Best-of list · Craft Beer

The Best Craft Beer Bars in Tokyo 2026

The best craft beer bars in Tokyo for 2026 — Popeye, Goodbeer Faucets, Yona Yona and six more. Read the full editorial guide on barsforKings.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is Beer Bar Popeye.

10 ranked rooms follow. How we picked is at the end of this guide.

Best overallBeer Bar Popeye

Tokyo's craft beer scene is Asia's deepest. Beer Bar Popeye runs around 70 taps and Goodbeer Faucets 40. The nine below show how serious Tokyo takes its beer.

The best craft beer bars in Tokyo

Editor's №1

Beer Bar Popeye

Beer Bar Popeye has poured craft beer in Ryogoku since 1985, the bar that taught Tokyo to take the stuff seriously. Around 70 taps run heavy on Japanese brewers, and the weekday happy hour throws in free snacks with a pint. It packs out by 8pm with a sumo-district crowd. Best for getting deep into domestic beer; go early, since there is no booking and the counter fills fast.

Full listing & hours →

Goodbeer Faucets

Goodbeer Faucets runs 40 taps and three handpumps from a sharp room in Shoto, a short walk from Shibuya's noise. The rotating list mixes Japanese and imported craft, with pints from 800 to 1,400 yen and a glass wall of bottles. Best for a focused tasting session without the izakaya clutter; early evening is calmest before the after-work crowd arrives.

Yona Yona Beer Works

Yona Yona Beer Works is the tap house for Yo-Ho Brewing, the brewer behind Yona Yona Ale, with eight branches across Tokyo. Each pours the full core range plus limited and cask versions you rarely find elsewhere, alongside sausages and sharing plates. It is polished and easy for groups. Best for a reliable introduction to Japan's best-known craft brand; the Aoyama and Akasaka rooms stay busy after work.

Craft Beer Market

Craft Beer Market built its name on value, pouring around 30 rotating Japanese and imported taps for roughly 480 yen a glass across five Tokyo branches. The food leans gastropub and the rooms are bigger and brighter than most beer bars here. Best for a long session that does not empty the wallet; the Jimbocho and Toranomon sites fill with office crowds from 6pm, so arrive before or after.

Full listing & hours →

Watering Hole

Watering Hole sits in a small Sendagaya space near Shinjuku, one of Tokyo's pioneering craft specialists with a well-curated list leaning American and European imports. The taps rotate hard and the bottle fridge runs deep for hard-to-find releases. Seats are limited and the regulars know their beer. Best for hunting a specific imported style; go midweek or early, since the narrow room fills quickly after work.

Full listing & hours →

Baird Taproom

The Harajuku Taproom is Baird Brewing's Tokyo flagship, pouring more than 20 of the Shizuoka brewery's beers alongside a full yakitori grill. The pairing of Baird's hop-forward and sour styles with charcoal skewers is the draw, in a warm wooden room above the Harajuku crowds. Best for matching beer with proper food; book ahead on weekends, when the upstairs tables go early.

Full listing & hours →

DevilCraft

DevilCraft opened in Kanda in 2011 and made its name pairing craft beer with Chicago-style deep-dish pizza, now across four Tokyo pubs and brewing its own since 2015. The taps mix house beers with strong American imports, and the pizza takes a while, so order it first. Best for a group that wants food as much as beer; the Hamamatsucho and Kanda rooms book up on weekends.

Mikkeller Tokyo

Mikkeller Tokyo hides up a Dogenzaka backstreet in Shibuya, the Danish gypsy brewer's outpost with 20 taps of its own and guest beers. The room is small and design-led, the pours pricey but rare, running from hoppy IPAs to barrel-aged sours. Best for trying Mikkeller releases that barely reach Japan; it opens at 4pm and runs to 1:30am on weekends, quietest early.

Ushitora

Ushitora anchors Shimokitazawa craft beer with its main Ichigo bar, pouring its own brews beside 30 guest taps and three casks. The vibe matches the neighbourhood: scruffy, music-led and unpretentious, with snacks to soak it up. A second branch sits a short walk away when the first fills. Best for a relaxed crawl through Tokyo's indie quarter; weekends run latest and loudest.

Shinshu Osake Mura

Shinshu Osake Mura is a Shimbashi standing bar stocked with sake, shochu and beer from Nagano. Pours start under 300 yen and the shelves double as a bottle shop. Best for an early, low-cost round before the 8:30pm close.

Full listing & hours →

Beyond the 10

Also worth knowing

11

Spring Valley Brewery

Spring Valley Brewery is Kirin's Daikanyama brewpub, brewing on site since 2015 and refreshed in 2024. Its core range of six beers sits beside seasonal pours and a full food menu. Best for a sit-down tasting on Log Road.

Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.