Pizza in Queen Creek by Neighborhood: A Local's Map
By Saguaro List ·
Queen Creek has grown fast enough in the last decade that "just Google pizza near me" often sends you to a chain on the wrong side of town—or worse, into Gilbert or San Tan Valley before you realize it. Here's a neighborhood-by-neighborhood breakdown to help you find a slice closer to your front door.
Why Neighborhood Matters in Queen Creek
Queen Creek is sprawling and still expanding. The distance between Meridian and the Schnepf Farms corridor can mean 15-plus minutes of driving—and in July, leaving a pizza in a hot car for that long turns dinner into a science experiment. Knowing which spots anchor your quadrant of town keeps the drive short and the cheese where it belongs: melted on the pizza, not on the seat.
The Power Road & Ellsworth Corridor (Northwest Queen Creek)
This stretch—roughly along Power Road between Ocotillo and Queen Creek Road—is the most restaurant-dense part of town. You'll find the widest variety of pizza styles here, from New York–style by-the-slice spots to fast-casual build-your-own concepts. If you're in the Mandalay Ranch, Cortland, or Hastings Farms neighborhoods, this is your home base.
What to look for:
- Dine-in and carryout options are both common here
- Delivery radius from this corridor tends to reach most northwest QC zip codes (85142, 85140 along the border)
- Lunch specials during the week are worth asking about; many spots offer $10–$14 lunch combos
Marketplace at Queen Creek & Ellsworth Loop (Central-East)
The area around the Queen Creek Marketplace has evolved into a genuine dining destination. Pizza options in this pocket range from fast-casual (under $15 for an individual pie) to sit-down spots where you'd spend $18–$28 for a large specialty pizza. This corridor is convenient for residents of Sossaman Estates, Cortina, and the newer developments east of Ellsworth.
Dine-In vs. Carryout Considerations
| Factor | Dine-In | Carryout |
|---|---|---|
| Best for summer heat | ✓ AC escape | Bring a thermal bag |
| Speed | 20–35 min typical | 15–25 min if ordered ahead |
| Cost | May add drinks, tip | More budget control |
| Family with kids | Often has more space | Easier logistics |
Ordering ahead via an app or phone call is especially smart on Friday evenings, when wait times can push past 30 minutes at popular spots.
San Tan Village Fringe & Signal Butte (Southeast)
As Queen Creek's southeastern edge continues to build out—think Ironwood Crossing, Harvest, and the communities tucked near Signal Butte Road—dining options are catching up. Pizza coverage in this area is thinner on local independents and heavier on chains and ghost kitchens right now, though that's shifting as rooftops multiply.
If you live out here, your best bets are:
- Third-party delivery apps that aggregate from multiple zones (watch the delivery fees, which often run $3–$7 for this distance)
- Carryout from the Marketplace corridor—a 10-minute drive that's worth building into your Friday routine
- Watching for new openings; this is the fastest-growing residential area in Queen Creek as of the mid-2020s
Schnepf Farms & Rural East Queen Creek
The easternmost reaches of Queen Creek—near Schnepf Road, Gary Road, and the equestrian lots along Ellsworth north of Combs—are genuinely rural. Pizza delivery to large-lot and rural addresses is hit or miss, and some delivery platforms won't route to these locations at all. Your reliable options:
- Call ahead and confirm delivery address acceptance explicitly
- Plan for carryout; the drive to the Power/Ellsworth corridor is manageable
- During Schnepf Farms event season (fall pumpkin patches, harvest festivals), local food vendors sometimes pop up on weekends—not a pizza plan to count on, but a nice bonus
Tips That Apply Across the Whole Town
Monsoon season (mid-June through September): Delivery drivers deal with the same sudden downpours and dust storms you do. Add buffer time to your ETA expectations, and if a storm is rolling in around dinner time, order early or pick up yourself.
Heat and carryout: Always use an insulated bag for pickup. Even a five-minute drive in August can start softening a cardboard box. Many pizza shops will give you a bag or box insert—just ask.
Checking licensing and reviews: Queen Creek falls under Maricopa County health inspections, and scores are public record. It takes about 30 seconds to pull up a restaurant's recent inspection before your first visit—a habit worth keeping.
TPT and pricing: Arizona's transaction privilege tax applies to restaurant meals, so menu prices you see online may not reflect your total. Budget a few extra dollars on any order.
For a broader look at what's open in town right now, the Queen Creek business directory is a good starting point. And if you're specifically hunting for pizza options across the Valley with real-time listings, you can search local pizza spots or browse the Saguaro List dining directory to compare what's available near your zip code.
Picking Your Spot
Queen Creek's pizza scene is no longer an afterthought—it's grown alongside the city itself. The northwest corridor offers the most variety today, the Marketplace area balances convenience and sit-down options, and the southeast is worth watching as new restaurants follow new residents. Know your neighborhood, order ahead when you can, and keep a thermal bag in the car during monsoon season. That's the local's playbook.
Find a trusted Pizza pro in Queen Creek
Browse vetted local businesses on Saguaro List.