Our Blackstone Flattop Pizza Oven Review — 2026
The Blackstone Flattop Pizza Oven is an outdoor pizza oven using Propane as its heat source, reaching temperatures up to 900°F. Designed to work on a Blackstone flattop griddle — uses the heat you already have. At $349–$399, it occupies best for griddle owners position in the home pizza oven market.
A dedicated pizza oven solves the core problem with home pizza: standard home ovens max out at 500–525°F, which produces acceptable but never exceptional pizza. At 900°F, the Blackstone Flattop Pizza Oven replicates the conditions of professional Neapolitan pizza ovens. The high heat produces the Maillard reaction in seconds — creating the char, leopard-spotting, and rise that distinguishes great pizza from the rest.
The Propane fuel type shapes the cooking experience and flavor profile. The Gozney Dome’s gas + wood option delivers the most versatile cooking: gas for consistent baseline heat, wood for smoke and flavor layering. The combo is overkill for beginners but ideal for serious home cooks.
The 14 inch max pizza size defines what you can practically cook. A 14 inch oven handles personal pizzas and most family needs. If you regularly cook for 4+ or want Detroit-style pans, look for a larger model. The key is matching oven size to your typical cooking load — an oversized oven is harder to manage and the stone recovers slower for small batches.
As best for griddle owners, the Blackstone Flattop Pizza Oven earns our recommendation. Designed to work on a Blackstone flattop griddle — uses the heat you already have The 900°F capability and Propane setup time make it practical for weekly use. The trade-off: must own a flattop griddle to get full value. If that does not affect your use case, this is a straightforward buy.
Technical Specifications
| Price | $349–$399 |
| Fuel | Propane |
| Max Temp | 900°F |
| Pizza Size | 14 inch |
| Compatibility | Works on any flat surface + griddle |
Pros & Cons
- Designed to work on a Blackstone flattop griddle — uses the heat you already have
- 14" cooking surface fits personal pies and family-size pizzas
- Propane means no pellet loading or wood management
- Must own a flattop griddle to get full value
- Less authentic flavor than wood or pellet-fueled options
Our Verdict: Blackstone Flattop Pizza Oven
Best for Griddle Owners
Blackstone Flattop Pizza Oven earns its position as best for griddle owners. Designed to work on a Blackstone flattop griddle — uses the heat you already have The device delivers where it counts — price: $349–$399. The main trade-off is must own a flattop griddle to get full value. For anyone serious about this category, Blackstone Flattop Pizza Oven is a strong candidate worth serious consideration.
How to Choose the Right Outdoor Pizza Oven
1. Match Fuel Type to Your Use Case
Gas ovens (Ooni Koda 16) are the easiest to operate — turn on, light, cook. They offer consistent temperature control and require no fuel management between sessions. Pellet ovens (Ooni Fyra 12) add a wood-smoke flavor that gas cannot replicate, but require pellet management, more frequent ash cleanup, and careful humidity control. Wood-only ovens (chimney-started) deliver the most authentic experience but demand real skill to manage flame and temperature mid-session.
2. Size Determines How You Cook
12-inch ovens (Ooni Fyra 12) are ideal for personal and couples cooking — pizzas cook in 60–90 seconds and the oven stays hot for 3–4 consecutive pies. 16-inch ovens (Ooni Koda 16, Gozney Dome) accommodate family-sized and New York-style pizzas and are more forgiving for beginners since you have more margin before burning the edges. If you want to cook for parties, the larger diameter is worth the higher price.
3. Temperature Recovery Matters for Multiple Pizzas
If you plan to cook more than 2–3 pizzas in a session, temperature recovery matters. Stone and steel combo ovens (Gozney Dome) retain heat better between pizzas than thin stone-only ovens (Ooni Fyra). The Ooni Koda 16 sits in the middle — adequate recovery for home use, but noticeable slow-down after 4+ consecutive pies. Match the oven’s thermal mass to your expected usage frequency.
4. Consider Total Cost of Ownership
The oven price is the starting point. Propane for gas ovens runs $8–$15 per 4-hour session depending on usage and local prices. Wood pellets cost $15–$25 per 10 lb bag with roughly 10 sessions worth of fuel. Dedicated natural gas conversion kits (available for both Ooni and Gozney) cost $75–$150 but eliminate ongoing fuel costs for gas oven owners. An Ooni pizza peel ($40–$60) and turning peel ($40) are nearly essential accessories not included in the base price.