
We cooked pizza on the Karu 16 across a season on wood and gas — checking heat-up time, peak temperature, recovery between pies, and the results at 60 seconds.
Home pizza ovens promise a lot; most cook a 12-inch pie and cool off fast. The Ooni Karu 16 is the one that delivers restaurant results. It hits 950°F in about fifteen minutes, bakes a true 16-inch Neapolitan pizza in sixty seconds, and runs on wood, charcoal or gas so you can chase live-fire flavour or plug-in convenience. It is the first oven the AVPN — the guardians of real Neapolitan pizza — recommended for home use, and in our testing it earned that.
| Type | Multi-fuel outdoor pizza oven |
| Fuel | Wood, charcoal or gas (gas burner sold separately) |
| Max temp | Up to 950°F in about 15 min |
| Cook time | 60-second pizzas |
| Capacity | 16 in pizzas; 16.7 × 16.7 in stone |
| Body | Ceramic-fibre-insulated stainless, powder-coated steel |
| Door | ViewFlame hinged glass with digital thermometer |
| Weight | About 62 lb |
| Recognition | AVPN-recommended for domestic use |
The Karu 16 is Ooni’s flagship multi-fuel pizza oven — a portable, insulated stainless oven that reaches pizzeria temperatures outdoors. ‘16’ is the headline: a 16.7-inch stone that fits a full 16-inch pizza, where most home ovens top out at 12. It burns wood or charcoal for live-fire flavour, or a bolt-on gas burner for push-button heat, and a hinged glass door lets you watch the bake. It is the oven serious home pizza makers converge on.
It is bigger and more substantial than Ooni’s smaller ovens — about 62 pounds of ceramic-fibre-insulated stainless in a powder-coated shell — and that insulation is why it holds heat so well. The ViewFlame hinged glass door with a front-mounted digital thermometer is the standout feature: you see the flame and the pizza without opening the oven and losing heat. Fold-away legs and a chimney make it portable-ish, though it is a two-hand lift. Build quality feels genuinely premium.
Assembly is minimal — attach the legs and chimney and it is ready. For wood or charcoal you load the rear firebox and light it; for gas you bolt on the separate burner (sold separately) and ignite. Either way it reaches cooking temperature in about fifteen minutes. The learning curve is fire management and launching the pizza, not the oven itself; a couple of practice pies and you have the rhythm.
Heat is the whole game, and the Karu 16 has it. In our testing it climbed to around 950°F on wood within fifteen minutes and held it, and the thick insulation meant it recovered fast between pizzas — crucial when you are cooking a stack for guests. That temperature is what cooks a Neapolitan crust in sixty seconds with proper leoparding and a soft, airy rim. No home kitchen oven comes close; this is the difference that makes the oven worth it.
At 950°F a pizza cooks in about a minute, which means you turn it once or twice and it is done — blistered, charred in spots, cooked through without drying out. The 16-inch floor is genuinely useful: you can make a full-size pie or two smaller ones, and it leaves room to turn the pizza with a peel. In our testing the results were restaurant-grade once we dialled in the launch and turn. Beyond pizza, the heat roasts vegetables, meats and bread beautifully.
The multi-fuel design is the Karu 16’s trump card. Wood and charcoal give the smoky, live-fire flavour that defines great pizza; the optional gas burner gives instant, steady heat and easy temperature control for a weeknight. Being able to choose — flavour on the weekend, convenience midweek — is why this oven suits more people than a single-fuel model. Just budget for the gas burner if you want that option, as it is sold separately.
Cleanup is simple: the stone self-cleans by burning off residue at temperature, and ash from wood or charcoal is knocked out of the firebox. Wipe the exterior, keep it covered between uses, and flip or replace the stone over time. There is no seasoning and little routine maintenance — the insulated stainless body is built to live outdoors under a cover. It is a low-upkeep tool for how much performance it delivers.
Against smaller Ooni ovens (Karu 12, Fyra), the Karu 16 adds full 16-inch capacity, the ViewFlame door and multi-fuel flexibility — the reasons it is the one to buy if budget allows. Against a gas-only oven like the Koda 16, it trades a little convenience for wood-fire flavour and fuel choice. Against a kitchen oven or a pizza steel, there is no contest on temperature or char — the Karu is a different category of result.
At $799 (plus a $100 gas burner if you want it) the Karu 16 is a premium home pizza oven, and the value is in what it replaces: pizzeria-quality pizza at home, indefinitely. For a household that makes pizza often, the cost amortises fast against takeout, and the build is made to last outdoors for years. If pizza night is a real ritual in your home, few purchases deliver this much repeatable joy for the money.
Buy it if you are serious about pizza, want full 16-inch pies and the flavour of live fire with the option of gas, and have outdoor space to run it. Skip it if you only make pizza occasionally — a smaller, cheaper oven or a pizza steel is enough — or if you have no outdoor area, since these ovens are strictly outdoor tools. For the committed pizza maker, this is the home oven to beat.
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