Bar in New Orleans, United States
St. Pizza
100Pearl PointsNeighborhood pizza, no French Quarter markup.

About St. Pizza
St. Pizza on Magazine Street is a low-friction, walk-in-friendly pizza option in New Orleans' Lower Garden District. It suits value-focused visitors who want a quick, filling meal without a reservation or a long wait. Verify hours before visiting, as confirmed operating data is limited.
St. Pizza, New Orleans: Quick Verdict
St. Pizza sits at 1152 Magazine St in the Lower Garden District, which already tells you something useful: this is a neighborhood spot, not a French Quarter tourist trap. If you're comparing pizza options along the Magazine Street corridor, this address puts it squarely in a walkable, local-leaning stretch of the city. The data on pricing, hours, and awards is limited, so the honest framing here is: St. Pizza is worth knowing about as a casual, accessible option in a city that doesn't always make pizza its headline act.
New Orleans runs on po'boys, Gulf seafood, and Creole cooking. Pizza spots that earn genuine local loyalty here tend to do so on value and consistency rather than on trend-chasing. St. Pizza's Magazine Street location, in a suite setting rather than a standalone room, signals a counter-service or fast-casual format — the kind of place where you're paying for the slice and the convenience, not the ambiance or the tableside service. For the value-focused visitor, that's actually a point in its favor: lower overhead usually means better price-to-quality alignment than a full sit-down operation.
If you're on Magazine Street and want a quick, filling meal without committing to a full restaurant experience, St. Pizza fits the gap. It's also an easy no-reservation stop, which matters in a city where the better-known dining rooms require planning weeks in advance. Booking difficulty here is low — walk in, order, eat. That frictionless access makes it a practical choice for groups that can't agree on a reservation window, or for solo travelers who want something direct between sightseeing stops.
For context on how New Orleans' bar and drinks scene intersects with casual dining on this end of town, our full New Orleans bars guide covers the options worth pairing with a slice. If you're planning a broader trip, the full New Orleans restaurants guide and full New Orleans hotels guide give you the fuller picture. For off-the-beaten-path eating, 2 Phat Vegans is another Magazine Street-area option worth knowing if your group has plant-based priorities.
One practical note: because hours, phone, and website data aren't confirmed in our records, verify current operating hours before making a trip specifically for St. Pizza. Magazine Street foot traffic makes it easy to combine with other errands or stops, so the risk of a wasted journey is low if you're already in the neighborhood.
How It Compares
Frequently Asked Questions
Does St. Pizza have happy hour deals?
No happy hour details are confirmed for St. Pizza at 1152 Magazine St. For deal-focused drinking in the Lower Garden District, Cure on Freret St runs a structured happy hour that draws a consistent crowd and is a stronger bet if discounted cocktails are the goal.
What's the crowd like at St. Pizza?
Expect a neighborhood mix: locals from the Lower Garden District, Magazine Street shoppers, and visitors who've done enough research to avoid the French Quarter tourist traps. The Magazine St address signals a relaxed, unpretentious crowd rather than a destination-dining scene.
What's the signature drink at St. Pizza?
No signature drink is documented for St. Pizza. Pizza-focused spots on Magazine Street typically pair with beer or simple wine, so don't come here expecting a cocktail program. If drinks are central to your plan, pair the visit with a stop at Cure or Cane & Table nearby.
Is St. Pizza good for a date?
It works for a low-key, early-evening date where the focus is the food rather than the setting. The Lower Garden District address is easy to reach and has a walkable follow-up bar scene on Magazine St. For a more deliberate date with atmosphere and cocktails, Jewel of the South is a better call.
Is the food good at St. Pizza?
St. Pizza sits on Magazine St in a neighborhood where repeat local business is the standard for survival, which is a reasonable proxy for quality. No formal awards or critical recognition are on record, so expectations should be calibrated to a solid neighborhood pizza spot rather than a destination.
Does St. Pizza have outdoor seating?
No outdoor seating is confirmed in available data for the 1152 Magazine St location. The Suite 103 address suggests an indoor-only setup, but it's worth calling ahead or checking on arrival if an outdoor option matters to your group.
Do I need a reservation at St. Pizza?
Almost certainly not. Pizza spots at this address and format typically operate walk-in only. Show up, order, eat — that's the format. If you're planning around a tight schedule on a Friday or Saturday evening, arriving before peak dinner hours is the practical move.
Location
1152 Magazine St Suite 103, New Orleans, LA 70130
New Orleans, United States
Compare St. Pizza
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| St. Pizza | — | |
| Jewel of the South | — | |
| Beachbum Berry's Latitude 29 | — | |
| Cure | — | |
| Cane & Table | — | |
| The Carousel Bar | — |
What to weigh when choosing between St. Pizza and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Jewel of the South — Notable alternative
- Beachbum Berry's Latitude 29 — Notable alternative
- Cure — Notable alternative
- Cane & Table — Notable alternative
- The Carousel Bar — Notable alternative
St. Pizza is a casual pizza spot on Magazine Street, and it occupies a different category from New Orleans' cocktail bars entirely — but if you're planning an evening in the Lower Garden District or nearby, knowing where to drink before or after matters. For serious cocktail drinking, Cure on Freret Street is the strongest choice in this part of the city: a program-driven bar with a track record of James Beard recognition, worth booking ahead if craft cocktails are a priority. Jewel of the South in the French Quarter delivers a more historically rooted experience, drawing on 19th-century New Orleans cocktail tradition — better for a special occasion drink than a casual round.
If you're after something more thematic, Beachbum Berry's Latitude 29 in the Hotel Monteleone is the tiki specialist in town — high-fun, high-commitment to the format, and worth it if that's your register. Cane & Table sits in a similar rum-forward, colonial-Caribbean lane and is easier to walk into without planning. For the tourist-friendly spin of The Carousel Bar at Hotel Monteleone — the rotating bar is genuine, the drinks are solid rather than exceptional, and it's worth one visit for the novelty. For cocktail bars in other cities as a comparison baseline, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Julep in Houston, and Kumiko in Chicago each show what a focused, category-defining bar program looks like — useful benchmarks if you're calibrating expectations for what New Orleans' best can match.
St. Pizza itself isn't competing in the cocktail bar space — it's a pizza stop, and the honest comparison is to other casual, accessible eating options along Magazine Street. If your group wants drinks and food in one place, pairing St. Pizza with a nearby bar is a more practical move than looking for both under one roof here. Check our full New Orleans experiences guide and full New Orleans wineries guide for broader planning context.
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