Travel & Tourism

Aruba's Best Japanese Restaurant Is Hiding Inside a Hyatt Hotel

I’ve spent the last decade traveling for work and play, even living as a digital nomad for a stint, which means I’ve eaten at more hotel restaurants than I care to admit. They’re convenient, sometimes great, often mediocre. So when my partner and I were searching for a date-night spot worth dressing up for during our Aruba trip, I’ll admit I was skeptical that a hotel restaurant could deliver. ShinSen, the brand-new sushi restaurant inside the Hyatt Regency Aruba in Palm Beach, turned out to be one of the best bets I’ve made.

Key takeaways:

  • My honest take on every dish we ordered, from start to finish, based on my date-night dinner at ShinSen.
  • What the menu doesn’t tell you: why the portions, flavor and presentation far exceeded what I anticipated.
  • Practical tips for planning your visit, including who this splurge-worthy dinner suits best, what to wear and how to snag the best table.
  • Prices: Starters $18–$30, signature nigiri $18–$24 for two pieces, specialty rolls $26, chef's specialty dishes $45, desserts $18. Budget roughly $100–150 per person with drinks. Classic rolls start at $9–$14 if you want to experience ShinSen without the splurge. Prices listed are as of February 2026.

Editor's note: The writer was hosted.

Inside ShinSen at the Hyatt Regency Aruba

 The moody dining room at ShinSen comes alive at night with geometric lanterns and lush tropical greenery. Photo credit: April Benshosan
The moody dining room at ShinSen comes alive at night with geometric lanterns and lush tropical greenery. Photo credit: April Benshosan

ShinSen sits in the ZoiA Wing of the Hyatt Regency Aruba Resort Spa & Casino, accessible from the resort lobby in Palm Beach. You don't need to stay at the Hyatt to dine here, which makes it a worthy detour from anywhere on the island.

The design is very topical-meets-Japanese-minimalism. When I walked in, I immediately noticed the warm tones, dark wood lattice ceilings, lanterns, and oversized monstera plants separating the tables and woven rattan chairs. There’s also a long bar counter with padded stools for those who prefer to watch the action. The lighting stays low and golden, the music sits at a volume where you can actually hear each other, and the oversized plants between tables create enough privacy.

The Hyatt Regency Aruba is a gorgeous resort, so if you have time either before or after your reservation, take some time to walk around and get a few photo opps in. Perhaps a pre-dinner stroll around the resort with your partner for photos, or a post-dinner walk on the beach?

SheBuysTravel Tip: We sat in the middle of the restaurant, but the ideal seating was the tables along the open-air edge (those tables were fully occupied by the time we arrived). There, you can dine while taking in the palm-tree-lined view of the resort and ocean. If you want a table with a view, make a reservation in advance.

What’s on the ShinSen Aruba Menu

 The six-piece chefs’ choice nigiri was super fresh and unforgettable. Photo credit: April Benshosan
The six-piece chefs’ choice nigiri was super fresh and unforgettable. Photo credit: April Benshosan

The dining menu covers starters, salads, a raw bar, signature nigiri, classic rolls, specialty rolls, hand rolls, chef's specialty dishes and desserts.

Our waiter Luis walked us through the highlights and told us the team's goal with ShinSen goes beyond serving good fish… They want diners to feel transported to Japan. Between the ambiance and what came out of the kitchen, they delivered on that promise.

Fair warning: the menu undersells the food. While the menu descriptions read minimal, what arrives at the table carries far more complexity than we expected. And that was actually a very pleasant surprise.

The Best Dishes I Tried at ShinSen

Cocktails

 The sake martini (left) and Berry Japanese 75 that kicked off our dinner at ShinSen. Photo credit: April Benshosan
The sake martini (left) and Berry Japanese 75 that kicked off our dinner at ShinSen. Photo credit: April Benshosan

We started with cocktails. I ordered the sake martini, and I need to talk about this drink. Clean sake flavor hits you first, smooth and bright. Then the aftertaste pivots into solidly dirty-martini territory. My partner went with the Berry Japanese 75, a mix of gin, raspberry puree, lime juice, grapefruit soda and agave.

If you’re dining as a couple, I’d recommend ordering one of each and trading sips. The sake martini and the Berry Japanese 75 sit on opposite ends of the flavor spectrum, so you’ll get a full sense of what the bar can do.

Starters

 Our starter spread at ShinSen: the warm mushroom salad (center) along with the tuna crispy rice and miso eggplant. Photo credit: April Benshosan
Our starter spread at ShinSen: the warm mushroom salad (center) along with the tuna crispy rice and miso eggplant. Photo credit: April Benshosan

We ordered three starters to share.

The Miso Eggplant ($18) came out light and refreshing. It definitely wasn’t the heavy, caramelized version you might expect.

The Warm Mushroom Salad ($18) surprised me most. Super-fresh leaves with a crisp bite, topped with meaty shiitake mushrooms delivering serious umami. Lightly dressed, and while the truffle stayed subtle rather than overpowering, the overall flavor tasted incredibly clean. It was one of the freshest salads I've eaten on the island, and the portion could pass as a light meal on its own.

The Tuna Crispy Rice ($30) rounded things out. You can't go wrong with crispy rice done well, and ShinSen nails it. Avocado, scallions and sweet soy layered over perfectly crunchy rice bites finished with sesame oil. It’s a crowd-pleaser and an easy one to share.

Rolls & Nigiri

 The Aruba Roll topped with mango and crispy sweet potato is filling enough to split between two people. Photo credit: April Benshosan
The Aruba Roll topped with mango and crispy sweet potato is filling enough to split between two people. Photo credit: April Benshosan



We went with the Aruba Roll ($26), the house signature. It had spicy salmon, cucumber, mango, jalapeño and crispy sweet potato. The sweet components (mango and sweet potato) play off the saltiness of soy sauce and umami from the fish. This roll fills you up; I'd recommend splitting one or two specialty rolls between two people rather than ordering your own.

For nigiri, we went with the Chef's Choice ($48), six pieces of whatever the chef selects that evening. All the nigiri options sounded wonderful, but we liked the idea of trusting the kitchen. We asked to skip eel (personal preference), and we received a delicious mix of tuna, yellowtail and salmon. Every piece tasted impeccably fresh.

SheBuysTravel Tip:Order one or two specialty rolls to split between two people instead of one each. The portions surprised us; the Aruba Roll alone could serve as a main. Put the savings toward a Sake Martini or the Coconut Rice & Mango dessert, both worth it.

Dessert

 The Coconut Rice and Mango dessert arrived with a side of vanilla ice cream, which was just the right light and refreshing send off after a full sushi dinner. Photo credit: April Benshosan
The Coconut Rice and Mango dessert arrived with a side of vanilla ice cream, which was just the right light and refreshing send off after a full sushi dinner. Photo credit: April Benshosan

We finished with the Coconut Rice & Mango ($18). A rice pudding base with gentle sweetness, coconut and lemongrass leading the flavor. Diced mango topped it with an almost gelatinous, syrupy texture that created a lovely contrast against ice-cold vanilla ice cream.

Although we ordered two, one portion was large enough to share between the both of us.

SheBuysTravel Tip: ShinSen is best suited for a romantic date night or a girls' outing. I spotted one family (what seemed like two parents and a child) but the price point makes it less suited for larger family dinners unless you have a generous budget.

ShinSen Aruba: Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Beautiful, moody atmosphere with lush tropical greenery and woven rattan seating. The vibe makes it one of the better date-night spots on the island.
  • Some portions run larger than expected. The Aruba Roll and Warm Mushroom Salad we ordered could easily feed two.
  • Every dish exceeded its menu description, and the kitchen clearly puts more craft into the food than the writing lets on.
  • The Sake Martini alone merits a visit.
  • Warm, knowledgeable service (shoutout to our waiter Luis).

Cons

  • The price point runs high for Aruba dining, so save this for a night out. Plan for around $80+ per person.
  • The truffle flavor didn't come through on the Warm Mushroom Salad, despite its billing.

FAQs

Is ShinSen Worth It?

Absolutely, especially for a date night or a special evening out with friends. The meal won't come cheap (expect $80–150 per person with drinks), but the sake martini and the super-fresh seafood made the cab ride worth it. Plus, the attentive service makes ShinSen one of the most memorable dining experiences I've had on the island.

Is ShinSen Aruba a good restaurant for couples?

Yes, it’s one of the more romantic dining spots on the island. Couples on honeymoons, anniversaries or date nights will feel like they chose the right spot to celebrate.

Do you need to stay at the Hyatt Regency Aruba to eat at ShinSen?

No, ShinSen is open to non-guests. The restaurant sits in the ZoiA Wing of the Hyatt Regency Aruba Resort Spa & Casino in Palm Beach and is accessible right from the resort lobby, so it’s worth the detour from anywhere on the island. Make a reservation in advance if you want one of the open-air edge tables overlooking the palm trees and ocean.

What are the best dishes at ShinSen Aruba?

For a well-rounded date-night meal, start with the Tuna Crispy Rice and the Warm Mushroom Salad to share, then move on to the signature Aruba Roll and the six-piece Chef’s Choice nigiri. Finish with the Coconut Rice & Mango dessert, which is made for sharing with two spoons. And if you’re drinking, the sake martini is unforgettable.

What’s the dress code at ShinSen Aruba?

Resort chic. A sundress or a nice blouse with linen pants works perfectly for women, while men can opt for a linen button-down or polo with chinos or tailored shorts. The overall vibe is elevated, but not overdone.

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The post Aruba's Best Japanese Restaurant Is Hiding Inside a Hyatt Hotel appeared first on She Buys Travel.

She Buys Travel

This story was originally published May 20, 2026 at 12:21 PM.

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