Substrate binding pockets of ω‐transaminase (ω‐TA) consist of a large (L) pocket capable of dual recognition of hydrophobic and carboxyl substituents, and a small (S) pocket displaying a strict steric constraint that permits entry of a substituent no larger than an ethyl group. Despite the unique catalytic utility of ω‐TA enabling asymmetric reductive amination of carbonyl compounds, the severe size exclusion occurring in the S pocket has limited synthetic applications of ω‐TA to access structurally diverse chiral amines and amino acids. Here we report the first example of an ω‐TA whose S pocket shows a non‐canonical steric constraint and readily accommodates up to an n‐butyl substituent. The relaxed substrate specificity of the (S)‐selective ω‐TA, cloned from Paracoccus denitrificans (PDTA), afforded efficient asymmetric syntheses of unnatural amino acids carrying long alkyl side chains such as L ‐norvaline and L ‐norleucine. Molecular modeling using the recently released X‐ray structure of PDTA could pinpoint an exact location of the S pocket which had remained dubious. Entry of a hydrophobic substituent in the L pocket was found to have the S pocket accept up to an ethyl substituent, reminiscent of the canonical steric constraint. In contrast, binding of a carboxyl group to the L pocket induced a slight movement of V153 away from the small‐pocket‐forming residues. The resulting structural change elicited excavation of the S pocket, leading to formation of a narrow tunnel‐like structure allowing accommodation of linear alkyl groups of carboxylate‐bearing substrates. To verify the active site model, we introduced site‐directed mutagenesis to six active site residues and examined whether the point mutations alleviated the steric constraint in the S pocket. Consistent with the molecular modeling results, the V153A variant assumed an elongated S pocket and accepted even an n‐hexyl substituent. Our findings provide precise structural information on substrate binding to the active site of ω‐TA, which is expected to benefit rational redesign of substrate specificity of ω‐TA.