The Best Chirashi Don in Singapore After Dark

A vibrant bowl of premium chirashi don featuring fresh slices of raw salmon, tuna, shrimp, and salmon roe served on vinegared rice.

Chirashi don often gets treated as a quick lunch, but the right bowl makes an excellent dinner. Fresh sashimi, properly seasoned sushi rice and a thoughtful mix of fish can feel satisfying without leaving the evening weighed down.

Our team looked beyond lunch sets to find the best chirashi don Singapore offers after dark. These eight restaurants cover everything from an affordable bara chirashi don to premium chirashi layered with fatty tuna, yellowtail, ikura and other sashimi grade seafood.

Your Chirashi Dinner Shortlist

This summary table compares each restaurant by location, the chirashi to order and what it does best, so you can quickly find the right pick for dinner.

The restaurants below also work as proper dinner destinations, whether you want bar seats, drinks and side dishes or simply a comforting bowl at relatively affordable prices.

Restaurant

Location

Bowl to Order

Best For

Tanuki Raw

Orchard Central

Triple Salmon Donburi

Dinner with drinks

Koji Sushi Bar

Raffles City

Sashimi Rice Bowl

Quiet sushi-bar dining

Kuro Maguro

Guoco Tower

Premium Tuna Donburi

Bluefin tuna

Kei Kaisendon

Wheelock Place

Kei Signature Kaisendon

Generous seafood portions

The Sushi Bar

Ngee Ann City

Kaisen Chirashi Don

Thick-cut sashimi

Omoté

Thomson Plaza

Omoté Chirashi

Marinated diced sashimi

Chirashi King Kong

Neuros

Signature Chirashi Don

Truffle rice

Shinjuku Restaurant

Cuppage Plaza

Chirashi Don

Traditional sashimi

1. Tanuki Raw

Tanuki Raw at Orchard Central, showcasing their popular Triple Salmon donburi served with miso soup and side dishes.

Tanuki Raw at Orchard Central is our pick when the chirashi don fix comes with plans for drinks. Its Four-Master Chirashi Donburi, listed from S$27.90, brings together bluefin tuna, Norwegian salmon, pink swordfish sashimi, yellowtail and salmon roe over the restaurant’s house mixed rice.

The fish gives the bowl plenty of contrast, moving from firm tuna sashimi to richer salmon sashimi and the clean bite of swordfish. Service fits the lively setting, with the team accustomed to diners ordering cocktails, oysters, hand rolls and other dishes alongside their bowl, while the indoor seats and alfresco area overlooking Orchard Road make dinner feel less rushed.

The Salmon Order We’d Add to the Table

If salmon is usually the first thing you look for, the Triple Salmon Donburi is the stronger follow-up order. The fresh salmon tasted clean and buttery, the aburi mentaiko salmon added a smoky richness, and the spicy salmon cubes brought just enough heat, while the ikura gave each mouthful a light pop of saltiness.

We would also add one of the creative maki rolls and the salmon mentaiko fries if there were a few of us sharing. Tanuki Raw feels more lively than a traditional sushi bar, and with the music, cocktails and punchier Japanese food, it suits a relaxed dinner with friends better than a quick solo meal.

2. Koji Sushi Bar

The minimalist entrance and dining counter at Koji Sushi Bar in Raffles City, a top destination for authentic Japanese chirashi don in Singapore.

Koji Sushi Bar suits evenings when we want dinner to feel more intimate without committing to a lengthy formal experience. Its Sashimi Rice Bowl has recently been listed at about S$23, with tuna, salmon, swordfish and jellyfish accompanied by miso soup and salad, while the restaurant describes its donburi sets as a heartier alternative to its nigiri.

The appeal lies in the clean arrangement and the contrast between raw fish and the jellyfish’s interesting texture. The sushi rice supports the seafood rather than overpowering it with too much soy sauce, and the compact room makes it easy for staff to keep an eye on tea, orders and pacing.

Why We Would Return to Koji Sushi Bar at Dinner

Koji Sushi Bar shifts from an accessible daytime spot into a more intimate evening setting, particularly at its Raffles City branch. The restaurant also runs an S$178++ omakase, but the rice bowl remains the more approachable route for diners who want fresh sashimi without turning dinner into a major occasion.

We would choose the counter or bar seats when available because they suit the straightforward food and allow diners to watch the room settle into its evening pace. Compared with other restaurants offering heavily dressed bowls, Koji feels restrained and fish-forward.

3. Kuro Maguro Guoco Tower

A generous premium tuna donburi bowl from Kuro Maguro at Guoco Tower, highlighting high-quality maguro sashimi slices and fresh wasabi.

Kuro Maguro at Guoco Tower is backed by Misaki Megumi Suisan, a Japanese tuna wholesaler that brings bluefin tuna into Singapore. That direct specialisation makes Kuro Maguro one of our strongest choices for anyone who wants a premium chirashi don built around tuna rather than a general assortment of fish.

Depending on the bowl and available cuts, diners may encounter lean akami, richer chutoro or fatty tuna with a softer, almost melting texture. The exceptional quality is most obvious when the fish is eaten plainly with a small dab of wasabi, letting the tuna and Japanese rice carry the meal without excessive sauce.

Kuro Maguro also works well as a starting point for exploring more Tanjong Pagar Japanese food beyond the usual sushi and donburi spots.

Kuro Maguro Works Better After Office Hours

The restaurant operates dinner service from 5:30pm, with later closing hours on weekdays than on weekends and public holidays. The atmosphere still carries some of Guoco Tower’s business-district energy, but it becomes more relaxed once the lunch crowd has cleared.

Service tends to be menu-focused, which helps when choosing between different tuna cuts and donburi styles. For our team, this is the place to prioritise tuna over variety, particularly when the craving is for premium ingredients rather than a colourful mix of fresh cubes.

4. Kei Kaisendon

Kei Signature Kaisendon at Kei Kaisendon, Wheelock Place, featuring a colorful mix of marinated fresh seafood on rice.

Kei Kaisendon specialises in kaisendon made with fresh seafood, offering several combinations rather than relying on one standard chirashi don. Its Kei Signature Kaisendon is the natural place to begin, with menu availability and pricing varying by outlet.

The bowls are designed for diners who enjoy abundance, with cubed fish, raw fish, garnishes and sauces layered over fluffy Japanese rice. Each spoonful can taste slightly different, which makes the kaisen don more playful than a neatly arranged sashimi bowl.

Turning the Kei Signature Kaisendon Into a Full Meal

Kei’s recommended way of eating kaisendon moves through different stages, including enjoying the seafood on its own, mixing in condiments and finishing the remaining rice with broth where available. That progression helps a generous portion remain interesting from the first fresh cubes to the final spoonful.

The restaurants are practical rather than ceremonial, including accessible mall locations such as Thomson Plaza. Service is usually geared towards helping diners order efficiently, which makes Kei a useful dinner choice when the team wants fresh seafood and a comforting bowl without a long wait.

5. The Sushi Bar

The famous Kaisen Chirashi Don at The Sushi Bar, Ngee Ann City, topped with a variety of thick-cut sashimi and fresh garnishes.

The Sushi Bar has built a following around thick-cut fish and uncomplicated Japanese cuisine. Its Normal Chirashi Don has recently been listed at about S$24.90, while the Aburi Kaisen Chirashi Don has been listed at about S$26.90.

The standard bowl is the better introduction for diners who want to judge the freshness of the sashimi and the balance of the sushi rice. Cuts tend to feel substantial, and the fish-to-rice ratio makes this one of the more filling options in the guide.

The Salmon Pick for a Sashimi Fan

The Salmon Ikura Don brings together salmon sashimi, salmon roe and rice for a clean, rich combination that never feels overdone. The salmon was soft and fresh, while the ikura added a briny pop that kept each spoonful lively.

The Normal Chirashi Don is slightly cheaper, but we would choose this one when the craving is clearly for salmon.

6. Omoté

The signature Omote Chirashi at Omote, Thomson Plaza, known for its overflowing pile of diced sashimi, salmon roe, and savory seasoning.

Omoté at Thomson Plaza is known for taking bara chirashi beyond the usual mix of cubed fish and rice. Its Omoté Chirashi has recently been listed at about S$20.90, while the Umami Soy Chirashi is around S$24.90 and the Truffle Roasted Garlic Chirashi around S$31.50.

The signature blend uses marinated cubed sashimi, giving every bite a savoury coating that reaches the Japanese rice below. We would choose the classic bowl first, then move to the truffle oil and roasted garlic version only when the evening calls for something richer.

The Best Chirashi Don for Diners Who Like Choice

Omoté’s menu also includes the Salmon Booster Chirashi, Ikura Supercharge Chirashi, Salmon Belly Ikura Don and Triple Salmon Katto Don. These are useful options for diners who want fresh salmon, salmon belly or salmon roe without sorting through a wider mix of tuna, yellowtail and other seafood.

The restaurant is often busy, so service can feel brisk during peak periods, but the menu is organised clearly enough for groups with different preferences. One person can order bara chirashi, another can choose grilled fish, and the table can still share sushi, salad or a salmon aburi roll.

7. Chirashi King Kong

Two bowls of signature chirashi don and truffle rice from Chirashi King Kong at Neuros, highlighting their unique fusion Japanese flavor profile.

Chirashi King Kong takes a more contemporary approach, pairing sashimi with fragrant truffle rice rather than plain vinegared rice. Current listings place spending at roughly S$13 to S$32 per person, although exact dishes and prices should be checked at the operating outlet before visiting.

The warm rice releases the truffle aroma immediately, while the raw fish keeps the bowl from becoming too heavy. It is less traditional than the other choices in this guide, but the contrast between warm rice and cool sashimi gives the bowl a memorable identity.

A Chirashi Don Fix With More Fragrance

This is the bowl we would choose when standard soy-seasoned chirashi feels too predictable. The truffle oil adds depth, while the salmon, tuna and other cubed fish keep enough freshness in the bowl to balance the richer base.

The setting is functional and casual, so dinner is more about flavour and value than lingering over drinks. Staff service is straightforward, making Chirashi King Kong better for a quick evening meal than a long celebratory dinner.

8. Shinjuku Restaurant Keeps Chirashi Don Comfortingly Traditional

The storefront of Shinjuku Restaurant at Cuppage Plaza, a long-standing Japanese dining spot for your traditional Chirashi Don.

When our team settled into Shinjuku Restaurant, this casual Japanese eatery at Cuppage Plaza, the room felt relaxed and familiar, with attentive staff who gave us time to browse the large menu without making dinner feel rushed.

The Chirashi Don arrived with assorted sashimi laid over Japanese rice, keeping the focus on the freshness and natural flavour of the fish. We enjoyed how the richer salmon contrasted with the firmer tuna and lighter slices of sashimi, while a small touch of soy sauce and wasabi gave the bowl enough seasoning without overwhelming it.

A Traditional Chirashi

This is not a bara chirashi made with marinated diced sashimi, so we would not order it expecting small cubes of fish mixed through the rice. Shinjuku serves its seafood as assorted sashimi over rice, making each slice easier to appreciate and giving the bowl a more classic Japanese presentation.

The relaxed Cuppage Plaza setting also makes it easy to build a fuller dinner around the bowl, especially with the restaurant’s grilled food, sake and familiar izakaya side dishes. Shinjuku does not currently list an aburi salmon don, although its menu does offer a separate Salmon Don for diners who prefer to keep the meal focused on salmon.

What Separates the Best Chirashi Don From an Average Bowl?

A close-up of a luxurious premium chirashi don bowl loaded with fresh uni, scallops, salmon roe, and assorted sashimi slices.

Fresh fish alone does not guarantee a good chirashi don. The best versions balance sashimi, sushi rice, seasoning and temperature so that the rice remains fluffy, the raw fish stays cool and the soy sauce never hides the natural flavour of the seafood.

Variety also matters, but more toppings are not always better. Tuna, salmon, yellowtail, surf clam and ikura should each contribute something distinct, while garnishes, wasabi and sauces should support the bowl rather than create noise.

For evenings when raw fish is not what we are craving, Singapore Best Restaurants also explores multiple Japanese cuisines with the same attention ingredient balance.

Why Chirashi Deserves the Dinner Table

What our team enjoyed most was how easily chirashi can shift with the mood of the evening. One night it can feel clean and precise, another night richer and more indulgent, but the best versions always come back to the same things: fresh fish, well-seasoned rice and enough restraint to let each ingredient speak clearly.

In a dining scene that moves quickly with every new opening and piece of food news, chirashi remains refreshingly dependable without feeling dated. It still gives us exactly what we want from dinner in Singapore: choice, freshness and a sense that even a simple combination of sashimi and rice can feel genuinely considered.

Singapore Best Restaurants Team