Bongo in Otsuka (also in this list). Yamataro’s onigiri are bigger than the ones at convenience stores, and there are around two dozen varieties of filling ranging from the classic ume (pickled plum) and tuna mayo to more inventive options such unagi cream cheese and spicy ahi poke.

You can’t go wrong with any of the selections on the menu, especially the minced meat with egg yolk (¥500), sujiko (salted salmon roe; ¥850) and garlic shrimp (¥500). Better yet, combine two fillings into one rice ball for an additional ¥200 or so.

The onigiri at Yamataro will only set you back between ¥350 and ¥850 each. So splurge and make it a meal: add on a pork and vegetable miso soup for ¥390 and a side of palate-cleaning pickles for ¥200.

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  • Indian
  • Shibuya

Tucked away on the second floor of a building in the back streets of Shibuya is this restaurant dedicated to serving pork vindaloo. This curry from Goa in western India is inspired by a Portuguese dish first introduced to the subcontinent in the 1500s. It’s made with a mixture of spices including red chillies, cumin, cloves and pepper, plus vinegar, which gives it a distinct sour and spicy taste that differentiates it from any other curry. And this restaurant’s vindaloo is so good, the curry earned the venue a Michelin Bib Gourmand award.

Pork Vindaloo Taberu Fukudaitoryo only offers one thing on the menu. It comes with a bed of rice and chopped salad, topped with a pork vindaloo roux, and a hard boiled egg on the side for ¥1,000. Hungry? A larger portion of curry costs an additional ¥200, but if you only want extra rice or salad, you can get those for free.

  • Japanese
  • Ginza

The shopping enclave of Ginza is the last place you’d expect to find a Bib Gourmand meal for just ¥1,000. But on weekday lunchtimes, this anomaly of a restaurant, tucked away in a narrow basement in a back alley, serves excellent tendon (tempura on rice) for just that. It’s a steal, considering dinner here will set you back at least ¥5,500.

This place has serious pedigree: the proprietor Chef Abe had previously worked at Nadaman, one of the city’s top Japanese restaurants, for 30 years. Prawn tempura is a speciality...

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  • Otsuka

Onigiri is the perfect one-handed food – soft, steamy rice with a savoury filling wrapped in crisp nori seaweed. It’s cheap and quick, known more for its sustenance than flavour, and easily found at many takeaway and convenience stores. But at Onigiri Bongo, the humble dish is elevated into a thoughtful, proper meal.

The menu features more than 50 fillings, including classics like ume plum and salmon flakes as well as unconventional combos like bacon and cheese, and curry and beef. The onigiri start at ¥400 while lunch sets go from ¥700 and come with two rice balls of your choice plus unlimited tofu miso soup...

Seafood

  • Sushi
  • Toranomon

This standing-only spot is operated by Uogashi Yamaharu, a long-standing seafood wholesaler and marketer based in Toyosu Fish Market (where it moved from Tsukiji Inner Market), so you know that the fish served is top-notch and handpicked by the most seasoned of professionals. Pair that with a menu designed by chef Mitsuhiko Tsukiuda of Sushi Tsukiuda in Nakameguro, and you’ll understand that the nigiri served here are the real deal.

The restaurant, however, retains a casual and welcoming ambience, mainly due to its nature as a standing-only operation. While you may not be able to rest your knees, the prices here are irresistible and the queues go quick due to fast turnover. The nigiri dishes served change day by day based on the season’s catch, but you can always expect the 5-piece omakase during lunch, which is a measly ¥900 (while supplies last). Pair that with the restaurant’s amazing location – it sits right under Hotel Toranomon Hills and boasts direct access from Toranomon Hills Station – and you have a true winner.

  • Japanese
  • Nakano

Unagi (grilled freshwater eel) is considered a delicacy, but this low-key and inviting eatery offers this luxurious dish as a quick and affordable meal. An unadon, grilled eel glazed with a sweet-savoury sauce over white rice, costs as little as ¥640.

For ¥1,300, you can get hitsumabushi, a speciality from Aichi prefecture which resembles the unaju (unagi served in a rectangular lacquer box) and should be enjoyed in two ways. First, you eat the eel and rice with a dash of wasabi. Then mix things up by pouring dashi broth into your rice and eat the unagi as you would ochazuke (a homely dish of broth and rice).

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  • Japanese
  • Higashi-Ginza

Specialising in himono fish dishes for under ¥1,000 a set, this favourite haunt of Ginza office workers serves up authentic teishoku (set meal) at lunch. The term ‘himono’ refers to the process of partially drying fish so that the flesh becomes sweeter and more succulent, a curing method that dates back to the Nara period (710-794) – himono was once offered to the royal court as a gift. Most of the dishes here, such as mackerel with crispy skin and salmon, are grilled over charcoal. Sets come with rice, grated daikon radish, miso soup and sesame spinach.

Noodles

  • Harajuku

Tucked away in an alley off Cat Street, Menchirashi is a stylish space to savour house-made udon noodles amongst Harajuku’s fashionable crowd. But don’t let its American-diner-with-hip-Japanese-twist interior deter you: prices here are very reasonable, with most udon dishes priced below ¥1,000.

Menchirashi is known for its fried-to-order tempura and onigiri rice balls, both of which make perfect accompaniments to a bowl of udon...

  • Kyobashi

Originating from Sapporo, this cosy restaurant is justly famed for its prawn-stock ramen, made by boiling down the heads of red shrimp to extract their briny, umami sweetness and then finishing off with pork back fat and shrimp oil. It’s a luscious soup that tastes of the ocean and you’ll want to clean out your bowl.

For a bargain ¥990, you can choose either the aforementioned shrimp soup or one with the addition of pork, plus a seasoning: miso, salt or soy sauce...

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  • Ningyocho

This unassuming noodle shop is tucked away on a side street in Ningyocho and offers a standing-only counter for hungry slurpers. Tickets for both soba and udon can be purchased at the vending machine, with options starting from a mere ¥490.

But what makes Fuku Soba special is its tempura, deep-fried toppings in the form of crispy discs, featuring ingredients such as beni shoga (pickled ginger), small sakura shrimp, burdock or a carrot-and-onion mix (also called kakiage). A tempura soba will only set you back ¥610, with additional fritters priced at ¥160 a piece.

  • Ramen
  • Omotesando

Following its rather upmarket take on conveyor belt sushi with Omotesando’s Kaitensushi Ginza Onodera, the operator of NYC’s Michelin-starred Sushi Ginza Onodera now takes a similarly elevated-yet-casual approach to ramen. Noodle Ginza Onodera, the group’s first venture into this field, is again located in fashionable Omotesando.

Noodle Ginza Onodera’s soup, which is slowly simmered with roast duck and a variety of aromatic vegetables, is intended to reach the heights of umami. The egg noodles themselves are custom-made to an exclusive recipe using only flour sourced from Japan’s northern island of Hokkaido. 

Surprisingly, given the restaurant's pedigree and location, a bowl of shoyu ramen here will only set you back ¥980. You can even get a bowl of mazesoba (brothless mixed ramen) for ¥1,200.

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  • Japanese
  • Waseda

This small, warmly lit udon shop in the vicinity of Waseda University offers top-notch noodles on a student-friendly budget. Udon sets start at ¥650 and include free refills of takikomi gohan (rice seasoned with dashi broth and vegetables), while the menu also offers several variations of dipping noodles such as chilled sesame, as well as hot broths like the warming winter favourite of nikujaga (meat and potato) udon. Get there before noon or after 1pm to avoid the lunch rush.

Misc

  • Hot dogs
  • Sangenjaya

This hidden gem, located in the maze of little alleys that make up Sangenjaya’s Sankaku Chitai, offers handmade hot dogs at a surprisingly affordable price point. Opened in 2014, the eatery makes its sausages in-house, which is why it’s able to keep costs low.

While there are ten hot dogs and eight sauces to choose from, their most popular offering is the original Plain Hot Dog (¥910) filled with their homemade sauerkraut and topped with generous amounts of ketchup and mustard. If you’re looking to spice things up, order the Chilli Dog (¥950) or Chilli Cheese Dog (¥980) topped with their homemade chilli con carne sauce.

A separate drink order is required when dining in.

  • Shibuya

It’s not hard to find a great burger in Tokyo, but these days they rather often come with a steep price tag. That’s why we’re excited about the latest addition to the city’s gourmet burger scene: Neo Nice Burger.

The menu features 13 burgers, from the classic Neo Nice Burger with the restaurant’s signature tomato sauce to the Neo Teriyaki Burger and more adventurous options like the Caesar Bacon Burger and Tandoori Chicken Burger. 

The restaurant takes pride in making nearly everything in-house – from the bread and sides to condiments like ketchup and mayonnaise. Best of all, prices are refreshingly reasonable, with burgers starting at ¥450 and sides going for ¥400.

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  • Izakaya
  • Harajuku

Not too far from Harajuku’s bustling Takeshita Street is Japanese restaurant Beetle, which offers one of the best lunch deals in the neighbourhood. You can choose from a variety of teishoku meals that come with rice, miso soup and pickles, featuring main dishes such as aji furai (deep-fried horse mackerel), menchi katsu (ground meat cutlet), yurinchi (fried chicken with scallion soy sauce), and more, all for under ¥1,000.

The a la carte menu doesn’t disappoint, either, with most dishes costing around ¥500. There’s classic izakaya-style dishes like mentaiko potato salad (¥490), deep-fried ham cutlet (¥530), sashimi (from ¥460), yakitori skewers (from ¥190) and oden (from ¥170). Drinks are just as cheap, with large bottles of Asahi, Sapporo and Kirin beer priced at ¥690.

  • Korean
  • Shin-Okubo

Looking for a cheap deal in Tokyo’s Korea town? Macchan offers one of the best deals around for both solo diners and big groups all day long. For lunch from 11am until 5pm, you can choose from over a dozen popular Korean dishes, like bibimbap (¥990), Shin ramen (¥990), kimchi fried rice (¥990) and Sundubu Jjigae (spicy tofu stew, ¥990). All orders come with side dishes and refillable rice.

The lunchtime Korean barbeque set – samgyeopsal or cheese dakgalbi – will set you back ¥1,980. But you do get good value for your money, as the freshly grilled meals include unlimited soft drinks, rice, soup, chijimi savoury pancakes and japchae (Korean glass noodle stir-fry).

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  • Pizza
  • Kichijoji

For a unique eating-out experience, bypass the generic Italian restaurants and head straight for Garage 50 in Kichijoji, where the pizzas are cooked in a retrofitted VW van. It’s hipster, sure, and you’ll be eating off paper plates while sitting on a stool in a garage, but the pizza is of exceptional value at ¥700. The inside of the vehicle has been refurbished to fit a pizza oven and the owner makes each pie fresh upon order. You can’t go wrong with the prosciutto topped with a soft egg, or the basil mascarpone.

Check the venue Instagram for the latest on opening hours before visiting.

  • Shinjuku

Within the flashing neon lights and clutter of Shinjuku, you can take refuge in the calm, old-worldly charm of Hayashiya, tucked into the 5th floor of a high-rise building. It serves yoshoku – Japanese-style Western food – and the menu has barely changed since it opened in 1949.

Signature dishes include the omurice (¥950), a paper-thin omelette cocooned around chicken fried rice and drizzled with ketchup, the hamburg with egg (hamburger patty, ¥980), and the cheese hamburg (¥1,180). An extensive drinks list features wine from all over the world as well as Japanese craft sake.

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  • Japanese
  • Shinjuku-Nichome

Cheap and cheerful, Fukuho Gyoza offers plates of six dumplings for just ¥385. While the gyoza are nothing fancy, they are substantial and filling, available with or without garlic, boiled or fried. To spruce up your meal, the sides (from ¥198) include pickled cabbage, miso cucumber, carrot salad and tofu with sesame sauce.

Complete your meal with rice (either served straight or topped with minced meat) and you’ll be satisfactorily sated, with your wallet barely dented. Here with friends (or just very hungry)? An order of 18 gyoza pieces comes in at only ¥1,078.

  • Vietnamese
  • Ebisu

Flavoursome Vietnamese fast food is the name of the game at this low-key Ebisu sandwich joint. The excellent baguettes, made in-house, are stuffed with mouthwatering ingredients: we love the roast pork and pâté option, as well as the grilled chicken satay with green onions. There are nine sandwich choices (small from ¥450; large from ¥640) while a banh mi set with a drink, soup or salad is an extra ¥150-300. With prices this low, you won’t mind that there are just a scattering of stools should you decide to eat in.

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