Gluten Free Japan LogoGF Japan
ホーム
アレルギーカードFAQお問い合わせ
ログイン
Back to Home
Yes — at select branches, with care

Is Afuri Gluten Free?

Afuri's standard ramen is not gluten free — the noodles are wheat. But select Afuri branches serve a gluten-free ramen with rice-based noodles, most famously their signature yuzu shiobowl. Here's where to find it and how to order it safely.

Afuri at a Glance for Celiacs

  • Standard ramen noodles — wheat-based, not gluten free
  • Gluten-free ramen (rice noodles) — offered at select branches
  • Yuzu shio broth — light citrus-salt base, the signature GF bowl
  • Available at every location — no, availability varies by branch
  • Dedicated GF kitchen — no, wheat noodles share the kitchen
  • Safe option exists — Yes, if you confirm the GF ramen with staff

Afuri's Gluten-Free Ramen Explained

Afuri is one of the few well-known ramen brands in Tokyo to offer a rice-noodle ramenfor gluten-free diners. It swaps the standard wheat noodles for rice-based noodles and pairs them with Afuri's famous yuzu shio (yuzu-citrus salt) broth.

  • Rice-based noodles instead of wheat
  • Light yuzu shio broth — the signature gluten-free bowl
  • Tare and some toppings can contain wheat soy sauce — confirm the whole bowl
  • Offered at select branches only — availability varies

How to Order Safely

  1. 1

    Confirm the GF ramen is available

    Ask: "Gluten free no ramen wa arimasu ka?" (グルテンフリーのラーメンはありますか? — Do you have gluten-free ramen?). Availability varies by branch, so check before ordering.

  2. 2

    Show a gluten-free allergy card

    Present a Japanese gluten-free allergy card so staff understand you must avoid wheat, including wheat-based soy sauce in the tare and toppings.

  3. 3

    Confirm the whole bowl, not just noodles

    Rice noodles alone are not enough — ask that the broth, tare (seasoning), and toppings are free of wheat soy sauce and other wheat ingredients.

  4. 4

    Ask about cross-contamination

    Afuri cooks wheat noodles in the same kitchen. Ask whether GF noodles are prepared with clean water and utensils to limit cross-contact.

Get a Free Japanese Allergy Card →

Important Caution for Strict Celiacs

Afuri's gluten-free ramen uses rice noodles, but Afuri is a mainstream ramen chain, not a dedicated gluten-free restaurant. Standard wheat noodles are cooked in the same kitchen, so shared water and utensils create a cross-contamination risk. Moderately sensitive diners can enjoy the GF ramen after confirming with staff. Highly sensitive celiacs should weigh that risk or choose a dedicated gluten-free ramen spot — always confirm current protocols in person.

Where to Find GF Ramen in Tokyo

Afuri's rice-noodle ramen is offered at select branches such as Harajuku and Shibuya (Dogenzaka). For the full verified list of celiac-safe ramen, see our guides.

Best Gluten-Free Ramen in Tokyo

Our top verified rice-noodle and celiac-safe ramen restaurants.

View →

Gluten-Free Shibuya Guide

Afuri Dogenzaka, Shinbu Sakiya, and Tokyo's highest concentration of GF spots.

View →

Plan Your Japan Trip

🍜

Tokyo GF Food Tours

Guided food experiences where your guide handles gluten-free requests in Japanese.

📱

Japan eSIM

Stay connected to translate allergen menus and call ahead to branches.

Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Afuri gluten free?

Standard Afuri ramen uses wheat noodles and is not gluten free. But select branches offer a rice-noodle gluten-free ramen — famously the yuzu shio bowl. Confirm availability and preparation with staff.

Which Afuri locations have gluten-free ramen?

Select Tokyo branches such as Afuri Harajuku and Afuri Shibuya (Dogenzaka) offer the rice-noodle option. Availability varies, so call ahead or check in person.

What is Afuri gluten-free ramen made of?

Rice-based noodles in place of wheat, served in Afuri's signature yuzu shio (citrus-salt) broth. Confirm the tare and toppings also avoid wheat soy sauce.

Is Afuri safe for celiacs?

It offers a GF ramen but is not a dedicated gluten-free kitchen. Wheat noodles share the kitchen, so cross-contamination is possible. Moderately sensitive diners can enjoy it after confirming; strict celiacs should weigh the risk.

How do I ask for gluten-free ramen at Afuri?

Ask: "Gluten free no ramen wa arimasu ka?" (グルテンフリーのラーメンはありますか?). Show a Japanese gluten-free allergy card and confirm the whole bowl avoids wheat.

More Gluten-Free Japan Resources

🍜Best GF Ramen🚫Is Ichiran GF?🏙️GF Shibuya🃏Allergy Card
Gluten Free Japan

セリアック病やグルテン不耐症の旅行者が、日本を安全においしく楽しめるようサポートします。

GF特集

  • おすすめGFラーメン
  • おすすめGF寿司
  • おすすめGFカレー
  • パンケーキ&スイーツ

ガイド・ツール

  • ガイド一覧
  • 初心者ガイド
  • 京都ガイド
  • 大阪ガイド
  • 富士・箱根
  • 沖縄ガイド
  • 白馬スキーガイド
  • ニセコスキーガイド
  • ハラール + GFガイド
  • ヴィーガン + GFガイド
  • 無料アレルギーカード
  • よくある質問

アカウント

  • ログイン / 新規登録
  • マイページ
  • 当サイトと検証方法について
  • サポートに問い合わせ

© 2026 Gluten Free Japan. All rights reserved.

当サイトは旅行者向けの一般情報を提供するものであり、医療上の助言ではありません。店舗の対応は変わることがあり、コンタミネーション(混入)のリスクが残る場合もあります。必ずスタッフにご確認ください。 検証方法.