The “love story” which people in the United States have had with pizza is at least 75 years old — and Americans started flirting with the simple baked concoction of cheese and tomato sauce on a base of flattened crust greater than a century ago…
…but how much money does pizza cost on average in each state in the United States?
To find out the answer, pizzerias, menus, and prices were collected from MenuWithPrice. Cheese pizza prices were derived from an average of pizzas of all sizes — either named “plain pizza,” “cheese pizza,” or “margherita pizza.” Pepperoni prices were derived from pizza of all sizes that had pepperoni as the singular topping.
The number of pizzerias in each city and state was estimated using MenuWithPrice and Yelp API.
Due to the unstructured nature of the menu data, differentiating pizza prices by size of pizza was not feasible — meaning that average prices reflect the prices of qualifying pizzas of all sizes.
City and state populations were taken from the United States Census Bureau. Only cities which had at least ten pizzerias and a population of a minimum of 100,000 people were included in the final dataset.
The data was collected in April of 2021.
I have been given express written permission to use the images and the verbatim text from this article pertaining to the price of a slice of pizza in every state in the United States — which was written for Expensivity — by using some fun maps to compare the prices of pizza in different states; and by imparting interesting statistics. While Expensivity has endeavored to ensure the information provided is accurate and current, it cannot guarantee it. Neither Expensivity nor The Gate accept liability for the information which is presented in this article.
Note: the original title of this article was The Average Cost of a Slice of Pizza in Each State in the United States, but the prices seemed too high for a slice of pizza.
The Average Cost of Pizza in Each State in the United States
Lombardi’s, in New York City, is most commonly cited as America’s first pizzeria – this Little Italy joint opened in 1905. Pizza-chomping Italians had entered the States before the turn of the 20th century, but it wasn’t until the close of WWII and the opening of America’s fridge-freezer generation that pizza became the ‘go-to’ chow around the country.
The frozen home pizza forced pizzerias to make a choice: go cheap, or go luxurious. And this tension has evolved ever since, as pizza went from being a beat-era phenomenon to a billion-dollar industry by the 1980s.
Because ultimately, you eat pizza because you just got to eat. A deluxe slice is nice from time to time – but when you most want pizza, you want it fast, and you want it cheap. Expensivity.com munched the numbers, mapping the average price of cheese/plain and pepperoni pizza across the pizzerias of every American state. We also found out the average price by city and the density of pizzerias per person around the US.
Key Findings
- The cheapest cheese pizza is in North Dakota, where the average price is $6.64.
- Alaska has the most expensive cheese pizza in the US on average, at $9.21.
- The city with the cheapest pepperoni pizza is Virginia Beach, VA ($6.26).
- Rhode Island is the state with the highest density of pizzerias: 37 for every 100,000 residents.
- Detroit, MI, is the city with the lowest density of pizzerias in the US (just 0.9 per 100k people) – while Fort Lauderdale, FL, has the highest density (95.4 per 100k people)
America’s Most Expensive Cheese Pizzas are in Alaska
There is an ‘expensive pizza belt’ tightening around America’s middle. That yellow strip from Montana down to Oklahoma then back up to Maine represents the American states with the highest-priced average plain/cheese/Margherita pizza.
But it’s way north of here, in Alaska, that you’ll find the highest prices of all. Alaska is home to Airport Pizza, which specializes in flying its pizza into remote parts of the state. And Alaska also has Moose’s, the highest-grossing one-off indie pizzeria in the US.
Cheaper pizzas fill the gap. North Dakota takes the cheese-stuffed crown for its average $6.64 Margherita. The North East is the cheapest region, with Rhode Island ($6.68), Massachusetts ($6.79), Delaware ($7.01), and New Hampshire ($7.14) among the 10 cheapest states.
Obscenely Cheap Pepperoni Pizza Pie in Utah
Oklahoma is home to America’s priciest pepperoni: the average price is $15.56. Meanwhile, the average Alaskan pepperoni is only America’s seventh most expensive – a bargain, considering Alaska’s top-dollar Margherita. That stretch of pepperoni-colored states through the midwest is a sore spot for pepperoni lovers because Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, and Nebraska are all among the top ten priciest.
But don’t get complacent if you’re not from one of these states. Pepperoni prices are soaring across America because demand is outstripping supply – especially thanks to pandemic-related production delays. And pepperoni may be most costly in Ohio, where a roster of high school football coaches may lose their jobs for forcing a senior to eat pepperoni pizza against his religious beliefs.
For distinctly cheaper pepperoni pizza, Utah offers a $6.49 slab that costs less than any pepperoni or plain cheese pizza across the rest of the States.
Rhode Island is Lined with Pizzerias
You can’t move without entering a pizza joint in Rhode Island. America’s smallest state has 37.3 pizza joints for every 100,000 residents – the highest density of pizzerias for any American state. But it’s not just quantity that counts – Little Rhody is also known for its variety.
“Rhode Islanders like their pizza,” says local restaurateur David Bertolini. “And Providence has become a destination for those who crave it. Our city really provides a worldly offering, from bakery-style pizza, to Neapolitan style, to wood grilled, to coal-fired.”
It’s tougher to find a pizzeria in the south, with only 15.1/100k in Hawaii and 16.4 in Louisiana. Perhaps Hawaiians are protesting against the invention of the Hawaiian pizza – which (possibly) originated in Portland, Oregon.
America’s Pizza Costs in Full – on a City Level
Finally, here’s the data in full. Use the buttons to sort by city or state, cheese or pepperoni, or number of pizzerias.
Wilmington, NC, and Hayward, CA, are tied for America’s cheapest plain cheese pizza. The average price is $6.35 in both cities, while the cheapest pepperoni is over in Virginia Beach, VA ($6.26).
You’ll pay a staggering $15.01 on average for a Margherita in Eau Claire, WI. That makes it America’s most expensive city for a cheesy pizza pie. By contrast, a pepperoni pie in Eau Claire costs only $11.35 on average.
You’ll feel the most special dining out for pizza in Fort Lauderdale, FL, where 95.4 pizzerias per 100,000 people mean you should get plenty of personal attention. Second-placed West Palm Beach is also in Florida, but with just 58.1/100k, indicating how pizzeria-rich Fort Lauderdale is.
You’re probably hungering for pizza by now. Armed with these stats, you know just where to go for the cheapest slice – or why not commence a cheap pizza tour of the US?
Final Boarding Call
If you want to know how — and, more importantly, how not — to eat an authentic New York pizza, just take a look at this hilarious video from Jon Stewart when he still hosted The Daily Show in 2011:
Not to be crusty, but here are two discussions on FlyerTalk whose topics are where are the Best Pizza Places in the United States of America and where are the Worst Pizza Places in the United States of America?
By the way, in Brooklyn, we used to call them pizzerias…
Photograph ©2021 by Brian Cohen.