Ain Soph
Vegan · Cafe · Ginza, Shinjuku, Ikebukuro
An established all-vegan group beloved for fluffy “heavenly” pancakes, hearty mains and a calm, design-forward room. Lovely for brunch or a sit-down dinner.
Tokyo's vegan cafe scene is strongest when you want pancakes, colorful comfort food or a slower brunch. These spots offer the clearest current choices from our restaurant catalogue.
Vegan · Cafe · Ginza, Shinjuku, Ikebukuro
An established all-vegan group beloved for fluffy “heavenly” pancakes, hearty mains and a calm, design-forward room. Lovely for brunch or a sit-down dinner.
Vegan · Cafe · Ginza Loft, Ginza
Bright, casual and modern — colorful vegan omurice, nuggets and “junk food done healthy.” Easy, affordable, and great for a quick shopping-break meal.
Cafe · Omotesando (Shibuya City)
A bright, veggie-forward cafe near Omotesando with clearly-marked vegan options, big salads and all-day brunch. Easy and comfortable for mixed groups.
Vegan · Cafe · Shinjuku-Sanchome
The Shinjuku branch of the Ain Soph family — bright and cafe-like, famous for towering vegan pancakes and parfaits, plus full plant-based lunch and dinner plates.
Ain Soph and 2foods are the simplest choices for strict vegans. At mixed-menu cafes such as Mr. Farmer, check the current menu labels and ask about dairy, egg and honey.
Weekend brunch and dessert visits can be busy, particularly at Ain Soph. Booking or arriving near opening time is sensible when a particular pancake or meal matters to your plans.
Ain Soph is the best-known option in this group, with cafe locations serving its signature vegan pancakes.
No. The page separates fully vegan restaurants from mixed-menu cafes with vegan choices, so check each card and current menu.
Some plant-based-labelled sweets may still use honey. Strict vegans should ask directly when the menu does not specify.