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Reno’s love affair with sushi stretches well beyond simple California rolls. Money-saving all-you-can-eat sushi pairs beautifully with happy hour specials, and you can enjoy some pristine nigiri with tablecloths, candles, and mountain views. From neighborhood favorites tucked away to destination counters inside major resorts, the city’s best all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants show off with a playful sense of abundance.
For first-timers, the breadth can be surprising: teppanyaki theatrics one night, thirty-plus nigiri options the next. Reno’s top rooms pair volume with care—and well-sourced seafood. Below are three reliable anchors for a great sushi circuit in Reno that our readers love. Go ahead and pick the mood that fits your night…

From sushi rolls to street tacos, your favorite food spots for the 2025 Reno Food Guide. (Getty Images Pro)
Tokyo Sushi
1999 S. Virginia St
Tokyo Sushi operates in Reno’s main drag with a fast-moving, value-forward approach that helped cement the city’s reputation for abundant, approachable sushi. Its menu highlights the deep sushi playbook—appetizers, baked and deep-fried rolls, long rolls that are both raw and cooked, nigiri, hand rolls, and desserts—paired with online ordering for days when you’d rather feast at home.
Tokyo Sushi is best known for its all-you-can-eat lunch and dinner, which locals love for its variety and speed. It’s open seven days a week from 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Long waits, especially during peak hours, are common. If you plan to visit, it is best to go early or during off-peak times to avoid waiting.
The baked mussels and signature rolls are often recommended by locals, so if you’re visiting, you may consider giving them a try. While it can get crowded and noisy, most diners agree that the quantity and quality of sushi for the price make Tokyo Sushi one of Reno’s favorite casual spots for Japanese food.
Oyster & Sushi Bar on the Sky Terrace
Atlantis Casino Resort Spa, 3800 S. Virginia St
Set on the glass-walled terrace of Atlantis, Oyster & Sushi Bar on the Sky Terrace is Reno’s seafood stage with a view—raw oysters, chowders and bisques, and a sushi program that lists more than fifty types of nigiri and maki, plus curated sake, plum wine, and imported beer. The resort’s dining hours currently run from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and until 11 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, making it a reliable upscale stop for lunch, dinner, or a late dining stop.
A recent menu update credits the culinary leads by name and lays out everything from oyster shooters to a wide sashimi and roll selection, alongside the house’s shellfish focus. Between the seafood bar and the sushi case, it’s easy to build a mixed meal. Reservations are available via major platforms if you want to time the sunset with your seating.
What distinguishes the Sky Terrace experience, beyond the seafood breadth, is the setting itself. The elevated walkway connects the hotel to the main casino and frames Sierra views; it’s one of the few places in town where you can pair all-you-can-eat sushi with resort polish and a wine-savvy service team.
Ijji 2 Sushi & Japanese Steakhouse
4955 S. Virginia St.
Ijji 2 blends two Reno obsessions under one roof: all-you-can-eat sushi and high-energy teppanyaki. The group positions Ijji as a “Reno sushi tradition,” and the Ijji 2 location is their modern flagship for both expansive sushi menus and hibachi dinners with knife-work theatrics. Expect a long list of all-you-can-eat nigiri, specialty rolls, and hot appetizers, plus a teppanyaki lineup that can turn dinner into a show.
If you like to know before you go, Ijji publishes detailed menu pages with categories for dinner rolls, long rolls, nigiri, baked items, and even a dedicated beverages section with signature cocktails and beer on tap. That transparency makes it easy to plan your meal. Ijji currently serves delicious bits from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily, which aligns with their all-day, all-crowd approach.
Because Ijji 2 stays busy, timing can shape your experience. Lunch tends to move quickly and rewards focused ordering; dinner is more leisurely and better for teppanyaki seats if you’re celebrating. Either way, what keeps Ijji near the top of local shortlists is consistency.

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