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Traditional Mexican dishes served at Restaurante Mina Vieja in ChihuahuaBy Cuisine

Pizza in Chihuahua: 26 Spots and a Chain at the Top

Chihuahua has 26 pizza spots. The best-rated one is a Little Caesars, which tells you everything about a city built on MX$80 chamorros.

Chihuahua has about 450 restaurants. Twenty-six of them sell pizza. When you rank every food spot in the city, the top pizza joint is Little Caesars, the American chain. Let that sink in.

It's not that Little Caesars is bad here. The Periférico de la Juventud location at number 3306 in Puerta de Hierro pulls a 4.1 rating from over 2,600 reviews. People mention speed and economy. The place stays open 10 AM to 11 PM, seven days a week, and you walk out with a whole pizza for well under MX$100. As a convenience play, it works. But when a chain leads the category, it means the independents haven't shown up.

Little Caesars Pizza location in Puerta de Hierro, Chihuahua
Little Caesars Pizza location in Puerta de Hierro, Chihuahua

The reason becomes clear when you look at what Chihuahua eats instead. Most of the city's restaurants fall in the budget range, under MX$100. There is exactly one upscale spot in the entire city. This is a town built on affordable, filling food, and the budget bracket is dominated by traditional Mexican cooking that makes pizza look like an afterthought.

Take Chamorros y Costillas del Centro on Calle Julián Carrillo in Centro. A 4.7 rating from over 440 reviews. Carnitas, chamorros, ribs, burritos, montado sandwiches. All under MX$100. Open 10 AM to 6:30 PM, every single day. That's a 4.7-rated meat counter at the same price point where Little Caesars pulls a 4.1. The competition isn't close.

La Cristy Co on Calle Ignacio Allende 118 in Zona Centro tells a similar story. A 4.4 rating across close to 1,000 reviews, and one of the most consistently praised restaurants I've eaten at in this city. Chilaquiles, corn tacos, entomatadas, hot cakes, fajitas. They have a patio with board games. Mimosas and horchata water on the drinks menu. Open until 11 PM on weekends. Price? Same MX$1-100 bracket as Little Caesars. For the cost of a pizza combo, you get two hours at a cafe that people keep coming back to. That math kills pizza.

The pattern holds at the next price tier. Restaurante Mina Vieja on Republica de Bolivia 4106 in Los Frailes runs a breakfast operation surrounded by antiques and mining memorabilia. A 4.6 rating from over 900 reviews, open until 3 PM (2 PM Sundays, closed Mondays). Enchiladas and chilaquiles in a space that feels more museum than restaurant. Over in Panamericana, Como Como at A. F. Carbonel 6100 matches that 4.6 rating with over 800 reviews. Breakfast-to-lunch only, closed by 2:30 PM. Chilaquiles, tamales, cafe de olla, totopos. Both charge MX$100-200 per person, which still undercuts most sit-down pizza places.

The gap here is wide open. Nobody has built a quality independent pizzeria that can compete with a MX$80 plate of chamorros at a 4.7-rated stall. Chihuahua eats on a budget. It eats Mexican, and it eats early, with most top spots closing by mid-afternoon. A wood-fired pizza operation with late-night hours, fair prices, and the obsessive quality that La Cristy Co brings to its chilaquiles would own a space that Little Caesars holds by default. Until someone builds that, the chamorros keep winning.

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