Jerusalem is unlike anywhere else in Israel for Asian food. The city’s large religious population means that kashrut matters here in a way it simply doesn’t in Tel Aviv — a large share of diners will only eat at certified kosher establishments, and restaurants know it. The result is an Asian dining scene shaped as much by religious law as by culinary ambition: sushi bars and pan-Asian kitchens that operate under full rabbinical supervision, curry houses that are naturally aligned with kosher principles, and a handful of non-certified spots serving the secular and tourist crowds.
For visitors who keep kosher — whether Israeli families on a Shabbat trip or Jewish tourists from abroad — Jerusalem offers more certified Asian options than any other city in the country. This guide maps the full picture: standout destinations, neighbourhood workhorses, and everything in between.
For the full searchable list, see our Asian businesses directory. For a cross-Israel perspective on kosher Asian dining, see the kosher Asian restaurants guide.
Japanese & Sushi#
Azia 19 — Rehavia (Kosher)
The standout Japanese restaurant in Jerusalem and the most complete Asian dining experience in the city. Opened in 2024 on Aza Street in Rehavia, Azia 19 runs an izakaya-style menu: sushi and sashimi, kushiyaki on a charcoal grill, Japanese-style burgers, and cocktails. The kitchen operates under full kosher certification — the rare combination of genuine Japanese technique and rabbinical supervision that observant diners rarely find outside Jerusalem. Wolt rating: 8.6.
📍 Aza 19, Jerusalem | @azia19_ | 02-587-7722
Sushi Rehavia — Multiple branches
A Jerusalem institution with branches on Aza Street and Emek Refaim, plus a mehadrin-certified branch on Rehov Rachel Imenu. Sushi Rehavia covers the everyday sushi fix — rolls, maki, salads — at accessible prices. The mehadrin branch (Rachel Imenu) is particularly useful for the Katamon–German Colony crowd.
Japan Japan — Jaffa Street (Kosher)
Part of the Japan Japan chain, with a branch on the central Jaffa Street corridor. Pan-Asian rather than strictly Japanese — sushi, noodles, and Asian fusion — in a casual format suited to the busy commercial strip. A separate mehadrin-certified branch serves the French Hill neighbourhood.
Japanika — Cinema City (Kosher)
The Cinema City Jerusalem branch of the national Japanika chain. Reliable kosher sushi and Japanese-inflected dishes in a high-traffic entertainment venue — useful if you’re heading to the complex for a film.
Atza Sushi Bar — Multiple branches
Atza Sushi Bar has three Jerusalem-area locations: Jerusalem city, Pisgat Ze’ev, and a further branch in Beit Shemesh. A sushi chain with consistent standards across the chain.
Oshi Oshi — Jerusalem
Pan-Asian sushi and noodle bar with a Jerusalem branch as well as a location in Mevaseret Zion — useful for residents of the western suburbs who want a quick Asian meal without driving into the city.
Sushi Fuze, Sushiya, Sushi YOYO, WokMan — Various Jerusalem neighbourhoods
Jerusalem has a dense network of smaller sushi and Japanese-adjacent spots. Sushi Fuze, Sushiya, Sushi YOYO, and WokMan are neighbourhood operations — the kind of place that handles lunch deliveries, quick dinners, and Shabbat pre-orders for local families. Standards vary; most operate under kashrut supervision.
Nei Gong (ניי גונג), JUJU Asian Kitchen, Chooka, Hoke Poke, Poke Bowl Haivrit, Sud, Yapani — Jerusalem
A second layer of sushi bars, poke bowl counters, and Japanese-flavoured kitchens across the city’s residential districts. This category has grown rapidly since 2022 as Jerusalem’s appetite for Asian food has caught up with Tel Aviv.
Pan-Asian & Fusion#
Satya — Keren HaYesod (Non-certified)
The most ambitious Asian-influenced restaurant in Jerusalem. Satya on Keren HaYesod Street runs a fish and fusion menu with a clear Southeast Asian lean — Thai aromatics, Japanese umami, elements of Vietnamese and Indonesian cooking. Not kosher-certified, which limits its audience in Jerusalem, but the cooking is a cut above the city’s certified options. Worth the trip for secular diners and tourists who don’t require supervision.
📍 Keren HaYesod 36, Jerusalem | satya.co.il | 02-650-6808
COCORECO — Jerusalem
A pan-Asian operation covering the broader Asian-fusion format: sushi, noodles, rice dishes. One of several neighbourhood spots that have filled demand in residential Jerusalem.
Mandarin — Jerusalem
A long-established Chinese-influenced pan-Asian restaurant with a Jerusalem presence. The Mandarin name appears across multiple Israeli cities; this branch serves the local neighbourhood market.
Naya — Beit Hakerem and Mevaseret Zion
Two branches of Naya serve the western Jerusalem corridor — one in Beit Hakerem inside the city, another in Beit Nekofa near Mevaseret Zion. Naya is a pan-Asian chain known for consistent quality and a broad menu.
Poke Toke — Jerusalem
Poke bowl counter in Jerusalem. The poke format — rice bowls with raw fish, vegetables, and sauces — has become a reliable lunchtime option across the city.
River Sushi Bar Kosher — Jerusalem (Kosher)
A kosher-certified sushi bar serving Jerusalem diners. Part of the expanding certified sushi infrastructure that has made Jerusalem a viable destination for kosher Asian food.
Sushi Bayit Vegan — Jerusalem
An all-vegan sushi operation — relevant both for religious diners (dairy-free, pareve options) and for the city’s health-conscious crowd. Plant-based sushi has found a natural audience in Jerusalem.
Teabar — Jerusalem
Asian-influenced drinks and light food. Teabar straddles the café and restaurant categories — useful for afternoon visits and as a lighter alternative to a full dinner.
Wok to Walk — Jerusalem
The Jerusalem branch of the international Wok to Walk chain. A fast-casual stir-fry concept: choose noodles or rice, pick a protein and sauce, eat immediately. One of the city’s more accessible Asian options for tourists on the go.
Indian#
Jeera Indian Food — Jerusalem
Indian cuisine maps well onto kosher requirements — the vegetarian tradition is deep, and the separation of meat and dairy is close enough to halal and kosher practice that certified Indian restaurants are relatively uncommon but conceptually compatible. Jeera is one of the few dedicated Indian restaurants operating in Jerusalem, serving the city’s small South Asian community and curious diners alike.
Ichikidana — Jerusalem
A second Indian option in the capital. Jerusalem’s Indian restaurant scene is small but stable — the community is anchored partly by the Indian Jewish community (particularly from Mumbai and Cochin) and partly by diplomatic and tech-industry residents.
Korean, Thai & Chinese#
Seoul House — Jerusalem
Jerusalem’s Korean restaurant. Seoul House covers the basics: bibimbap, Korean fried chicken, and the broader Korean-food-in-Israel repertoire. Korean food has a small but loyal following in Jerusalem, partly through the Korean Christian pilgrim community which visits the city year-round.
The Thai Jerusalem and Thailandi Bamoshava — Jerusalem
Two Thai options in the city. Thai food in Jerusalem faces the same kashrut tension as elsewhere — authentic Thai cooking uses shellfish, fish sauce, and pork in ways that complicate kosher certification — so both restaurants cater primarily to secular diners. Station 9 is a third Thai-flavoured venue in the city.
Take A Wok and Mian Noodles — Jerusalem
Two Chinese-influenced spots cover the noodle and wok format in Jerusalem. Mian Noodles focuses on Chinese noodle dishes; Take A Wok covers the broader stir-fry and rice menu. Sheyan is a further Chinese option.
Outside Jerusalem: Mevaseret Zion and Beit Shemesh#
Oshi Oshi Mevaseret, Naya Beit Nekofa, Atza Sushi Bar Mevaseret, Deknoy, Sushi Box Mevaseret, Shinzu Ein Karem — Mevaseret Zion area
The communities just west of Jerusalem — Mevaseret Zion, Beit Zayit, and Mevasseret — have their own cluster of Asian restaurants. This makes sense: many Jerusalem families live in the western suburbs and commute, and they want local Asian food without the drive into the city. Shinzu has a branch in Ein Karem as well as Ramot.
Japan Japan Beit Shemesh, Atza Sushi Bar Beit Shemesh, Sushi N’ Bagel Beit Shemesh, Sushi Tokyo Beit Shemesh, Kapao Beit Shemesh — Beit Shemesh
Beit Shemesh, 30 km west of Jerusalem, has developed its own significant cluster of Asian restaurants. The city’s large Anglo-immigrant religious population creates strong demand for kosher Asian food — particularly sushi — and the local scene reflects that. Kapao in Beit Shemesh is notable for a menu that goes beyond standard sushi into broader Asian-fusion territory.
A Note on Kosher Certification#
In Jerusalem, kashrut is not an afterthought. The religious and observant population is large enough that the market for certified Asian food has grown considerably. Key terms:
- Kosher (כשר) — rabbinical supervision at a standard level
- Mehadrin (מהדרין) — stricter kosher supervision, required by many haredi and strictly Orthodox diners
- Chalav Yisrael — dairy products supervised by Jewish-observant personnel
Many Asian restaurants in Jerusalem advertise kosher certification without specifying the level. If kashrut matters to your group, always confirm the certification body and level directly with the restaurant before booking.
Note also that some restaurants naturally avoid pork and shellfish without being formally certified. This does not constitute kosher certification and should not be assumed to meet kashrut requirements.
Ingredients: Balagan Eastwest Food#
If you’re cooking Asian food at home in Jerusalem, Balagan Eastwest Food on Agripas Street is the essential stop. The store carries an extremely wide range of ingredients for Japanese, Thai, Indian, Filipino, Korean, and Chinese cooking — fresh Asian vegetables included. One of the best-stocked Asian grocery stores in Israel outside Tel Aviv.
📍 Agripas 47, Jerusalem | ewi.co.il | 02-623-0332
Open Sun–Thu 09:00–18:30, Fri 08:00–15:30
The Full Directory#
This guide covers the recommended options; our Asian businesses directory lists the full Jerusalem scene, searchable by cuisine and neighbourhood.
For certified options across Israel, see the kosher Asian restaurants guide.





