About Kona Grill
Kona Grill occupies an unusual position in the East Valley dining landscape: a credible sushi program and a credible American grill, operating under the same roof, neither treated as the afterthought. At SanTan Village — right off the 202 San Tan Freeway, sandwiched between Best Buy and Barnes & Noble — the Gilbert location has run this dual act since the mid-2000s and has earned its reputation as the reliable answer when the table cannot agree on a cuisine. The interior is modern-polished: polished concrete floors, tall banquettes, a sushi counter running most of one wall, and a main dining room that absorbs a large group without feeling cavernous.
The sushi bar is the surprise. The roll program has won awards, and the quality is genuinely above what one expects from a chain concept — the Lobster Shanghai, Vegas Roll, and Big Wave rolls are consistently executed, the fish is handled carefully, and the itamae at the counter take the work seriously. For a suburban Arizona sushi bar, the depth and precision exceed the category. For sushi purists accustomed to omakase counters, it is a cheerful rather than religious experience, but the foundation is there.
The American menu runs parallel and competitive. The Kona Grill filet, the macadamia-nut chicken, the spicy noodles with shrimp, and the burger are all treated as primary menu items rather than auxiliary options. Scratch-kitchen preparation, full sourcing detail available on request, and portion sizes calibrated for both the appetizer-and-drink happy-hour crowd and the full-meal dinner crowd. The dessert program — molten chocolate cake and the Kona seasonal cobbler — handles birthday celebrations without fanfare.
Kona Grill's happy-hour program is structurally important to the business. Monday is all-day happy hour, Tuesday through Friday runs 2pm to 6pm, and every night of the week a reverse happy hour runs from 9pm to close — a schedule that captures the after-work SanTan Village crowd and the post-movie audience equally. Prices during happy hour drop to genuinely attractive levels: discounted sushi rolls, $8 cocktails, and a short-menu small-plate program. Full dinner for two with wine runs $80 to $130. Team dinners of six to twelve settle in around $50 per person. With 1,007 Yelp reviews averaging 4.2 stars, the consistency has earned its audience.
Best Occasion: Team Dinner
Kona Grill is the East Valley's most versatile team-dinner room because it eliminates the cuisine-veto problem. The vegetarian gets a sushi-and-noodles meal. The steak-only holdout gets a filet. The mixed group gets shared sushi platters, appetizers, and a decent bar program that supports both cocktails and wine. The private-dining capabilities handle groups up to twenty-four. Service is paced to the table rather than the clock. For a team of eight looking for a cross-cuisine dinner, a sales group entertaining a multi-taste client, or a birthday party where the guest of honor wants both their maki and their ribeye, Kona Grill is the straightforward answer.
Best Occasion for Kona Grill?
Cast your vote — members only
Join free to vote and see community results.
Diner Reviews
Share your experience with the Restaurants for Kings community.
Register to Write a Review