How to order at an izakaya
Order a first drink quickly, share small plates, and check table-charge or smoking rules before settling in.
Steps
- Confirm whether the izakaya has a cover charge, smoking area, or tablet menu.
- Order the first drink and a few shareable dishes before the table gets busy.
- Ask about allergies, raw items, or pork/seafood broth before ordering unclear dishes.
- Request the bill when ready and check whether payment is at the table or cashier.
Common mistakes
- Waiting too long to order the first drink.
- Ordering one dish per person like a Western course meal.
- Missing the table charge or small appetizer fee.
- Assuming every izakaya is non-smoking or card-friendly.
Next branch
Use the quick steps above first. Open the full detail only when you need examples, edge cases, or the next task.
Detailed guide Full notes, examples, and recovery steps
The fast rule
An izakaya is built around drinks and shared small plates. The easiest flow is sit -> first drink -> a few shared dishes -> add more -> ask for the bill.
Before ordering
Check whether there is a tablet, QR code, paper menu, or staff ordering system. If there is a small appetizer served automatically, it may be the table charge. This is normal in many places.
If smoking, allergies, or dietary restrictions matter, ask before ordering. It is easier to leave early than to negotiate after food has started.
What to order first
Pick one drink per person and two or three simple dishes for the table. Good first choices are grilled skewers, fried chicken, edamame, salad, fries, sashimi if you eat raw fish, or rice dishes. Add more after you see portion size.
How to avoid awkwardness
Do not occupy a busy table with no drink order. Do not split every plate into individual orders unless the shop style expects it. If using a tablet, check whether the item is per piece, per skewer, or per plate.
Paying
Ask for the bill with a phrase card or say okaikei onegaishimasu. Some places bring the bill to the table; others expect you to pay at the cashier near the entrance.