Shinjuku Ramen

Fuunji

Shinjuku’s Tsukemen Worth Lining Up For

Office workers, ramen obsessives, and off-duty chefs queue before the 11am opening — all for tsukemen that earned a spot on Japan's most trusted restaurant list, year after year.

Last verified: April 2026

Fuunji — Ramen in Shinjuku, Tokyo
Fuunji — Ramen in Shinjuku, Tokyo
ONDO Score
91/100
Ranked among Tokyo's most visited by locals.
01 Why locals love it

Why Japanese People Love It

Fuunji has earned a spot on Tabelog's coveted Hyakumeiten list — Japan's most trusted restaurant ranking — year after year, and the queue that forms before the 11am opening tells you everything you need to know about how seriously locals take it. On any given weekday morning, you'll find office workers, ramen obsessives, and the occasional chef from a nearby restaurant all waiting in the same line, paper tickets in hand, nobody complaining.

What they're lining up for is tsukemen built around a single-minded technique: the owner preps everything himself, every morning, from scratch. The dipping broth is a marriage of fish-forward dashi — deeply funky with dried bonito and mackerel — and a long-cooked pork bone base that gives it body without turning heavy. The two elements shouldn't work together this well, but somehow they do.

The noodles are thick, hand-cut, and genuinely chewy in a way that holds up to repeated dipping without going slack. Japanese regulars almost always order the large size (大盛り) at no extra charge — a detail the staff never needs to announce because everyone already knows.

02 How to experience it

How to Experience It

Fuunji is walk-in only — no reservations, no workarounds. Your best strategy is to arrive around 30 minutes before they open. A line will already be forming, and that's exactly where you want to be. Weekday mornings give you the best shot at a shorter wait.

The counter seating makes this a perfectly comfortable solo visit. You'll be facing the kitchen, which gives you a front-row view of the bowl coming together — worth watching.

Ordering runs through a ticket machine just inside the entrance. Here's how it goes:

  1. Buy your ticket from the vending machine before you sit down.
  2. Hand it to the staff when they come to you — no need to say anything.
  3. Wait at your seat; your bowl will arrive directly.

The staff speak little to no English, so pointing at the machine buttons works fine. One thing that matters: when you finish, keep the noise down and move on promptly. The queue outside is real, and turnover is part of the rhythm here.

03 What to order

What to Order

Tokusei Tsukemen (特製つけ麺) — The signature order. Thick, wavy noodles arrive separately from a deeply concentrated dipping broth built on chicken and dashi — intensely savory, with a brightness that cuts through the richness. "Tokusei" gets you extra toppings including chashu and a soft-boiled egg, which makes the full experience worth the small price bump.

Morisoba (もりそば) — A lighter entry point into the same dipping-style format, using thinner noodles and a cleaner broth. If you're visiting in summer or find yourself hesitant about the full-throttle richness of tsukemen, this is the call.

Wantan-iri Tokusei Tsukemen (ワンタン入り特製つけ麺) — The tokusei bowl upgraded with silky, thin-skinned wontons filled with minced pork. Order this on your first visit if you want the complete picture of what Fuunji does best.

04 Practical info

Plan your visit

AreaShinjuku
CategoryRamen
Price range¥900-1300
Hours11:00-15:00 / 17:00-21:00
ClosedNo regular closing day
Access5 min walk from JR Shinjuku Station South Exit / 1 min walk from Toei Shinjuku Line or Oedo Line Shinjuku Station Exit 6
ReservationsWalk-in only. No reservations accepted.
English menu ✕ None No — point at menu photos
English supportNone
Last verifiedApril 2026
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05 Nearby experiences

Nearby Experiences

Fuunji sits just a few minutes' walk from Shinjuku's west exit chaos, which makes Omoide Yokocho — the narrow alley of smoky yakitori stalls running alongside the train tracks — a natural landing spot afterward. Let the tsukemen settle, then graze on skewers over cold Sapporo. If you're arriving earlier in the day, the Sompo Japan Museum on Nishi-Shinjuku's main boulevard opens at 10am and pairs a quiet hour with the inevitable queue outside Fuunji.

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