
Kura Sushi
One of Orange County's few remaining conveyor belt sushi restaurants keeps spinning its prices upwards
If we compiled a list of Orange County dining “guilty pleasures” in the early 2020s, Kura Sushi would have been at or near the top. As serious sushi fans, we’re willing to go out of our way for excellent nigiri and rolls, including those at high-quality local omakase destinations such as Sugarfish. By contrast, Kura has been at best uneven since the pandemic – its pricing kept climbing, while its food and service quality dipped enough that we stopped coming in for a while. Thankfully, the chain began recovering in mid-2024, and is now worth recommending again.
Kura opened its first U.S. location in 2008 in Irvine, 13 years after its founding in Osaka, Japan, where it established itself as a “latecomer” to a brilliant system for facilitating food service: conveyor belts. Describing its concept simply as “safe, delicious, cheap,” Kura quickly moves sushi around its restaurants in enclosed display containers, letting guests unseal and pick up individual plates whenever they see something appealing. Touchscreens enable any item to be ordered fresh from the kitchen, but part of the fun comes from grabbing plates and assembling a meal from whatever the conveyor holds.
At its historic best, Kura served B- to C-grade sushi, generally two nigiri pieces per plate, and focused on value. For many years, it maintained its Japanese plate pricing at 100 yen – a number that jumped to 115 yen ($0.80 U.S.) in 2022, with a small number of items at higher 230-250 yen ($1.75 U.S.) price points. By contrast, Orange County prices are currently at a minimum of $3.75 per dish.
Kura’s quality has almost recovered from its worst days, when fish slices were too often thin, dry, and not particularly interesting. These problems were offset somewhat by the chain’s “monthly discoveries,” limited time menu items that include slices of steak (Kagoshima, Miyazaki, and Kyushu wagyu), better breeds of salmon (king and sockeye), alfonsino “kinmedai” with yuzu pepper, and seared garlic skipjack tuna, to name a few. As typified by matcha cream-topped sushi, which was honestly sort of gross, the discoveries became less innovative and interesting as time went on, reducing incentives to return.
Irvine’s pioneering Kura at the Diamond Jamboree plaza is small, with challenging parking at certain times, and service that fluctuated from astonishingly rude after the pandemic to better in recent months. Robots now pointlessly scoot beverage orders around to tables, reducing but not eliminating the need for human service while blocking already cramped aisles. By comparison, a newer Garden Grove location is at least three or four times larger, and there’s never been a wait when we’ve visited.
Throughout 2022 and 2023, Kura was not good enough to recommend, but by mid-2024, it had turned around: Though the prices are higher than ever before, and the service experience is still sort of mid – we blame the robots – the overall food quality has increased to the point where even sushi fans can have satisfying (though B-grade) meals here. If you’re in Orange County and considering sushi, we’d strongly recommend the larger location for the superior seating and lower wait times, but neither place is locally top-tier for anything except convenience and novelty.
Note that Kaisen, a smaller conveyor belt restaurant in Costa Mesa, delivers better value and somewhat better quality for its lower prices. Kaisen has its own issues, and feels like it hasn’t been updated inside in decades, but is worth considering for a similar experience.
Stats
Price: $$-$$$
Service: Conveyor Belt
Open Since: 2008 (OC)
Addresses
2700 Alton Pkwy., Suite 133
Irvine, CA 92606
949.553.0747
13826 Brookhurst St.
Garden Grove, CA 92843
714.583.8068
Instagram: @kurasushi_usa