Shimokitazawa Izakaya & Bars

Shirubee Shimokitazawa

Faux-Showa Izakaya Built for Late Nights

Bare bulbs, smoky oden cauldrons, paper-cup lighting and a 1am last call. Shimokitazawa's most committed showa-nostalgia drinking house.

Last verified: 2026-05-16

Shirubee Shimokitazawa — Faux-Showa Izakaya Built for Late Nights
Shirubee Shimokitazawa — Faux-Showa Izakaya Built for Late Nights
ONDO Score
84/100
Ranked among Tokyo's most visited by locals.
01 Why locals love it

Why Japanese People Love It

Shirubee opened in 1999 with a clear concept: build a Showa-era (1926-1989) drinking house from scratch, complete with bare bulbs, hand-painted signs, paper-cup lamps, mismatched wooden tables, and a constantly simmering oden pot at the center of the room. Twenty-five years later, it's not aging — it's becoming what it always pretended to be. The interior smells like actual decades of nikomi simmer, and the regulars are people who first came in their twenties and never left.

What sets it apart from genuinely old izakaya is that it was built to be functional from the start: 100 seats across two floors, a full kitchen, late-night oden capacity, and a young staff that knows the menu cold. The 'fake old' construction means everything works — the toilets are clean, the ventilation isn't a tragedy, and you can fit a group of eight without negotiating with three other tables. It's the most comfortable possible version of the dive bar.

Shimokitazawa's drinking culture is built around this place. The neighborhood is dense with small theaters, live music venues, and vinyl shops, and after a show or a record-digging afternoon, Shirubee is where everyone ends up. The crowd skews younger than nearby standing bars — students, theater people, musicians on their off nights, and a steady undercurrent of regulars in their fifties who treat the place like a living room.

02 How to experience it

How to Experience It

Walk south from Shimokitazawa Station's south exit; the entrance is two minutes down a brightly lit shopping arcade. The door is set back slightly and easy to miss — look for the paper lanterns and the chalkboard with the day's specials. Inside, you climb a steep staircase to the second floor for the larger room or take seats on the ground floor near the oden pot.

Walk-in only, no reservations. On a Friday or Saturday night between 7pm and 9pm expect a ten- to twenty-minute wait at the door; the staff will hand you a slip and call you in. Weekday nights you usually walk straight in. The late hours (1am close) mean the place is also a viable last-stop after a 10pm theater show or a midnight ramen.

The ordering system is paper-slip: you write your orders on a printed checklist and hand it to the staff. The Japanese is dense, but a partial English menu exists — ask for it on entry. If your reading is light, point at what nearby tables are eating; the staff is comfortable with that.

03 What to order

What to Order

The signature is oden — Japanese winter stew with daikon, eggs, beef tendon, and various surimi (fish-paste) items simmered for hours in a soy-dashi broth. The Shirubee version is on the saltier side, perfect for drinking. Start with a small assortment plate (盛り合わせ) and add daikon and egg by the piece.

Beyond oden, the motsu-nikomi (offal stew, usually beef) is a closing-time staple — slow-cooked, miso-rich, almost gel-textured from the long simmer. Pair with hoppy (a low-alcohol beer-flavored mixer cut with shochu) for the full showa-bar pricing experience: a hoppy set runs roughly ¥500.

04 Practical info

Plan your visit

AreaShimokitazawa
CategoryIzakaya & Bars
Price range¥2500-4500
Hours17:00-翌1:00 (LO 24:00)
Closedなし
Access小田急線・京王井の頭線下北沢駅南口から徒歩2分
ReservationsWalk-in only
English menu ⚠ Limited Limited — partial English menu items
English supportLimited English staff — gesture and pointing common
Last verified2026-05-16
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05 Nearby experiences

Nearby Experiences

Shimokitazawa is the city's vinyl-and-vintage capital — walk five minutes in any direction and you'll hit independent record shops, used-clothing stores, and small theaters. Within the same south-exit arcade, Bear Pond Espresso (closed Tuesday, daytime only) sits four minutes north for a pre-drink coffee, and Bonus Track — Tokyo's most architecturally interesting new development — is five minutes east for a slower-paced bookshop-bar combination.

For continuing the night, the alleys between Shimokitazawa Station's two exits are lined with standing bars (tachinomi), tiny ramen shops, and a few late-night izakaya that pick up where Shirubee leaves off at 1am. The neighborhood is one of Tokyo's safest for solo late-night walking.

Hours, prices, and availability change. We recommend confirming details directly with the venue before your visit. Information verified: 2026-05-16.