Japanese nightlife runs on subtlety. The unforgettable rooms are rarely the ones with a queue outside — they’re the eight-seat cocktail bar on the fourth floor with no sign, the jazz kissa that’s been spinning vinyl since 1965, the licensed club where the door opens more easily with a reservation than without one.
For visitors, the barrier is the same as with restaurants: a phone, a language, and a set of unwritten rules. This guide explains the landscape. When you find a venue you want and can’t book it yourself, BookNippon arranges the table reservation in Japanese — reservations only, at licensed venues, for guests 18 and over.
The kinds of venues we reserve
- Cocktail & whisky bars — intimate, master-led counters where seats are limited and a reservation is appreciated or required.
- Jazz clubs & kissa — listening bars and live-music rooms, some with a cover or set charge and limited seating.
- Karaoke & box rooms — private rooms that benefit from a reservation on busy nights.
- Show restaurants & cabarets — dinner-and-performance venues that book by seating.
- Licensed hostess & host clubs — conversation-and-drinks clubs that often take reservations and may require Japanese ability or a foreigner-friendly policy.
- Snack bars — the classic neighbourhood “snack,” a small bar with a mama-san, where an introduction or call smooths the welcome.
BookNippon arranges table and seat reservations at licensed venues only. We do not broker any adult services. Everything at the venue — drinks, cover, table charges — is strictly between you and the venue, paid directly to them. All guests must be 18+.
Understanding the charge system
The single biggest source of confusion (and bad reviews from tourists) is the charge system. Many Japanese nightlife venues add a seating or cover charge on top of your drinks:
- Table / seating charge: a fixed per-person fee just to be seated, common at bars and lounges.
- Otoshi: a small appetizer-and-seat charge, as in izakaya.
- Set-time systems: hostess and host clubs typically bill in time blocks (e.g. per 60 minutes) plus drinks and any nominations.
- Music / show charge: jazz and live venues may add a cover for performance nights.
None of this is a scam — it’s simply how the venue prices the room. The problem is only ever not knowing in advance. When we make a reservation, we ask the venue about its charge system and pass it to you in writing before you go.
Etiquette & “know before you go”
- Confirmation calls. Some venues call to confirm 30–90 minutes before your seating; we handle that contact for you.
- Timing windows. Many smaller venues have a first and second seating; arriving on time matters.
- Language & foreign-guest policy. A few clubs only seat guests who can communicate in Japanese, or who arrive with a reservation. We state party size, nationality and Japanese ability when we book, which is why a reservation gets you in where a walk-in is turned away.
- No-shows & cancellation fees. As with restaurants, late cancellations and no-shows can incur fees (often 50–100%). We pass on the venue’s policy with your confirmation.
- Names & discretion. Reservations can be made under any name; we keep your details private and share only what the venue needs.
When to book
Friday and Saturday nights are tightest, especially in Tokyo’s Ginza and Roppongi, Osaka’s Kitashinchi and Kyoto’s Gion. For a specific bar or club, a day or two ahead is usually enough; for show restaurants and popular live nights, book a week or more out. The traditional off-peak months across the industry are February, June and September — easier seats, same quality.
Pair it with dinner
Most nightlife evenings start with a meal. See our guide to booking restaurants in Japan in English, or jump to a city: Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto.