Suzukien Asakusa
The World’s Strongest Matcha Gelato, Level 7
An 1853 tea house that, with Shizuoka's Nanaya, scales matcha gelato across seven intensities — No. 7 is the most concentrated matcha gelato made anywhere.
Last verified: 2026-05-16
Why Japanese People Love It
Suzukien has been a tea merchant in Asakusa since 1853 — a Tokugawa-era shinise (long-established business) selling Japanese leaf tea long before matcha became an international dessert flavor. The shop's modern fame began in January 2016, when it partnered with Nanaya, a Shizuoka confectioner, to sell matcha gelato graded across seven intensity levels. Level 1 is the gentle, milky matcha most people know. Level 7 is, by the makers' own claim and broad consensus, the most concentrated matcha gelato produced anywhere in the world.
The grading is the whole point, and it's genuinely educational rather than a gimmick. Tasting Level 1, then Level 4, then Level 7 in sequence teaches you what matcha actually is when you remove the sugar-and-milk cushion: at Level 7 it is intensely vegetal, almost bitter, closer to a fine sencha than to a dessert. Japanese visitors who think they know matcha routinely recalibrate here. Level 7 is sold outside Nanaya's own Shizuoka shops only at this Asakusa main branch.
It matters that the gelato sits inside a working 170-year tea shop rather than a dessert chain. The front of the store still sells loose-leaf gyokuro and sencha to neighborhood customers; the gelato counter is an extension of that expertise, not a separate business. For visitors, it converts an Instagram-famous dessert into a short, real lesson in Japanese tea — which is exactly the kind of thing Asakusa does well when you step one block off the temple's main axis.
How to Experience It
Find Suzukien at 3-4-3 Asakusa, about an 8-minute walk from the Ginza Line's Asakusa Station or 5 minutes from the Tsukuba Express station — slightly west of the Senso-ji crowds, on a quieter stretch. The gelato counter is to the side of the tea shop; there's usually a short queue but it moves quickly.
Open 11:00-17:00 with irregular closures (the shop's Instagram is the reliable check before a special trip). Early afternoon on weekends is the busiest; late afternoon just before close is the calmest. The gelato is takeaway-style — there's limited seating, so most people eat standing or walking.
Order by number. The counter has a clear chart of the seven levels with the matcha origin and concentration; you can also ask for a hojicha (roasted tea) gelato or a double-scoop to compare two levels side by side. Pay, take your cup, and eat it before it softens — Level 7 in particular is dense and changes texture fast.
What to Order
The instructive order is a double scoop pairing Level 1 (or 2) with Level 7 — the contrast is the entire experience and the fastest way to understand matcha's range. If you only want one, Level 4 is the balanced midpoint most regulars settle on for everyday eating; Level 7 is the order if you came specifically for the world-record claim.
The hojicha (roasted green tea) gelato is the underrated alternative — nuttier, less bitter, and a good palate reset between matcha levels. The shop also sells its loose-leaf teas; a small tin of gyokuro makes a more distinctive Asakusa souvenir than the usual Nakamise-dori options.
Plan your visit
| Area | Asakusa |
|---|---|
| Category | Café & Coffee |
| Price range | ¥500-1200 |
| Hours | 11:00-17:00 |
| Closed | 不定休 |
| Access | 東京メトロ銀座線浅草駅から徒歩8分・つくばエクスプレス浅草駅から徒歩5分 |
| Reservations | Walk-in only — order at the counter, takeaway gelato |
| English menu | ✓ Available Yes — the seven-level chart is visual and bilingual |
| English support | Limited English; the numbered system needs little explanation |
| Last verified | 2026-05-16 |
Nearby Experiences
You're a short walk from Senso-ji and Kimuraya Honten (ningyo-yaki on Nakamise-dori). Asakusa Menchi is five minutes east on Denboin-dori for a savory street-snack counterpoint, and Asakusa Mugitoro Honten is ten minutes toward the river for a proper lunch.
Asakusa rewards eating small across several shops rather than one big meal. A loop of Suzukien (matcha gelato) → Asakusa Menchi (menchi-katsu) → Kimuraya (ningyo-yaki) is the canonical tabearuki — eating while walking — circuit through the temple district.