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Wedding Pizza Catering: Plan the Best Dinner at Any Wedding This Year

Pizza catering earns its place at weddings on three counts. It's a show: a wood-fired oven blisters a pie in a couple of minutes, in front of your guests, and the oven becomes part of the reception. It's priced simply: wedding packages are quoted per person with continuous baking, so nobody counts slices — as general guidance most full-service caterers charge somewhere around $18–30 per person, with wedding packages often running above standard party rates for the extra coordination and presentation; treat those as typical ranges, not quotes, and let two or three local quotes set the real number. And it flexes to your format: live oven-side station service, passed slices at cocktail hour, family-style pies to the tables, or the crowd-favorite late-night drop when the dance floor peaks. Every caterer below carries the Weddings badge because there's real evidence — from the caterer's own site or from couples' reviews — of actual wedding work, not just a "we do events" line. 601 caterers qualify so far, and the list grows as the directory does.

When to book: a mobile pizza caterer is a physical oven with a single calendar — popular Saturdays in peak season go early, so start conversations as soon as the venue is signed, and treat 2–4 months out as the floor rather than the plan. If you'd rather run the oven yourself, oven rental is the budget route — with real trade-offs worth reading first.

Standout wedding pizza caterers across the US

Ranked by local reputation — rating weighted by review count — with one pick per name.

OG ZAZA - Pizza Trailer

4.8 ★★★★★ 280 reviews

861 E Hennepin Ave, Minneapolis, MN

Weddings Corporate events Wood-fired the pizza wows guests

New Haven Pizza Truck

5 ★★★★★ 191 reviews

86 Leonardo Dr, North Haven, CT

Weddings Corporate events Wood-fired the pizza wows guestsprofessional & punctualfriendly & fun

Ilmioamore Woodfired Pizza Truck Catering

4.9 ★★★★★ 184 reviews

Houston, TX

Weddings Corporate events Wood-fired the pizza wows guestsfriendly & fun

Carmelo's Mobile Brick Oven Pizza Truck

5 ★★★★★ 163 reviews

Paterson, NJ

Weddings Corporate events Wood-fired the pizza wows guestsprofessional & punctualfriendly & fun

Old World Pizza Truck

4.9 ★★★★★ 165 reviews

163 Foster St, New Haven, CT

Weddings Corporate events Wood-fired the pizza wows guestsprofessional & punctualfriendly & fun

Mobile pizza oven for hire, specializing in thin-crust pies and New Haven-style pizza.

Và Fa Napoli Pizza(pizza truck)

5 ★★★★★ 134 reviews

8 Eton Ct, Annandale, NJ

Weddings Corporate events Wood-fired the pizza wows guestsprofessional & punctualfriendly & fun

Find wedding pizza catering in your city

Every city below has at least two caterers with wedding evidence — which matters, because the single best booking tool you have is a second quote for the same date.

Alabama

Arizona

California

Colorado

Connecticut

Delaware

District of Columbia

Florida

Georgia

Illinois

Indiana

Iowa

Maine

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

Mississippi

Missouri

New Jersey

New York

North Carolina

Ohio

Oregon

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Rhode Island

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Tennessee

Texas

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Vermont

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Wisconsin

Planning wedding pizza catering: the questions every couple asks

Is pizza actually enough food for a wedding?
Yes — because a wedding package isn't a pizza delivery, it's continuous baking. The crew fires pies for the whole service window and the per-person pricing assumes everyone eats their fill; the planning baseline behind it is about 3 slices per adult, but that's the caterer's problem, not yours. Most couples round the menu out with a salad and appetizer course, and many caterers offer exactly that as a package tier — ask what theirs includes. See what's typically in a package →
Station service, family-style, or late-night?
Three formats, all real. Live station: the oven is visible, guests watch pies fire and grab slices as they come out — dinner and entertainment in one. Family-style: whole pies to the tables, the most traditional-feeling option. Late-night: the oven fires back up as the dance floor peaks and sends out slices — a snack quantity (roughly 1–1.5 slices per guest), so it prices well below dinner service, and it's consistently one of the highest-praise-per-dollar calls couples make. Plenty of couples combine formats — passed slices at cocktail hour, station for dinner. Ask each caterer what they recommend for your venue's layout.
What does wedding pizza catering cost?
As general guidance: most full-service caterers price somewhere around $18–30 per person, wedding packages often run 10–25% above standard party rates, and event minimums commonly sit in the $800–1,500 range. A late-night add-on is a fraction of dinner pricing because it's snack quantity. Those are typical ranges — the honest way to price your date is two or three quotes on identical scope. Read the full cost guide →
What about gluten-free, vegan, and picky-eater guests?
This is quietly one of pizza catering's best arguments: everyone eats pizza, and dietary versions are a solved problem for good caterers — gluten-free crusts, vegan cheese, and simple cheese pies for the kids' table. Ask how they handle cross-contact (separate prep and dedicated peels are the right answers), and put dietary counts in your first quote email. Caterers with dietary options proven on their own menus are flagged in menu add-ons & services. Dietary options guide →
What does the venue need to make an oven work?
Four questions to settle early: access — can a truck or trailer physically reach the serving spot (gate widths, soft grass after rain)? Ground — ovens want firm, reasonably level parking. Power and water — many rigs are self-contained, some want an outlet; ask which, and tell your venue. Rules — some venues restrict open flame or require the caterer's insurance certificate. Every experienced wedding caterer has a site checklist; walk it with your venue coordinator before you sign.
What should we check before signing?
Four things. Coverage: do they serve your venue's area, and is travel included or billed? Insurance: general liability with a certificate your venue can see — most venues ask. Scope in writing: service window, staff count, what's included (salads, plates, napkins, buffet setup) and what isn't. And reviews from actual weddings — the city pages below surface couples' quotes for exactly this reason. Then get a second quote on the same scope; the cheaper quote with three "not included" lines usually isn't the cheaper quote.

Keep going: read the complete wedding pizza catering guide, compare oven rental vs full catering if you're tempted by the DIY route, or browse menu add-ons — salads, dessert pizza, and staffed full service live there.