What we liked
- 950 ยฐF multi-fuel (wood/gas/charcoal)
- 16-inch interior (Neapolitan size)
- 60-second cook time
- 5-year Ooni warranty
What we didn't like
- adds up
- 60-sec cook takes practice
- Outdoor use only (no indoor)
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedHigh heat and the crust it producesThe 16-inch interior and Neapolitan sizeMulti-fuel flexibility and living with itWho should buy the Ooni Karu 16?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQsQuick verdict
After eleven months of backyard use, the Ooni Karu 16 is the multi-fuel pizza oven I would buy again. It hits the high heat that produces real leopard-spotted Neapolitan crust, the 16-inch interior fits a full-size pie, and the multi-fuel design lets you start with wood for flavor then switch to gas for control. The trade is a steep learning curve, since the 60-second cook takes practice, and it is outdoor-only.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this oven myself and have run it for eleven months. Ooni did not provide a sample. A pizza oven is a product you can only honestly evaluate by actually cooking on it across a long stretch, because the gap between a great oven and a frustrating one is not visible on a spec sheet, it shows up around pizza number thirty when you finally figure out the dough, the fire, and the timing. So I cooked, repeatedly, through a full range of conditions.
Over those eleven months I cooked across all three fuel types, in different weather, for different crowds, and through the awkward early phase where I burned pizzas before I learned the rhythm. That arc, from clumsy first attempts to confident weeknight pies, is exactly what a buyer needs to hear about, because the oven’s biggest challenge is not the hardware, it is the skill it demands, and you only learn that by living with it.
How we evaluated
I ran the oven through its full fuel range, starting fires with wood and charcoal for flavor and running it on propane when I wanted steady, repeatable heat, so I could speak to each mode honestly rather than guessing. I tracked how hot it actually got and how long it held temperature between pizzas, since recovery time between pies is what determines whether you can feed a crowd or only yourself.
I cooked full 16-inch pizzas to confirm the interior really handles a Neapolitan-size pie rather than just a personal one, used the view window to monitor cooks without opening the door, and timed cooks at high heat to confirm the 60-second claim in the real world. I also lived with the practical side over eleven months: setup, the folding legs for portability, fuel handling, and how the oven held up to repeated backyard use across the seasons.
High heat and the crust it produces
The heat is the whole point, and it delivers exactly what a home oven cannot. At full temperature the Karu 16 reaches the searing heat that produces genuine leopard-spotted Neapolitan crust, the charred, blistered spots that define pizzeria-quality pizza. A standard kitchen oven tops out far below this and bakes a pizza for eight to ten minutes, which is a fundamentally different and lesser result. This oven cooks a pie in about 60 seconds, and that speed is what gives you the puffy, charred, tender crust you cannot get indoors.
That high heat is also where the learning curve lives. A 60-second cook is unforgiving, and in my first weeks I produced a fair number of pizzas with one charred edge and one pale one because I was not turning fast enough or managing the fire well. By the time I had cooked through a few dozen pies, the timing became second nature and the results were consistently excellent. The heat is not the problem, your technique is, and the oven rewards the practice generously.
The 16-inch interior and Neapolitan size
The 16-inch interior is the upgrade that justifies this over the smaller models. It fits a full 16-inch pizza, a proper Neapolitan-size pie rather than the 12-inch limit of the smaller Ooni, and that difference is bigger than it sounds in practice. A full-size pie feeds more people per cook, and the extra width gives you room to launch and turn the pizza without fighting the walls of the oven.
That space also makes the cooking itself easier once you have the technique down. There is enough room to rotate the pizza cleanly as it cooks, which is essential when one side faces the flame and needs turning every fifteen seconds or so. On a cramped oven that rotation is a struggle, and here it is comfortable. If you are buying a pizza oven to cook for a household or guests rather than just yourself, the 16-inch size is the one to get.
Multi-fuel flexibility and living with it
The multi-fuel design is the feature I came to appreciate most over eleven months. You can start a session with wood or charcoal for genuine smoky flavor, then switch to gas when you want steady, predictable heat that does not demand constant fire tending. That flexibility means the oven fits both a leisurely weekend cook where you want the wood-fired character and a quick weeknight pizza where you just want consistent results in twenty minutes, and not having to choose is genuinely valuable.
Practically, the view window door lets you watch a pizza cook without opening up and dumping heat, which matters a lot when the whole cook lasts 60 seconds. The folding legs make it portable enough to take to a tailgate or a campsite, and over eleven months the oven held up well to repeated backyard use. The honest caveats are that it is outdoor-only, it adds up over smaller single-fuel ovens, and that 60-second cook genuinely takes a few dozen pizzas of practice before you master it.
Who should buy the Ooni Karu 16?
Buy it if you are serious about backyard pizza, you want the high heat that produces real Neapolitan crust, you want to cook full 16-inch pies for a group, and you value the flexibility to run wood, charcoal, or gas depending on the occasion. For an enthusiast who wants pizzeria-quality results at home and is willing to put in the practice, this is the oven that delivers the complete package.
Skip it if you want a plug-in-and-forget appliance, since this rewards practice and fire management rather than convenience, if you only ever cook personal-size pizzas where a smaller oven costs less, or if you have no outdoor space, because this is strictly an outdoor oven.
The verdict
Eleven months in, the Ooni Karu 16 is the backyard pizza oven I would buy again without hesitation. It reaches the heat that makes genuinely great Neapolitan crust, the 16-inch interior cooks full pies for a crowd, the multi-fuel design covers both flavor and convenience, and it held up to a year of regular use. You pay a premium over smaller single-fuel ovens and you have to earn the 60-second cook through a few dozen practice pies, but once it clicks, this oven produces pizza a home kitchen simply cannot. For a committed backyard cook, it is the one to own.
Versus the alternatives
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ooni Karu 16 | Top Pick Outdoor Pizza | 4.8 | Check price |
| Ooni Koda 16 Gas-Only | Best Gas-Only Ooni | 4.7 | Check price |
| Roccbox Gozney | Best Portable Premium | 4.7 | Check price |
| Generic outdoor pizza oven | Skip | 3.5 | Check price |
Specs at a glance
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Ooni Karu 16 Multi-Fuel Outdoor Pizza Oven FAQs
Yes for backyard pizza enthusiasts. The multi-fuel flexibility and 16-inch Neapolitan capacity justify the premium over single-fuel Roccbox.
Update log
- Jun 20, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


