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The Best Outdoor Pizza Ovens

A portable pizza oven that heats up to 800-plus degrees and turns your backyard into a pizzeria? It’s a pizza lover’s dream come true—but only if you buy the right model.

Headshot of Kate Shannon LevineHeadshot of Sarah SandlerHeadshot of Miye Bromberg
By Kate Shannon Levine, Sarah Sandler & Miye Bromberg

Last Updated July 16, 2025

Editor&aposs Note:Update, July 2025

The Ooni Koda 2 is our new winner. This powerful 14-inch oven makes attractively charred, tender pizzas in minutes and is just the right size for most home cooks. For those who want more the ability to make up to 18-inch pizzas, the Ooni Koda 2 Pro is our favorite larger option.A pizza oven is the perfect gift for the pizza fanatic in your life. For more ideas, check out our Holiday Gift Guide.

What You Need To Know

The best outdoor pizza ovens run on propane, reach an ambient temperature of at least 800 degrees Fahrenheit, and have features that help distribute heat more evenly than others. Our favorite is the Ooni Koda 2. With a 14-inch baking stone, it makes beautiful pizzas that are just the right size. If you’d like a larger pizza oven, we also like the Ooni Koda 2 Pro, which can accommodate pizzas up to 18 inches in diameter. For a lighter-weight, more easily transportable pizza oven, we recommend the smaller Ooni Koda 12.

You can make great pizza in a home oven. But because the temperatures of most ovens top out at 500 degrees, it’s hard to get truly professional-quality results. For that, you need temperatures of 800 degrees or more. One option is to install a dedicated pizza oven in your kitchen or backyard, but those can be big, expensive, and more permanent than many people want. Another option is to get an indoor (electric) pizza oven. Our favorites, the Breville Smart Oven Pizzaiolo and the Ooni Volt 12 Electric Pizza Oven, get incredibly hot and make truly impressive pizza. But they’re also relatively expensive.

A Neapolitan-style pizza being removed from the Ooni Koda 2 Pro outdoor pizza oven using a metal pizza peel.A Neapolitan-style pizza topped with cheese and pepperoni.Reviews editor wearing a hat and apron tops an uncooked pizza with shredded mozzarella cheese while it is sitting on a metal pizza peel.

We made (and ate) a lot of pizza as we tested these ovens. The best models produced pies with crisp, leopard-spotted crusts and tender interiors.

The third option is to get an outdoor pizza oven. A good outdoor pizza oven is one of the best ways to take your pizza-making game to the next level. Powered by propane, wood, charcoal, wood pellets, or a combination of these fuels, the best models perform just as well as our favorite indoor pizza ovens, if not better. They are usually easy to assemble and a bit less expensive to boot. Compared to a permanent brick pizza oven, these pizza ovens are also relatively portable, with the smallest models easy enough to pack into a car to bring to a tailgate or campground. That said, the majority of the models we’ve tested aren’t exactly lightweight, as these ovens require some heft for insulation and stability—nobody wants a screaming-hot appliance to blow over in a gust of wind. Most weigh from 20 to 60 pounds, though we’ve tested models as heavy as 80 pounds.

Person holding a metal pizza peel places a cheese pizza on a wood cutting board.
Pizza ovens that reached an ambient temperature of at least 800 degrees helped us to achieve professional-quality pizzas with crusts that were beautifully browned on the outside and tender on the inside.

This means that you might need a friend to help you move your oven—something you could have to do more often than you’d think (see below, “What’s the best way to store my pizza oven?”). For these reasons, we recommend taking both your strength and your storage availability into consideration before choosing an outdoor pizza oven—the larger the model, the heavier it will be and the more space it will occupy (see below, “What Size Pizza Oven Should I Get?”). 

Cooking pizza in an outdoor pizza oven can be a bit of an adventure—there’s a learning curve to using every model we tested, and you’ll need to tinker a little with your recipes and timing to get the best results. But we think that’s part of the fun! Once you get the hang of using one of these ovens, the results speak for themselves. In just 2 minutes, you can produce perfect Neapolitan-style pizzas with charred, leopard-spotted crusts and tender, chewy interiors. The best ovens can be used to make foods beyond your standard pie. By adjusting the oven’s heat levels, you can not only make different types of pizza (Detroit- or New York–style, for example) but other baked goods and even roast meat, vegetables, or fruit.

Outdoor pizza ovens are not for everyone—their price and size can be prohibitive. But if you love pizza and make it regularly, these ovens are a great investment.

Reviews editor wearing a hat uses pizza peel to load a cheese pizza into the Ooni Koda 2 Pro outdoor pizza oven.
Some of the ovens that we tested got as hot as 1200 degrees, cooking a pizza in less than just 2 minutes.

What Are the Different Types of Outdoor Pizza Ovens?

There are two main types of outdoor pizza ovens, and each type is determined by the kind of fuel (or fuels) used. Ovens that use propane gas are the most common. Most come with burners that you attach to a standard 20-pound propane tank—the type you might use for a gas grill or flat-top grill—though a few use smaller 14- to 16-ounce tanks. Multifuel ovens use wood, charcoal, and/or sometimes even wood pellets, which you add to a special fuel chamber in the oven and light. Most can also be used with a gas burner, typically sold separately.

As you’ll read, we think gas ovens are the best choice for most people. They’re very easy to use, allowing you to more reliably achieve and maintain the temperatures you need for different types of pizzas and other foods. They’re also the easiest to clean, leaving no ash to remove afterward.

A metal pizza oven sits on a table in the background; it is attached to a 20-pound propane tank.Pizza oven fuel chamber with a pile of flaming wood.

Pizza ovens use different types of fuel to produce heat; propane and wood are two of the most common.

Multifuel ovens can perform just as well as gas ovens; our top-rated multifuel oven attained even hotter temperatures when loaded with wood than it did when fueled by propane, producing beautifully browned, tender pizza at jaw-dropping ambient (air) temperatures of 900 to 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit. But there’s a longer learning curve to using wood, charcoal, and pellets than there is to using gas. You’ll need to chop any wood down to size in order to fit the relatively small fuel chambers, and it takes some experience to know how much of any of these fuels you need to achieve different temperatures, and in which configurations. You’ll also need to keep feeding the fire in order to maintain the temperatures you want—the fuel chambers for these ovens are often fairly small and can hold only so much wood or charcoal at a time. (In some of the models we’ve tested, the fuel chambers were too small to accommodate enough wood or charcoal to get hot enough to reach the high temperatures needed to make Neapolitan pizza.) And of course, wood, charcoal, and pellets are messier than gas, leaving ash and sometimes half-burnt debris to clean up afterward. 

A well-browned chicken sits in a roasting pan inside a metal pizza oven. A probe is inserted in the breast of the chicken to monitor temperature.
Outdoor pizza ovens aren’t just for pizza; some are large enough to roast vegetables or chicken (as seen here) or even bake loaves of bread.

More importantly, wood, charcoal, and pellets won’t improve the quality of your pizza, which cooks too quickly to pick up any wood or coal flavor. Charcoal can be great for low-and-slow cooking such as roasting meat, and you could use wood for shorter cooking stints, such as roasting vegetables. But these are secondary uses for a pizza oven, not to mention ones that you can also carry out much more easily with a gas-powered oven. There’s no harm in getting a multifuel oven if you enjoy the challenges of live-fire cooking or like working with charcoal and pellets—the best options are certainly fun to use, and we’ve highly recommended several over the years. Just know that you’ll often pay more for these fairly limited gains in versatility, especially if you want to add on a gas burner.

What Size Pizza Oven Should I Get?

Outdoor pizza ovens come in a variety of sizes, usually defined by the width of their decks, or baking stones, which can vary from 12 to 18 inches. We think that a pizza oven with a 13- to 14-inch stone is best for most people. It can accommodate 12- and 13-inch pizzas, the size of pizzas that most home cooks are likely to make, while still providing a bit of wiggle room on either side of the baking stone when loading, rotating, and unloading them. A 14-inch pizza oven typically weighs around 30 pounds—heavy enough to stay put on a table but not too difficult to take on the go or move inside in inclement weather. (That said, some we’ve tested have weighed as much as 80 pounds.) These medium-size ovens have prices that fall toward the middle of the range, with most costing about $400 to $500. The Ooni Koda 2 is our top pick for most people. 

Seven outdoor pizza ovens lined up next to each other.
Some ovens were big and bulky while others were impressively slim and lightweight. No matter the style, all of them were pretty easy to put together.

Some newer, larger models have stones from 16 to 18 inches in width. Bigger ovens can be more versatile, giving you the option to make larger pies, multiple small pies, or several different foods at once. However, they take up more room and are heavier, typically weighing about 45 pounds, so you may need assistance moving them. They also cost more. Still, if you have the space and extra cash—at least $600—a larger oven may be well worthwhile. The Ooni Koda 2 Pro is our favorite larger outdoor pizza oven. 

On the other hand, models with 11- to 12-inch stones are best for smaller spaces and for cooks who want a truly portable option. Because these ovens are more compact, they make correspondingly smaller pies, but they’re also easier to store and transport, weighing closer to just 20 pounds. They usually range in price from $200 to $500, with the average price hovering around $400. The Ooni Koda 12 is our favorite smaller, lighter-weight option.

What to Look For

  • High—and Easily Adjusted—Temperatures: A good pizza oven should be able to heat both the baking stone and air in the oven to temperatures higher than those a conventional oven generates. We preferred models that were capable of producing an ambient temperature of at least 800 degrees and a stone temperature of at least 700 degrees. (The Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana, the Italian institute that regulates the protected-origin standards for making Neapolitan pizza, recommends ambient temperatures of about 905 degrees and stone temperatures of about 716 degrees. But we’ve found the slightly lower temperatures above to work well for home use—even when making Neapolitan pizza, a type of pizza that cooks especially hot and fast.) In an oven that can produce these scorching-hot temperatures, pizzas cook extremely quickly—from 90 seconds to just a few minutes. Their crusts are chewy yet tender with great browning on the underside and pleasant char around the edges. More heat isn’t necessarily better, though. Some of the models we’ve tested got even hotter than 800 degrees, generating ambient temperatures of up to 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit. These super-high temperatures aren’t necessarily helpful, as they increase the risk that your pizza’s exterior will burn before the inside can cook through properly, making it more challenging to produce edible results. Plus, some types of pizza, such as Detroit- or New York–style, bake at lower cooking temperatures. For this reason, we liked models that were capable of reaching high temperatures but that also allowed us to adjust the heat level so we could cook at lower temperatures.
A hand holds a digital data logger, which reads a temperature of 988.2 degrees.A hand holds an infrared thermometer and points it at the baking stone of a pizza oven. The temperature reads 808.6 degrees.

We used a variety of methods to monitor the temperatures of the air and baking stone inside each pizza oven.

  • Models Fueled with Propane Gas: These were the easiest to use. All we had to do was connect the regulators and hoses attached to the ovens to standard 20-pound propane tanks, just as we do with gas grills. A few models required smaller 14- to 16-ounce propane tanks or the purchase of an additional converter to connect to 20-pound tanks. To ignite each oven, we simply pressed in a dial, twisted it to high, held it for a few seconds, and released it when we saw a flame. Once the ovens were hot, which took 20 to 30 minutes depending on the model, we could adjust the heat by turning the dial. 
  • Exposed Gas Burners: For an oven to work well, its burner has to heat the baking stone plus the air inside the oven, and its walls and roof have to direct the heat back onto the pizzas as they bake. In the ovens we tested, the gas burners were positioned either beneath the stone or exposed on the sides and/or at the rear of the oven. We preferred models with burners that were exposed. The flames generated by these models arced up and over the baking stones, making for hotter ovens, and browning the pizzas more effectively too.
Outdoor pizza oven that has flames coming from gas burners on the left and right sides.
We preferred pizza ovens where the gas burners were exposed either at the rear or sides of the oven, like the one seen here, over ovens where the burners were positioned under the stone.
  • Removable Stone: All the ovens we’ve tested come with cordierite baking stones, which sit in the floor of the oven. While most of the ovens had stones that could easily be removed without special tools, a few were fixed in place. There aren’t many occasions that require taking the stone out of the oven, but being able to remove the stone does make cleanup (of burnt flour or stuck-on cheese, for example) a bit simpler. With a fixed stone, your cleaning options are limited to heating the oven to burn off debris and vacuuming or sweeping up that debris once the oven is cool.
Pepperoni pizza cooking in the Ooni Koda 2 Pro outdoor pizza oven.
Burnt flour and melted cheese can get stuck to the baking stone of your pizza oven. Models with removable stones were easier to clean.

What to Avoid

  • Gas Burners Under the Baking Stone: Propane-fueled models with gas burners under their baking stones just didn’t perform as well. After preheating these ovens on high for 20 minutes, the maximum amount of time recommended by their manufacturers, the average temperatures of their baking stones were about 580 and 625 degrees. Though hotter than a stone heated in a home oven, both were cooler than the 700-plus degrees we wanted. (Because most companies caution that heating the empty ovens for too long can damage them, we didn’t extend the recommended 20-minute preheating time.) Using these ovens to bake pizza was akin to cooking the pizzas in a skillet on a stovetop burner; the pizzas baked from the bottom up and the crusts absorbed a lot of heat in the time it took the toppings to cook through. All the pizza crusts—whether they were meant to be chewy thin crust or light, airy Neapolitan-style—dried out a little and were even a bit crunchy. They tasted good, but they weren’t true to the intended style. 

The Tests: 

  • Make Thin-Crust Pizza using propane as a fuel source
  • Make Neapolitan-style pizza using propane as a fuel source
  • With multifuel models, make Neapolitan-style pizza using wood and, if the ovens can accommodate it, charcoal
  • Monitor the temperature of the baking stone, internal air temperature just above the cooking surface, and the ceiling of the oven throughout all tests

How We Rated

  • Performance: We evaluated the quality of the pizzas we made with each oven.
  • Ease of Use: We considered how easy it was to set up the ovens, connect them to propane tanks, and ignite them. We also rated the models on how easy they were to use with other fuels (wood, charcoal) where applicable. We evaluated how easy it was to produce evenly cooked pizzas, including whether there was enough room to launch, rotate, and remove them. 

FAQs

The multifuel outdoor pizza ovens we tested differed significantly from the wood-fired ovens you'll find in many pizza restaurants. They hold a lot less wood, and the wood they do hold must be cut down into much smaller pieces to fit the fuel chambers. As a result, it’s hard to reach or maintain the high temperatures we prefer for making pizza. Professional pizza ovens use large logs and burn them down to embers in a way that makes for hotter, more even cooking: The wood is lit near the door of the oven, thereby heating up the baking surface at the front of the oven, and then the embers are pushed to the back. These larger fires and piles of coals burn longer and are easier to maintain than the smaller piles generated by the home-use versions. One similarity between wood-fired ovens of all types? Pizzas cook so quickly in both home and commercial versions that they never pick up much wood flavor.

From years of testing, however, we’ve learned that outdoor pizza ovens can be damaged when exposed to the elements for extended periods of time–rain, snow, wind, and humidity can all wreak havoc with their parts. (Chimneys and any uncoated metal parts can rust, burners can malfunction, and stones can develop mold.) Many pizza oven manufacturers say that you can leave your pizza oven outside as long as it’s covered–most sell dedicated covers that are designed to fit your oven perfectly and protect all parts from inclement weather. At the very least, we definitely agree that getting a cover for your oven is a good idea. Put it on the oven as soon as you’ve finished cooking and the oven has cooled down. But even a good cover can’t completely protect your oven from the elements–we’ve seen rust and mold form even when our ovens were under wraps. To give your oven the longest lifespan, we recommend that you move it inside, to a dry, sheltered location, whenever it’s not in use.

We have only tested baking peels intended for use with a regular oven. But we plan to test smaller peels and perforated peels for outdoor pizza ovens soon. We know that many outdoor pizza oven users prefer them, since most other peels are too large.

We like using our Neapolitan-Style Pizza recipe and our Thin-Crust Pizza recipe for crispier, New York–style pies. Just bear in mind that pies cook more quickly in an outdoor pizza oven than they do in a conventional one.

Everything We Tested

Good 3 Stars out of 3.
Fair 2 Stars out of 3.
Poor 1 Star out of 3.

Highly Recommended

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

WinnerOoni Koda 2

The Ooni Koda 2 is a breeze to set up and has a 14-inch stone, providing welcome wiggle room for making 12- and 13-inch pizzas, the size of pizza you’re most likely to make at home. The powerful gas burner, located in the rear of the oven, made attractive, spotty-browned, tender pizzas in just 2 minutes. The oven also has a “flamekeeper visor shield” built into the opening of the oven to help direct heat flow; we found that this helped brown toppings especially well. Because the heat overhead can be so strong, be sure to keep a close eye on your pizza as it’s cooking to avoid burning. Overall, the oven weighs about 30 pounds, which makes it sit securely on a table, but some users may need assistance moving it around.

Model Number: US Koda 2 UU-P2D1002 8mbar Black (US Propane)

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 30.4 lb

Dimensions: 18 x 20.75 x 12.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 822°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 14 in

Maximum Ambient Temperature: 874°F

Price at Time of Testing: $449.00

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

The Ooni Koda 2 is a breeze to set up and has a 14-inch stone, providing welcome wiggle room for making 12- and 13-inch pizzas, the size of pizza you’re most likely to make at home. The powerful gas burner, located in the rear of the oven, made attractive, spotty-browned, tender pizzas in just 2 minutes. The oven also has a “flamekeeper visor shield” built into the opening of the oven to help direct heat flow; we found that this helped brown toppings especially well. Because the heat overhead can be so strong, be sure to keep a close eye on your pizza as it’s cooking to avoid burning. Overall, the oven weighs about 30 pounds, which makes it sit securely on a table, but some users may need assistance moving it around.

Model Number: US Koda 2 UU-P2D1002 8mbar Black (US Propane)

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 30.4 lb

Dimensions: 18 x 20.75 x 12.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 822°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 14 in

Maximum Ambient Temperature: 874°F

Price at Time of Testing: $449.00

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Ooni Koda 16 Gas-Powered Pizza Oven

This outdoor pizza oven offers the convenience of propane and the ability to cook pizzas up to 16 inches in diameter. It has a powerful L-shaped burner located along the left and rear of the oven, which heats both the stone and the air in the oven effectively. We consistently produced pizzas that were perfectly cooked on top and had beautiful char and spotting on their undersides. Because the back left corner gets hotter than the rest of the oven, it’s important to rotate the pizzas so that they cook evenly. The oven is impressively sleek, and its legs fold so that it’s fairly compact in storage or transit, but it’s bulkier and about twice as heavy as the Ooni Koda 12.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 40.1 lb

Dimensions: 23.2 x 25 x 14.7 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 775°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 16 in

Price at Time of Testing: $599.00

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

This outdoor pizza oven offers the convenience of propane and the ability to cook pizzas up to 16 inches in diameter. It has a powerful L-shaped burner located along the left and rear of the oven, which heats both the stone and the air in the oven effectively. We consistently produced pizzas that were perfectly cooked on top and had beautiful char and spotting on their undersides. Because the back left corner gets hotter than the rest of the oven, it’s important to rotate the pizzas so that they cook evenly. The oven is impressively sleek, and its legs fold so that it’s fairly compact in storage or transit, but it’s bulkier and about twice as heavy as the Ooni Koda 12.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 40.1 lb

Dimensions: 23.2 x 25 x 14.7 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 775°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 16 in

Price at Time of Testing: $599.00

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Best Smaller Outdoor Pizza OvenOoni Koda 12 Gas-Powered Pizza Oven

This compact, portable gas-fired oven is our recommendation for home cooks who want to cook excellent 12-inch pizzas outdoors quickly and easily. A gas flame located at the rear of the oven heated up the baking stone relatively evenly while also heating the inside of the oven. An angled heat deflector on the roof of the oven helped direct heat to the tops of the pizzas as they baked. It was easy to ignite the flame and adjust the heat using a dial located at the rear of the oven. As with most of the models, you’ll need to rotate pizzas as they bake to ensure an even cook.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 20.20 lb

Dimensions: 15 x 22.25 x 11.25 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 753°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $399.00

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

This compact, portable gas-fired oven is our recommendation for home cooks who want to cook excellent 12-inch pizzas outdoors quickly and easily. A gas flame located at the rear of the oven heated up the baking stone relatively evenly while also heating the inside of the oven. An angled heat deflector on the roof of the oven helped direct heat to the tops of the pizzas as they baked. It was easy to ignite the flame and adjust the heat using a dial located at the rear of the oven. As with most of the models, you’ll need to rotate pizzas as they bake to ensure an even cook.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 20.20 lb

Dimensions: 15 x 22.25 x 11.25 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 753°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $399.00

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Best Larger Outdoor Pizza OvenOoni Koda 2 Pro

This large gas pizza oven was simple to set up, so we were able to get cooking in no time. It has an 18-inch stone, and we appreciated that this extra space allows for pizzas anywhere from 12 to 16 inches. Its battery-powered ignition makes lighting the flame quick and easy. Unlike most other ovens that have a single rear burner, this oven has gas burners on the left and right sides. This setup means that the oven gets hot—hotter than we think most home cooks might need—with an ambient temperature that measured as high as 1,200 degrees. The flame position also means that at any given time, two sides of the pizzas are exposed to the flame instead of one, so pizzas cook especially fast. You’ll need to keep a close eye on your pies and do some tinkering to avoid burning the crust’s exterior before the inside cooks through; with a little practice, we were able to produce beautifully browned, chewy pizzas in less than 2 minutes. This oven comes with a Bluetooth-enabled temperature hub, which reads out ambient temperatures from inside the oven and delivers them to the display or the Ooni app. We found this hub easy to attach and roughly accurate, helping us dial in the right temperatures for different types of pizza and other food. Because the oven is so large, it weighs nearly 60 pounds, so you’ll want a friend to help move it into place or to move it indoors. If you have the space and money, it’s a great oven, providing additional versatility and the ability to make both small and large pizzas (and other foods).

Model Number: UU-P2D900 28mbar Black (US Propane)

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 58.4 lb

Dimensions: 25 x 25 x 15 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 748°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 18 in

Maximum Ambient Temperature: 1,205°F

Price at Time of Testing: $749.00

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

This large gas pizza oven was simple to set up, so we were able to get cooking in no time. It has an 18-inch stone, and we appreciated that this extra space allows for pizzas anywhere from 12 to 16 inches. Its battery-powered ignition makes lighting the flame quick and easy. Unlike most other ovens that have a single rear burner, this oven has gas burners on the left and right sides. This setup means that the oven gets hot—hotter than we think most home cooks might need—with an ambient temperature that measured as high as 1,200 degrees. The flame position also means that at any given time, two sides of the pizzas are exposed to the flame instead of one, so pizzas cook especially fast. You’ll need to keep a close eye on your pies and do some tinkering to avoid burning the crust’s exterior before the inside cooks through; with a little practice, we were able to produce beautifully browned, chewy pizzas in less than 2 minutes. This oven comes with a Bluetooth-enabled temperature hub, which reads out ambient temperatures from inside the oven and delivers them to the display or the Ooni app. We found this hub easy to attach and roughly accurate, helping us dial in the right temperatures for different types of pizza and other food. Because the oven is so large, it weighs nearly 60 pounds, so you’ll want a friend to help move it into place or to move it indoors. If you have the space and money, it’s a great oven, providing additional versatility and the ability to make both small and large pizzas (and other foods).

Model Number: UU-P2D900 28mbar Black (US Propane)

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 58.4 lb

Dimensions: 25 x 25 x 15 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 748°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 18 in

Maximum Ambient Temperature: 1,205°F

Price at Time of Testing: $749.00

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Gozney Arc

This oven got plenty hot and made attractive Neapolitan-style pizzas with beautiful, blistered crusts. Its gas burner is located on the left side, so the oven is naturally a bit hotter on that side than on the right. As with most of the gas ovens we’ve tested, you’ll need to rotate your pizza every 20 to 30 seconds to cook it evenly. While most pizza ovens have rectangular, slot-like openings, requiring you to approach the oven head-on with your pizza peel, this oven has a wide, curved opening that allows you to go in at an angle from either side. As a result, it was especially easy to navigate a pizza peel to rotate pizzas of up to 14 inches in diameter. Unlike many other outdoor pizza ovens, this model has small rubber feet instead of tall legs, so it feels especially stable. The digital temperature display that’s built into the front of the oven reflects the stone’s temperature and is a helpful guide for hitting the ideal temperatures for making different types of pizza. A few minor issues This oven is on the heavier side for its size, weighing almost 50 pounds and making it tricky for most people to transport, and that extra weight doesn’t come with the added benefit of more cooking space. And the baking stone that comes with the oven cannot be removed without nullifying the warranty (although you can buy a special stone replacement kit from Gozney). As a result, cleanup is a bit more complicated Instead of removing the stone and simply scraping off residue, the company instructs cooks to heat the oven to burn off debris and then vacuum it up once cool.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 47 lb

Dimensions: 16 x 19.25 x 12.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 796°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 14 in

Maximum Ambient Temperature: 978°F

Price at Time of Testing: $700

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

This oven got plenty hot and made attractive Neapolitan-style pizzas with beautiful, blistered crusts. Its gas burner is located on the left side, so the oven is naturally a bit hotter on that side than on the right. As with most of the gas ovens we’ve tested, you’ll need to rotate your pizza every 20 to 30 seconds to cook it evenly. While most pizza ovens have rectangular, slot-like openings, requiring you to approach the oven head-on with your pizza peel, this oven has a wide, curved opening that allows you to go in at an angle from either side. As a result, it was especially easy to navigate a pizza peel to rotate pizzas of up to 14 inches in diameter. Unlike many other outdoor pizza ovens, this model has small rubber feet instead of tall legs, so it feels especially stable. The digital temperature display that’s built into the front of the oven reflects the stone’s temperature and is a helpful guide for hitting the ideal temperatures for making different types of pizza. A few minor issues This oven is on the heavier side for its size, weighing almost 50 pounds and making it tricky for most people to transport, and that extra weight doesn’t come with the added benefit of more cooking space. And the baking stone that comes with the oven cannot be removed without nullifying the warranty (although you can buy a special stone replacement kit from Gozney). As a result, cleanup is a bit more complicated Instead of removing the stone and simply scraping off residue, the company instructs cooks to heat the oven to burn off debris and then vacuum it up once cool.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 47 lb

Dimensions: 16 x 19.25 x 12.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 796°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 14 in

Maximum Ambient Temperature: 978°F

Price at Time of Testing: $700

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Solo Stove Pi Prime

The first propane-only model from Solo is sleek, incredibly easy to set up, and straightforward to use. It requires virtually zero assembly You just remove it from the box, insert the pizza stone, hook up to gas, and start. This oven made beautiful pizzas that were spotty and charred on the outside and soft and chewy on the inside in just under two minutes. Similar to the Solo Stove Pi Pizza Oven, the flame is located at the rear of the oven, so you need to rotate the pizza as it cooks to achieve even cooking. The knob on the front makes it easy to turn the heat up or down. Depending on the style of pizza you’re making, you’ll need to tinker with what level is ideal for you and your dough. This model is a great alternative to our favorite smaller model, making pies that are up to 13 inches in diameter. The medium-high to high heat is quite strong, so keep a very close eye on your pizza as you cook.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 30 lb

Dimensions: 20.5 x 20.5 x 15.13 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 732°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 13 in

Price at Time of Testing: $349.99

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

The first propane-only model from Solo is sleek, incredibly easy to set up, and straightforward to use. It requires virtually zero assembly You just remove it from the box, insert the pizza stone, hook up to gas, and start. This oven made beautiful pizzas that were spotty and charred on the outside and soft and chewy on the inside in just under two minutes. Similar to the Solo Stove Pi Pizza Oven, the flame is located at the rear of the oven, so you need to rotate the pizza as it cooks to achieve even cooking. The knob on the front makes it easy to turn the heat up or down. Depending on the style of pizza you’re making, you’ll need to tinker with what level is ideal for you and your dough. This model is a great alternative to our favorite smaller model, making pies that are up to 13 inches in diameter. The medium-high to high heat is quite strong, so keep a very close eye on your pizza as you cook.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 30 lb

Dimensions: 20.5 x 20.5 x 15.13 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 732°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 13 in

Price at Time of Testing: $349.99

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Ooni Karu 2 Pro

This large multifuel oven was easy to set up and a pleasure to use. Capable of achieving very high temperatures using both wood and propane, it made gorgeous pizza with perfectly distributed char spots and tender interiors. The oven’s spacious interior and relatively tall ceiling (measuring about 6.3 inches high) give it a little more versatility than smaller ovens with shallower profiles, providing plenty of room for cooking not only different types (and sizes) of pizzas, but also vegetables and a 4.5-pound roast chicken. We appreciated how simple it was to switch between the propane attachment and the fuel chamber used for wood, charcoal, and wood pellets too. And we liked the digital temperature hub, which reported ambient temperatures fairly accurately, giving us a good sense of when our oven was hot enough for different tasks. We also liked that the hub let us use a second probe to monitor meat temperatures. The app that accompanies the hub was simple to use, though because it’s connected to the hub via Bluetooth, we lost the signal whenever we were more than 20 feet away. Downsides were few. Because this oven is so large, it is quite heavy and a bit cumbersome to move and store. And as with other multifuel ovens, it can be a little trickier to dial in the right heat levels when using wood, charcoal, or pellets than when using propane, and it requires more babysitting to maintain those heat levels once they’re established. Cleanup can also be a touch messier, too, as you’ll need to remove the fuel chamber and knock out any ashes or half-burnt wood or charcoal and sweep out the oven after each use. But otherwise, this is a wonderful oven that can produce great food with any type of fuel.

Model Number: UU-P2EE00

Fuel: Wood, charcoal, wood pellets, propane (attachment sold separately)

Weight: 60 lb

Dimensions: 20 x 34 x 32.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 760.4°F (wood), 759.4°F (propane)

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 15 in

Maximum Ambient Temperature: 1,069°F (wood), 1,062°F (propane)

Price at Time of Testing: $989.00 ($849.00 for oven, $140.00 for burner)

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

This large multifuel oven was easy to set up and a pleasure to use. Capable of achieving very high temperatures using both wood and propane, it made gorgeous pizza with perfectly distributed char spots and tender interiors. The oven’s spacious interior and relatively tall ceiling (measuring about 6.3 inches high) give it a little more versatility than smaller ovens with shallower profiles, providing plenty of room for cooking not only different types (and sizes) of pizzas, but also vegetables and a 4.5-pound roast chicken. We appreciated how simple it was to switch between the propane attachment and the fuel chamber used for wood, charcoal, and wood pellets too. And we liked the digital temperature hub, which reported ambient temperatures fairly accurately, giving us a good sense of when our oven was hot enough for different tasks. We also liked that the hub let us use a second probe to monitor meat temperatures. The app that accompanies the hub was simple to use, though because it’s connected to the hub via Bluetooth, we lost the signal whenever we were more than 20 feet away. Downsides were few. Because this oven is so large, it is quite heavy and a bit cumbersome to move and store. And as with other multifuel ovens, it can be a little trickier to dial in the right heat levels when using wood, charcoal, or pellets than when using propane, and it requires more babysitting to maintain those heat levels once they’re established. Cleanup can also be a touch messier, too, as you’ll need to remove the fuel chamber and knock out any ashes or half-burnt wood or charcoal and sweep out the oven after each use. But otherwise, this is a wonderful oven that can produce great food with any type of fuel.

Model Number: UU-P2EE00

Fuel: Wood, charcoal, wood pellets, propane (attachment sold separately)

Weight: 60 lb

Dimensions: 20 x 34 x 32.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 760.4°F (wood), 759.4°F (propane)

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 15 in

Maximum Ambient Temperature: 1,069°F (wood), 1,062°F (propane)

Price at Time of Testing: $989.00 ($849.00 for oven, $140.00 for burner)

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Ooni Karu 12 Multi-Fuel Pizza Oven

This fairly compact oven fits 12-inch pizzas and is a good choice for people who like the flexibility of cooking with wood, charcoal, or gas and want to move their pizza oven with relative ease. We loved that the tall chimney—which is essential for wood and charcoal cooking—can be removed and replaced with a small cap while using propane and when transporting or storing the oven. The gas flame, which is located at the rear of the oven and arcs over the stone, is powerful and easy to ignite. Pizzas had nicely melted and bubbly cheese on top while the sides and bottom of the crusts had good char and spotting. Wood must be cut down to size, and maintaining the heat with both wood and charcoal is messy and requires some vigilance. But if you enjoy both the challenges and potential rewards of using those fuels, including the ability to slow-roast foods, this model is fun and easier to use than some we’ve tested.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane (attachment sold separately), wood, charcoal

Weight: 26.4 lb

Dimensions: 15.7 x 26.6 x 28.7 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 750°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $498.99 ($399.00 for oven, $99.99 for gas burner)

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

This fairly compact oven fits 12-inch pizzas and is a good choice for people who like the flexibility of cooking with wood, charcoal, or gas and want to move their pizza oven with relative ease. We loved that the tall chimney—which is essential for wood and charcoal cooking—can be removed and replaced with a small cap while using propane and when transporting or storing the oven. The gas flame, which is located at the rear of the oven and arcs over the stone, is powerful and easy to ignite. Pizzas had nicely melted and bubbly cheese on top while the sides and bottom of the crusts had good char and spotting. Wood must be cut down to size, and maintaining the heat with both wood and charcoal is messy and requires some vigilance. But if you enjoy both the challenges and potential rewards of using those fuels, including the ability to slow-roast foods, this model is fun and easier to use than some we’ve tested.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane (attachment sold separately), wood, charcoal

Weight: 26.4 lb

Dimensions: 15.7 x 26.6 x 28.7 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 750°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $498.99 ($399.00 for oven, $99.99 for gas burner)

Recommended

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Roccbox by Gozney

We had good results using this oven with propane: An exposed flame at the rear of the oven heated the stone quickly and relatively evenly and also ensured that the tops of the pizzas cooked through quickly. It was less user-friendly when heated with wood. The cylindrical chamber that holds the wood was small, and the wood pieces had to be small enough to clear a 90-degree turn down a narrow chute that leads into the chamber. Even when we were able to fill the chamber with wood that fit, we struggled to build a lasting fire and we had to monitor it constantly. We had to detach the chamber completely to empty the ashes and embers, which we couldn’t do until it had completely cooled.

Model Number: RBX1GREENUS

Fuel: Propane, wood

Weight: 46.1 lb

Dimensions: 13.5 x 21 x 18 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 770°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 11 in

Price at Time of Testing: $499.99

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

We had good results using this oven with propane: An exposed flame at the rear of the oven heated the stone quickly and relatively evenly and also ensured that the tops of the pizzas cooked through quickly. It was less user-friendly when heated with wood. The cylindrical chamber that holds the wood was small, and the wood pieces had to be small enough to clear a 90-degree turn down a narrow chute that leads into the chamber. Even when we were able to fill the chamber with wood that fit, we struggled to build a lasting fire and we had to monitor it constantly. We had to detach the chamber completely to empty the ashes and embers, which we couldn’t do until it had completely cooled.

Model Number: RBX1GREENUS

Fuel: Propane, wood

Weight: 46.1 lb

Dimensions: 13.5 x 21 x 18 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 770°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 11 in

Price at Time of Testing: $499.99

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Blackstone Portable Pizza Oven

This pizza oven is by far the heaviest model we tested—it weighs more than 80 pounds— which makes it much less portable than the other ovens we tested. It is also a bit more complicated to assemble and consists of two separate parts. The top chamber contains two stones: a circular one on the bottom to place your pizza on, and a rectangular one a few inches above it that also gets hot and helps to brown the top of your pizza. The bottom chamber contains the gas burner. The two chambers notch into each other but don’t solidly connect, so if you need to move the oven inside or outside, you’ll have to transport the two pieces separately. While the two-stone setup was unconventional, the oven got fairly hot and we were able to make nice pizzas. This model also has a removable door and instructs the user to put the door on the oven when cooking pizza. While this may help the oven to retain heat, it was a pain to remove the door every time we wanted to rotate or remove the pizza.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 84 lb

Dimensions: 33 x 19.5 x 18 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 686°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 14 in

Price at Time of Testing: $399.99

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

This pizza oven is by far the heaviest model we tested—it weighs more than 80 pounds— which makes it much less portable than the other ovens we tested. It is also a bit more complicated to assemble and consists of two separate parts. The top chamber contains two stones: a circular one on the bottom to place your pizza on, and a rectangular one a few inches above it that also gets hot and helps to brown the top of your pizza. The bottom chamber contains the gas burner. The two chambers notch into each other but don’t solidly connect, so if you need to move the oven inside or outside, you’ll have to transport the two pieces separately. While the two-stone setup was unconventional, the oven got fairly hot and we were able to make nice pizzas. This model also has a removable door and instructs the user to put the door on the oven when cooking pizza. While this may help the oven to retain heat, it was a pain to remove the door every time we wanted to rotate or remove the pizza.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 84 lb

Dimensions: 33 x 19.5 x 18 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 686°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 14 in

Price at Time of Testing: $399.99

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Pizzacraft Pizzeria Pronto Outdoor Pizza Oven

The gas burner is located below the stone, so the stone got hotter than a home oven and heated very evenly, but the air in the oven didn’t get as hot as we would have liked. Hence, the pizzas took longer to cook through than in other models and had fairly crisp crusts. The pizzas were good, but we wanted an oven that would allow us to make airier, more tender pizzas.

Model Number: PC6000

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 27.05 lb

Dimensions: 16.25 in (diameter) x 15 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 580°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $299.99

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

The gas burner is located below the stone, so the stone got hotter than a home oven and heated very evenly, but the air in the oven didn’t get as hot as we would have liked. Hence, the pizzas took longer to cook through than in other models and had fairly crisp crusts. The pizzas were good, but we wanted an oven that would allow us to make airier, more tender pizzas.

Model Number: PC6000

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 27.05 lb

Dimensions: 16.25 in (diameter) x 15 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 580°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $299.99

Not Recommended

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Cuisinart Outdoors Alfrescamoré Portable Outdoor Pizza Oven

While this oven was more affordable than other models we’ve tested, it just didn’t make good pizzas. It was somewhat complicated to put together and had a lot of parts. There’s a small circular stone in the middle that is heated from the bottom and no mechanism to brown the pizza from the top. Because of this, all of the pizzas we made were very pale on top. Also, because the oven didn’t get quite hot enough, pizzas took close to 6 minutes to cook, yielding a dry, overly chewy crust. The oven’s design also made it difficult to see whether the gas was ignited or not.

Model Number: CPO-600

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 32 lb

Dimensions: 23 x 17 x 14.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 635°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $212.49

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

While this oven was more affordable than other models we’ve tested, it just didn’t make good pizzas. It was somewhat complicated to put together and had a lot of parts. There’s a small circular stone in the middle that is heated from the bottom and no mechanism to brown the pizza from the top. Because of this, all of the pizzas we made were very pale on top. Also, because the oven didn’t get quite hot enough, pizzas took close to 6 minutes to cook, yielding a dry, overly chewy crust. The oven’s design also made it difficult to see whether the gas was ignited or not.

Model Number: CPO-600

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 32 lb

Dimensions: 23 x 17 x 14.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 635°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $212.49

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Bertello Wood Fire & Gas Outdoor Pizza Oven

Although this oven is similar in size and shape to our favorite propane-powered oven, it performed differently. The oven was much hotter in the back than in the front, so the section of the pizza nearest the flame scorched while the section farthest from the flame remained soft and pale. Even when we rotated the pizzas frequently, it was nearly impossible to get an evenly cooked pizza. It was hard to build and maintain a robust flame using wood and charcoal, though we did like that the tray used to hold the wood and charcoal was easy to access. It lacked a chimney, so any smoke in the oven blew straight out of the mouth of the oven and into our eyes, which was especially noticeable when we used wood and charcoal to heat it.

Model Number:

Fuel: Propane (attachment sold separately), wood, wood pellets, charcoal

Weight: 25.6 lb

Dimensions: 14 x 21.5 x 11 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 695°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 11 in

Price at Time of Testing: $333.99 ($249.00 for oven, $84.99 for gas burner)

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Although this oven is similar in size and shape to our favorite propane-powered oven, it performed differently. The oven was much hotter in the back than in the front, so the section of the pizza nearest the flame scorched while the section farthest from the flame remained soft and pale. Even when we rotated the pizzas frequently, it was nearly impossible to get an evenly cooked pizza. It was hard to build and maintain a robust flame using wood and charcoal, though we did like that the tray used to hold the wood and charcoal was easy to access. It lacked a chimney, so any smoke in the oven blew straight out of the mouth of the oven and into our eyes, which was especially noticeable when we used wood and charcoal to heat it.

Model Number:

Fuel: Propane (attachment sold separately), wood, wood pellets, charcoal

Weight: 25.6 lb

Dimensions: 14 x 21.5 x 11 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 695°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 11 in

Price at Time of Testing: $333.99 ($249.00 for oven, $84.99 for gas burner)

Discontinued

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Solo Stove Pi Pizza Oven

This handsome pizza oven is essentially plug and play. Its combination of simple set up, powerful gas heat, and a well-designed cooking chamber made it easy to start churning out beautifully charred, tender, chewy pizzas in no time. You unbox it, slide in the cordierite pizza stone, hook up the fuel, and go. A knob on the side makes it simple to dial the heat up and down. Compared to our two top-rated Ooni gas models, it’s broader and doesn’t have foldable legs, but at roughly 30 pounds it’s still possible to move around for storage or pizza parties on the go. That dome-shape is beneficial, too, allowing for a taller opening with better visibility to launch and maneuver pizzas. It fits up to a 12-inch pizza. As with other multifuel models we’ve tested, the chamber for burning wood is so small that you have to work hard to keep a hot-enough fire going. Because pizza cooks so fast, all of that extra work isn’t getting you any flavor benefit. It’s better to just use gas and get a consistent, ripping hot temperature with quick recovery times between pies. Also, as with all of the outdoor pizza ovens we’ve tested, the back of the oven is hotter, so you need to rotate the pizza as it cooks to get an even cook. (Image courtesy of Solo Stove.)

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane, wood

Weight: 30.5 lb

Dimensions: 20.5 x 20.5 x 15.13 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 875°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 inches

Price at Time of Testing: $649.99 ($519.99 for oven, $130.00 for gas burner)

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

This handsome pizza oven is essentially plug and play. Its combination of simple set up, powerful gas heat, and a well-designed cooking chamber made it easy to start churning out beautifully charred, tender, chewy pizzas in no time. You unbox it, slide in the cordierite pizza stone, hook up the fuel, and go. A knob on the side makes it simple to dial the heat up and down. Compared to our two top-rated Ooni gas models, it’s broader and doesn’t have foldable legs, but at roughly 30 pounds it’s still possible to move around for storage or pizza parties on the go. That dome-shape is beneficial, too, allowing for a taller opening with better visibility to launch and maneuver pizzas. It fits up to a 12-inch pizza. As with other multifuel models we’ve tested, the chamber for burning wood is so small that you have to work hard to keep a hot-enough fire going. Because pizza cooks so fast, all of that extra work isn’t getting you any flavor benefit. It’s better to just use gas and get a consistent, ripping hot temperature with quick recovery times between pies. Also, as with all of the outdoor pizza ovens we’ve tested, the back of the oven is hotter, so you need to rotate the pizza as it cooks to get an even cook. (Image courtesy of Solo Stove.)

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane, wood

Weight: 30.5 lb

Dimensions: 20.5 x 20.5 x 15.13 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 875°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12 inches

Price at Time of Testing: $649.99 ($519.99 for oven, $130.00 for gas burner)

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Ooni Pro 16 Multi-Fuel Pizza Oven

If you want the versatility of making pizzas using wood, charcoal, or gas, this large multifuel model is a great option. Just know that those fuels are inherently more difficult and messier to use than gas and do not add flavor to quick-cooking foods such as pizza. You need to cut your wood to size, but the tray-style chamber for burning wood and charcoal is the largest of the ovens we tested and is easy to access. We were able to make the best pizza using the model’s propane attachment. The cooking surface, which measures 18 inches wide by 18 inches long, is about 5 inches wider than the cooking surfaces of other models we tested. A chimney adds bulk but helpfully directs smoke out of the oven without getting in the user’s eyes.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane (attachment sold separately), wood, wood pellets, charcoal

Weight: 46.35 lb

Dimensions: 19.25 x 30 x 27.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 740°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $698.99 ($599.00 for oven, $99.99 for gas burner)

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

If you want the versatility of making pizzas using wood, charcoal, or gas, this large multifuel model is a great option. Just know that those fuels are inherently more difficult and messier to use than gas and do not add flavor to quick-cooking foods such as pizza. You need to cut your wood to size, but the tray-style chamber for burning wood and charcoal is the largest of the ovens we tested and is easy to access. We were able to make the best pizza using the model’s propane attachment. The cooking surface, which measures 18 inches wide by 18 inches long, is about 5 inches wider than the cooking surfaces of other models we tested. A chimney adds bulk but helpfully directs smoke out of the oven without getting in the user’s eyes.

Model Number: n/a

Fuel: Propane (attachment sold separately), wood, wood pellets, charcoal

Weight: 46.35 lb

Dimensions: 19.25 x 30 x 27.5 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 740°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $698.99 ($599.00 for oven, $99.99 for gas burner)

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

Camp Chef Italian Artisan Pizza Oven

This propane-powered oven was big and bulky, with a burner located below its wide, 20-inch baking stone. The stone got hot and heated evenly, but the burner didn’t sufficiently heat the air at the top of the oven, meaning that the tops of the pizzas took a long time to cook and the crusts turned out unappealingly thick and crunchy. It could make pizza that tasted good, but it always turned out the same way, with a drier, more cracker-like crust. We prefer more versatile models that aren’t limited to making a certain style of pizza.

Model Number: PZOVEN

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 41.6 lb

Dimensions: 25.75 x 14.5 x 15.25 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 625°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12.5 in

Price at Time of Testing: $263.49

  • Performance
  • Ease of Use

This propane-powered oven was big and bulky, with a burner located below its wide, 20-inch baking stone. The stone got hot and heated evenly, but the burner didn’t sufficiently heat the air at the top of the oven, meaning that the tops of the pizzas took a long time to cook and the crusts turned out unappealingly thick and crunchy. It could make pizza that tasted good, but it always turned out the same way, with a drier, more cracker-like crust. We prefer more versatile models that aren’t limited to making a certain style of pizza.

Model Number: PZOVEN

Fuel: Propane

Weight: 41.6 lb

Dimensions: 25.75 x 14.5 x 15.25 in

Average Surface Temperature of Stone After Preheating: 625°F

Maximum Pizza Diameter: 12.5 in

Price at Time of Testing: $263.49

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