FlightLogic

FlightLogic is an independent, advertising-supported information service that lets you compare airlines, airports, hotels, and travel products. We do not provide financial advice and we do not recommend specific products or providers. Links marked * are advertising links and may earn us commission at no extra cost to you — always read the terms of any product before booking or applying. Learn more about how we make money.

Advertiser disclosure — how this service works

FlightLogic is an independent, advertising-supported information service that lets you compare airlines, airports, hotels, and travel products. We do not provide financial advice and we do not recommend specific products or providers. Links marked * are advertising links and may earn us commission at no extra cost to you — always read the terms of any product before booking or applying. Learn more about how we make money.

Midtown East, Manhattan, New York

Sushi Sho

Keiji Nakazawa's Edomae counter near the Public Library became the first sushi room in New York to reach three stars since Masa.

4.8

FlightLogic expert score: 9.6/10 · Editorial composite rating 4.8/5 · ££££ · Japanese , Sushi

Milestone celebrationsSerious sushi devoteesPre-theater splurges near Bryant Park Three MICHELIN StarsFlightLogic Platinum 2026
★★★ Michelin Stars

Quick answer

Is Sushi Sho worth visiting? FlightLogic assigns an expert score of 9.6/10 based on editorial research. The 4.8/5 star figure is an editorial composite for guide comparison — not a verified consumer aggregate. It has 3 Michelin stars. Best for milestone celebrations, serious sushi devotees, pre-theater splurges near bryant park.

About Sushi Sho

Sushi Sho earned its third MICHELIN star at the November 2025 Northeast Cities ceremony, promoted from two, and became the first sushi restaurant in New York to reach the top rank since Masa. Chef Keiji Nakazawa works a twelve-seat hinoki counter blocks from the New York Public Library, aging his own tuna and cutting rice temperature by the piece rather than by the batch. The room does one thing — a single omakase, no menu, no substitutions — and does it with a rigor that reads as calm rather than tense. Nothing here is loud; the discipline is the point.

Menu highlights

Editorial rating breakdown

Distribution reflects FlightLogic editorial modelling for guide comparison. See published excerpts below.

Published reviews

Sorted by date (newest first). We do not reorder by rating or “helpfulness”. Review integrity policy

  1. 5.0
    Editorial sample

    Watched Nakazawa adjust the rice temperature between two pieces of the same fish and could taste the difference. This is craft with no wasted motion.

    — Daniel Petrov ·

    Response from Sushi Sho

    Thank you, Daniel — precision is the whole point of the counter. We hope to see you again soon.

  2. 5.0
    Editorial sample

    Twelve seats, total silence except the hinoki block. The tamago at the end nearly undid me — dense, barely sweet, warm.

    — Meredith Okafor ·

Submit a verified dining review

Consumer reviews require on-site geolocation verification or transaction proof before publication. See our review integrity policy.

Incentivised review disclosure (DMCC Act 2024)

We use your browser location (with permission) to verify you visited Sushi Sho. Coordinates are processed in memory only and never stored.

How far in advance should I book Sushi Sho?

Reservations open 30 days out and the twelve-seat counter fills within hours, especially for Friday and Saturday seatings — book the moment the window opens.

Is there a set menu, or can I request specific pieces?

The counter runs a single nightly omakase built around that day's fish; substitutions are not offered, though allergies are accommodated with advance notice.