Kitchen Swaps

Best Soy Sauce Substitute for Teriyaki

For teriyaki, start with Tamari + water. Compare backups, ratios, mistakes, and fixes for soy sauce swaps.

Start here: Tamari + water (2 tsp tamari + 1 tsp water = 1 tbsp soy sauce)

Teriyaki usually needs the substitute to preserve the main job of soy sauce while keeping the salt, sweetness, acidity, or texture close enough that the finished dish still tastes balanced.

Best for: keeping salt, fermented umami, color, and sauce body in stir-fries, fried rice, ramen, teriyaki, marinades, and dipping sauces.

Watch for: sweetness in coconut aminos, sharpness in Worcestershire, thickness in miso, and sodium concentration as sauces reduce.

View the full soy sauce substitute guide for exact ratios, comparison picks, mistake fixes, and dietary notes.

How to choose for Teriyaki

Teriyaki exposes sweetness quickly. Tamari plus water keeps the sauce savory while sugar, mirin, or honey provide the glaze.

Quick picks

Compare the strongest options

Option Fit Why choose it Starting ratio
Tamari + water Best Closest salty umami profile for most recipes. 2 tsp tamari + 1 tsp water
Coconut aminos + salt Good Soy-free option with a sweeter finish. 1 tbsp coconut aminos + pinch salt
Miso + water Conditional Adds body and fermented depth in soups and marinades. 1 tsp miso + 2 tsp water

Common mistakes and fixes

Related cooking goals

Related substitute guides