These 14 Colorado Pizzerias Are Serving Slices Worth The Drive This March

March has a special talent for making everyone crave something warm, melty, and wildly satisfying, and that is exactly where this pizza-filled adventure comes in. When the air is cold and your gloves are still on the passenger seat, nothing feels more triumphant than opening a box and seeing a perfect slice waiting inside.

In Colorado, pizza season somehow feels even more magical, because every bubbling pie turns an ordinary outing into a cozy little celebration.

These 14 standout spots prove that simple ingredients can still create serious excitement, whether you are chasing a crisp crust, stretchy cheese, or the kind of sauce that makes you immediately reach for another bite.

Bring a hungry friend, clear your weekend, and prepare to follow the smell of fresh dough wherever it leads. By the end of it, Colorado’s pizza scene will have you plotting your next food run before the last crumb even disappears from the box.

1. Marco’s Coal-Fired

Marco's Coal-Fired
© Marco’s Coal Fired | Ballpark

There is something deeply satisfying about a pizza crust that carries actual char marks, the kind that tell you the oven meant business. Marco’s Coal-Fired at 2129 Larimer Street in Denver’s RiNo neighborhood has built a serious reputation around exactly that.

The coal-fired oven here burns hotter than most wood-fired setups, producing blistered, airy Neapolitan-style crusts that are nearly impossible to replicate at home.

Think of this as your post-gallery-stroll reward, a moment to sit down after wandering Larimer’s creative corridor and let something genuinely excellent land in front of you. The atmosphere carries that easy energy of a neighborhood that takes food seriously without making it feel like a production.

You are not being lectured about pizza; you are just eating a really good one.

Marco’s is particularly recognized for its authentic approach to Neapolitan technique, which means the simplicity on the menu is intentional, not lazy. Couples who appreciate clean, confident cooking tend to find this place checks every box.

Show up on a Tuesday evening when the pace is a little more relaxed and the oven is still firing at full power.

2. Blue Pan Pizza

Blue Pan Pizza
© Blue Pan Pizza

Detroit-style pizza has been having a long-overdue moment across the country, and Blue Pan Pizza at 3934 West 32nd Avenue in Denver’s West Highland neighborhood is one of the clearest reasons why Colorado deserves a seat at that table. The defining feature here is the square pan, which produces a thick, airy dough with deeply caramelized cheese along every edge.

It is the kind of pizza that rewards patience because every corner piece is essentially its own prize.

If you have been skeptical about thick-crust pizza in the past, Blue Pan is the place that tends to change minds. The sauce goes on top of the cheese here, a hallmark of the Detroit tradition, which keeps everything balanced and prevents sogginess.

It is a small detail that makes a noticeable difference in every single bite.

West 32nd Avenue is a pleasant stretch to walk before or after, which makes this a clean, simple choice for a casual Sunday reset. Families with strong opinions about pizza toppings tend to find the menu broad enough to keep everyone at the table happy.

Blue Pan is not trying to reinvent anything; it is just doing one regional style exceptionally well.

3. Famous Original J’s Pizza

Famous Original J's Pizza
© Famous Original J’s Pizza

Some pizza places carry their reputation quietly, built slice by slice over years of consistent output. Famous Original J’s Pizza at 715 East 26th Avenue in Denver has that kind of earned credibility.

It operates with the confidence of a spot that knows its regulars by order, not just by name, and the New York-style slices here are the sort of wide, foldable, properly sauced pies that feel like a memory even on the first visit.

This is a reliable pre-movie stop, the kind of place where you are in and out with exactly what you came for and zero regrets. The crust hits that ideal middle ground between crisp and chewy, and the cheese pull is everything you want it to be.

There is nothing theatrical about the experience, which is precisely the point.

Solo diners especially tend to appreciate the no-pressure vibe here. You can grab a slice at the counter, find a seat, and just eat without ceremony.

Located on East 26th Avenue, it sits in a part of Denver that rewards a short wander before or after. Famous Original J’s is a straightforward call when you want something honest and filling without the wait.

4. Mario’s Speakeasy Pizzeria

Mario's Speakeasy Pizzeria
© Mario’s Speakeasy Pizza

The name alone earns a second look. Mario’s Speakeasy Pizzeria at 1410 Market Street in downtown Denver brings a little theatrical flair to the pizza conversation, and the atmosphere leans into that spirit without going overboard.

Market Street sits in the heart of downtown, which makes this a natural stop for anyone already navigating that part of the city on a weekday breather or a post-work evening plan.

What makes Mario’s stand out beyond the name is the pizzeria’s commitment to a classic approach with enough personality to keep things interesting. The setting carries a relaxed, almost conspiratorial warmth, the kind of place where conversations tend to stretch longer than planned.

Couples looking for a low-maintenance dinner with a bit of character tend to land here and leave satisfied.

The downtown location means parking requires a small plan, but the effort is well worth it. Market Street has a natural energy in February, when the cold sends people looking for warm rooms and good food.

Mario’s delivers on both counts. Think of it less as a destination and more as a reliable anchor for an evening that needed a strong focal point.

It earns its spot on this list without breaking a sweat.

5. Pizzeria Lui

Pizzeria Lui
© Pizzeria Lui

Lakewood does not always get the food spotlight it deserves, but Pizzeria Lui at 5380 West Mississippi Avenue is making a convincing case for a detour. Tucked into a stretch of West Mississippi Avenue that rewards a little local knowledge, this spot carries the kind of focused energy you find in pizzerias run by people who genuinely care about the craft.

The pies here reflect that attention in every layer.

Pizzeria Lui has earned a loyal following among Lakewood residents who appreciate a Neapolitan-leaning approach without the downtown price tag or the downtown parking situation. The crust achieves that elusive combination of light and structured, and the toppings are applied with restraint, which is always a good sign.

Less is often more when the base is this well executed.

This is a strong candidate for a Sunday afternoon reset, the kind of meal that recalibrates your week before it starts. Families who want something a step above the usual without committing to a formal dining experience tend to find Pizzeria Lui hits exactly the right register.

West Mississippi Avenue is easy to navigate, and the spot itself is right in the flow of the neighborhood. Come hungry and leave genuinely impressed.

6. Arte Pizzeria

Arte Pizzeria
© Arte Pizzeria

Loveland in February has a quiet, unhurried quality that pairs surprisingly well with a long pizza lunch. Arte Pizzeria at 1636 North Lincoln Avenue leans into that pace, offering a dining experience that feels considered rather than rushed.

The name signals something about the philosophy here: pizza as craft, not just fuel, and the execution backs that up consistently.

North Lincoln Avenue in Loveland is the kind of address that feels genuinely local, the sort of street where you park once and walk a bit before settling in. Arte Pizzeria fits that neighborhood rhythm without trying too hard.

The pies reflect a commitment to quality ingredients and careful assembly, which means even a simple margherita carries more personality than you might expect.

Travelers making a run between Denver and Fort Collins often discover Arte Pizzeria as a convenient and rewarding midpoint stop. It is the kind of place that earns a return visit before the first one is even finished.

Solo diners who enjoy eating without distraction tend to appreciate the calm, focused atmosphere here. If you have been looking for a reason to spend an afternoon in Loveland, Arte Pizzeria at 1636 North Lincoln Avenue is a clean and convincing one.

7. Slice420

Slice420
© Slice 420

West Colorado Avenue in Colorado Springs has a personality all its own, and Slice420 at 2501 West Colorado Avenue fits right into that creative, slightly irreverent corridor. This is not a white-tablecloth situation.

It is a counter-order, grab-your-slice, find-a-seat kind of place, and that is exactly what makes it work so well for the neighborhood it calls home.

Slice420 has developed a reputation for generous portions and a rotating selection that keeps regulars coming back to see what is new. The by-the-slice model is particularly useful for indecisive groups, where everyone can go their own direction without a committee vote.

It is a game-day pickup that actually delivers, rather than just promising convenience.

The Old Colorado City stretch of West Colorado Avenue is worth a short wander before or after, which turns a pizza stop into a genuinely pleasant afternoon out. Families with kids who have strong topping opinions will appreciate the flexibility here.

Slice420 is the kind of spot that does not overthink itself, and the result is a relaxed, reliable experience that earns real affection from the people who discover it. At 2501 West Colorado Avenue, it is easy to find and even easier to enjoy.

8. Walter’s303 Pizzeria & Publik House

Walter's303 Pizzeria & Publik House
© Walter’s 303 Pizzeria & Publik House

Up in the northern reaches of Colorado Springs, Walter’s303 Pizzeria and Publik House at 2690 North Gate Boulevard occupies a spot that feels a little like a neighborhood anchor, the kind of place that a community quietly organizes itself around. The name carries a certain regional pride, and the energy inside tends to reflect that, relaxed but genuinely alive.

Walter’s303 is known for combining solid pizza craft with a communal, publik-house atmosphere that makes lingering feel natural rather than awkward. The pies are built with care, and the menu offers enough range to satisfy a table of people who cannot agree on anything.

That flexibility is genuinely valuable when you are coordinating a group outing without a lot of advance planning.

North Gate Boulevard is a convenient stop for anyone coming in from Monument or heading toward the Air Force Academy area, which gives Walter’s303 an easy logic as a route-friendly meal. Couples who want a relaxed evening without formality tend to find this spot hits a comfortable middle ground.

The atmosphere does a lot of the work here, making even a simple pizza feel like part of a broader, enjoyable evening. Show up with low expectations and leave with high ones.

9. Pizzeria Rustica

Pizzeria Rustica
© Rustica Brick Oven Cafe

Right along the same creative stretch of West Colorado Avenue as Slice420, but with a distinctly different personality, Pizzeria Rustica at 2527 West Colorado Avenue has carved out its own loyal following in Colorado Springs. Where some pizza spots go wide, Rustica goes deep, focusing on a more refined, Italian-influenced approach that rewards diners who pay attention to the details.

The thin crust here is a point of pride, and the ingredient combinations reflect a kitchen that thinks carefully about balance. This is a good spot for the diner who approaches pizza the way a reader approaches a well-edited book: appreciating what was left out as much as what made it in.

The result is a menu that feels intentional without being precious.

Old Colorado City’s walkable character makes Pizzeria Rustica a natural anchor for an afternoon that starts with a stroll and ends with something genuinely satisfying. Couples on a quiet February outing tend to find the atmosphere here warm and unhurried.

It is a stress-free call when you want something a step above casual without crossing into formal territory. At 2527 West Colorado Avenue, it is close enough to Slice420 that a comparison visit on the same day is entirely reasonable and highly recommended.

10. Bambino’s Urban Pizzeria

Bambino's Urban Pizzeria
© Bambino’s Urban Pizzeria

Downtown Colorado Springs has been developing a real food identity over the past several years, and Bambino’s Urban Pizzeria at 36 East Bijou Street is part of that story. The urban in the name is not just marketing; the setting genuinely reflects a downtown energy that feels current without being self-conscious.

East Bijou Street puts you right in the middle of the city’s pedestrian-friendly core.

Bambino’s has built a reputation on creative topping combinations and a crust that holds up under pressure, both literally and figuratively. The menu tends to reward adventurous eaters while still offering enough familiar ground for those who know what they like and stick to it.

That balance is harder to achieve than it looks, and Bambino’s manages it with apparent ease.

This is a particularly good late-afternoon stop after a day of exploring downtown, when the city is still moving but the rush has not quite started. Solo travelers who find themselves in Colorado Springs midweek tend to appreciate the accessible, friendly counter culture here.

Bambino’s does not try to be the loudest voice in the room; it just consistently delivers a product that speaks for itself. At 36 East Bijou Street, it is exactly where you want it to be.

11. Woody’s Wood-Fired Pizza & Watering Hole

Woody's Wood-Fired Pizza & Watering Hole
© Woody’s Wood-Fired Pizza

Golden is one of those Colorado towns that earns its reputation every single time you visit, and Woody’s Wood-Fired Pizza and Watering Hole at 1305 Washington Avenue is woven into that reputation in a meaningful way. Washington Avenue is Golden’s main artery, lined with the kind of independent businesses that give a mountain town its character, and Woody’s fits that spirit without any effort at all.

The wood-fired oven is the centerpiece of the experience here, producing crusts with that particular smoky depth that gas ovens simply cannot replicate. Woody’s has the relaxed confidence of a place that has been doing this long enough to stop worrying about trends.

The result is a menu that feels settled and assured, which is exactly what you want when you have driven up from Denver for a proper meal.

February in Golden means the Clear Creek corridor is quiet and beautiful, which makes a pre-pizza walk along the creek a genuinely appealing way to build an appetite. Families who want a mountain-town meal without the mountain-town pricing anxiety tend to find Woody’s a reliable and satisfying answer.

At 1305 Washington Avenue, it is right in the flow of Golden’s main street energy. Come for the pizza; stay because the town makes leaving feel optional.

12. Beau Jo’s Pizza

Beau Jo's Pizza
© Beau Jo’s Idaho Springs

If there is one pizza on this list that qualifies as a genuine Colorado institution, it is Beau Jo’s in Idaho Springs. At 1517 Miner Street, this place has been feeding mountain travelers, skiers, and road-trippers for decades, and it has not needed a rebrand or a reinvention to stay relevant.

The pizza here is Colorado-style mountain pie, which means thick, braided honey wheat crusts and portions that take the word hearty seriously.

The honey on the table is not decoration. Beau Jo’s tradition of dipping the leftover crust in honey at the end of a meal is one of those small rituals that turns a meal into a memory.

It sounds odd until you try it, and then it sounds obvious. Idaho Springs sits right off I-70, which makes Beau Jo’s a logical and rewarding stop on any mountain corridor drive.

Families heading to or from the ski resorts have been making Beau Jo’s a mandatory detour for generations, and the generational loyalty shows in the room. The energy at 1517 Miner Street is warm, unhurried, and completely unpretentious.

If you have never been, February is an ideal time to fix that, when the mountain air sharpens your appetite and a big, honest pizza feels like exactly the right answer.

13. White Pie

White Pie
© White Pie

The name is a statement of intent. White Pie at 3002 East 6th Avenue in Denver’s Congress Park neighborhood has built its identity around the elegant, often underestimated world of pizza without traditional red sauce.

If you have spent most of your pizza life in marinara territory, this is a genuinely eye-opening detour worth making in February.

East 6th Avenue is one of Denver’s more pleasant neighborhood corridors, and White Pie fits the block’s independent, thoughtful energy. The menu reflects a kitchen that understands how to build flavor without leaning on tomato as a crutch.

Ricotta, garlic, herbs, and quality cheeses do the heavy lifting here, and they do it with confidence.

This is an excellent spot for couples who want a dinner that feels a little special without requiring a reservation three weeks out. The atmosphere at White Pie is warm and neighborhood-scaled, meaning it never feels like you wandered into something too formal for a Tuesday.

Solo diners who enjoy eating attentively, actually tasting what is in front of them, tend to find White Pie a quietly rewarding experience. At 3002 East 6th Avenue, it is the kind of place that makes you reconsider everything you thought you knew about what pizza needs to be.

14. Evergreen Local’s Pizza

Evergreen Local's Pizza
© Local’s Pizza

There is something particularly right about eating pizza in a mountain town on a cold February evening, and Evergreen Local’s Pizza at 3897 Evergreen Parkway leans into that feeling without overcooking it. The name signals exactly what this place is: a spot built for the people who actually live here, not just the people passing through, though visitors are clearly welcome and well fed.

Evergreen Parkway is a scenic approach to a town that rewards slowing down, and Evergreen Local’s Pizza reflects that unhurried mountain character. The pies here are made with the kind of straightforward confidence that comes from knowing your audience and consistently delivering what they came for.

There is no performance involved, just good pizza in a comfortable room.

This is a particularly strong option for anyone making the Evergreen loop from Denver on a free Saturday, when the mountain air and the drive itself become part of the experience. Families who want a reliable, low-pressure meal after a morning of outdoor activity will find Evergreen Local’s hits every practical note.

The Evergreen Parkway location is easy to find and easy to return to, which explains why this place holds such a firm place in the community’s regular rotation. It earns its spot on any Colorado pizza shortlist without needing to shout about it.