Han no Daidokoro Bettei
Kobe and Yamagata Beef Yakiniku, Shibuya
A higher-end Shibuya yakiniku house specializing in Kobe and Yamagata wagyu, with private-room comfort and a tabletop grill done with restraint.
Last verified: 2026-05-16
Why Japanese People Love It
Yakiniku — Japanese-style tabletop grilled beef — runs a wide quality spectrum, from cheap all-you-can-eat chains to high-end wagyu specialists. Han no Daidokoro Bettei sits at the upper-mid end: a Shibuya house focused on Kobe and Yamagata beef, served in a calmer, private-room-capable setting on the 7th floor of a Dogenzaka building, away from the street noise. It's the version of yakiniku you go to for the meat quality, not the all-you-can-eat volume.
The two headline brands matter. Kobe beef (the internationally famous Tajima-strain wagyu, tightly certified) and Yamagata beef (a less globally known but highly regarded northern wagyu) give two distinct fat profiles to compare across a single meal. Grilling premium wagyu yourself, at the table, on a charcoal or gas grill, is a participatory experience that high-end teppanyaki (chef-grilled) doesn't offer — you control the doneness of a ¥3,000 cut, which is either thrilling or stressful depending on temperament.
For visitors, the appeal is accessing brand-name wagyu in a comfortable, English-menued, reservation-friendly setting without the formality (or the price ceiling) of a teppanyaki counter. The private rooms make it viable for a group dinner or a quieter date; the 7th-floor location keeps it out of the Dogenzaka chaos while staying central.
How to Experience It
Find it at 2-29-8 Dogenzaka, 7th floor of the Dogenzaka Center Building, five minutes from JR Shibuya. The upper-floor location means it's quieter than street-level yakiniku; take the elevator. Reservations are recommended, especially for dinner and for private rooms.
Lunch (11:30-15:00) is the value window — set menus bring the Kobe/Yamagata experience down to a more accessible price than à la carte dinner. Dinner runs 17:30-22:00 (later Friday/Saturday), year-round. Private rooms should be requested when booking.
Grilling: the staff will explain the grill and recommend cooking times per cut (English menu and English-comfortable service). Premium wagyu cooks fast — most cuts want only seconds per side. Don't over-grill the marbled cuts; the fat is the point and renders quickly.
What to Order
Order a comparison set if available — a few cuts of Kobe alongside Yamagata — so the meal does the work of teaching you the difference between the two wagyu profiles. The lunch sets are the efficient way to do this without an open-ended à la carte bill.
Among individual cuts, the harami (skirt) and the marbled rosu/sirloin show the brands' fat character best; leaner cuts like akami are the contrast. Pair with the namul and kimchi sides (the shop's Korean-influenced lineage) and rice; finish with a cold reimen (chilled noodle) if you have room.
Plan your visit
| Area | Shibuya |
|---|---|
| Category | Traditional Specialties |
| Price range | ¥4000-12000 |
| Hours | 11:30-15:00 (LO 14:30) / 17:30-22:00 (Fri-Sat -22:30) |
| Closed | なし(年中無休) |
| Access | JR渋谷駅から徒歩5分・道玄坂2-29-8 道玄坂センタービル7F |
| Reservations | Reservations recommended (private rooms available) |
| English menu | ✓ Available Yes — English menu available |
| English support | Yes — accustomed to international guests |
| Last verified | 2026-05-16 |
Nearby Experiences
You're on Dogenzaka — Kushikatsu Tanaka and Kurand Sake Market Shibuya are within five minutes if the evening continues, and Uobei Shibuya is nearby for a completely different (touchscreen-sushi) register. The Scramble Crossing is five minutes downhill.
For a beef-technique contrast, a Han no Daidokoro yakiniku dinner (you grill premium wagyu) pairs instructively against Gyukatsu Motomura Shibuya (you finish a fried beef cutlet on a hot stone) — two participatory beef formats within a few minutes of each other.