Montreal · ラーメン

Authentic Ramen
in Montreal.

Bowls built on hours-long stocks and house-made noodles — tonkotsu, shoyu, shio, miso. Counted by clarity of broth, not by queues.

01
Ramen Nakamichi — authentic refined artisan ramen restaurant in Montreal, Mile End

Ramen Nakamichi

¥¥
Mile End · Ramen · casual
Refined artisan ramenJapanese-ownedMile Endrich brothsTastet best ramen

Japanese chef-owners Jumpei Iwakiri and Yuri Ishikawa bring their passion for refined ramen to Mile End at Ramen Nakamichi, earning recognition on Tastet's best ramen list for their deeply developed broths and premium ingredients.

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03
Ramen Misoya — authentic miso ramen restaurant in Montreal, Downtown / Ville-Marie

Ramen Misoya

¥
Downtown / Ville-Marie · Ramen · casual
Miso ramenJapanese chainmiso broth specialistchicken ramenpork ramen

Ramen Misoya brings Japan's miso ramen heritage to downtown Montreal with a focused menu of chicken, pork, shrimp, and vegetable broths. The international Japanese chain maintains the same broth philosophies developed in Sapporo.

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04
Tsukuyomi Ramen — authentic fukuoka-style tonkotsu ramen restaurant in Montreal, Mile End

Tsukuyomi Ramen

¥
Mile End · Ramen · casual
Fukuoka-style tonkotsu ramenhomemade noodlesscratch brothsvegan optionMile End

Tsukuyomi Ramen is a Montreal institution delivering Fukuoka-style tonkotsu ramen with daily homemade noodles and scratch-made broths from its cosy Mile End counter, consistently praised as one of the city's most authentic ramen experiences.

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05
Yokato Yokabai — authentic fukuoka-style tonkotsu ramen restaurant in Montreal, Plateau-Mont-Royal

Yokato Yokabai

¥
Plateau-Mont-Royal · Ramen · casual
Fukuoka-style tonkotsu ramenMichelin recommendedhomemade noodlesno reservationsPlateau

Yokato Yokabai is a Michelin Guide-recommended ramen restaurant in the Plateau celebrated for its Fukuoka-style tonkotsu, daily homemade noodles, and commitment to organic ingredients — regularly drawing queues of devoted regulars.

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Other Japanese cuisines in Montreal
FAQ

Questions, answered.

What makes ramen in Montreal authentic?
Bowls built on hours-long stocks and house-made noodles — tonkotsu, shoyu, shio, miso. Counted by clarity of broth, not by queues. In Montreal, we apply the same standard: chefs trained in the discipline, ingredients and technique consistent with Japanese practice, and a focused ramen-first format rather than a mixed menu.
How do you define authenticity?
Washoku Guide defines authenticity by the kitchen's grounding in Japanese culinary tradition: trained chefs (often in Japan), techniques and ingredients consistent with Japanese practice, a focused menu rather than a pan-Asian one, and a coherent dining format (sushi-ya, ramen-ya, izakaya, kaiseki, etc.). We weigh these signals together — no single factor decides.
Do you require Japanese ownership?
No. Japanese ownership is one positive signal, but it is not required. We also recognise restaurants with Japanese-led kitchens or non-Japanese chefs who have trained extensively in Japan and apply traditional techniques with discipline. What matters is the cooking, not the passport.
How are restaurants selected?
Each entry is researched and chosen by Washoku Guide editors — not voted in, not paid for, and not algorithmically ranked. We read kitchen biographies, study menus, talk to people in the industry, and visit when possible. Restaurants pay nothing to be listed.
Are the listings ranked?
No. Washoku Guide is a curated guide, not a ranking. Order on a city page is editorial and may change as the guide evolves; it does not imply that #1 is better than #5. Every listed restaurant has met our authenticity bar.
Are these the only authentic ramen restaurants in Montreal?
These are the ones Washoku Guide has researched and stands behind today. The guide grows over time; if you know an authentic ramen restaurant in Montreal we should consider, please get in touch.