San Luis Potosí has a dozen dedicated pizza spots scattered across a city of roughly 600 restaurants. That makes pizza a small category here. The price split is clean: half the places charge under MX$100 per person, the rest sit in the MX$100–200 range. There is no upscale pizza in SLP. Nobody charges MX$300 for a wood-fired margherita, and based on what I've eaten across the city, nobody needs to.
The budget tier is where the surprises live. Cherry's Pizza Aviación on Av. Hernán Cortes in the Industrial Aviación neighborhood holds a 4.5 Google rating across 646 reviews. At under MX$100 per person, it sits within striking distance of Euro Pizza, which costs twice as much and rates only a tenth of a point higher. Reviewers keep highlighting the value, and the place stays open seven days a week from 12:30 PM. O Sole Mío works the same angle: priced under MX$100, it carries a 4.7 rating from more than 1,300 reviews, the highest Google average among SLP's budget pizza options. And then there is Pizzería artesanal Los Pinos on Calle Xicoténcatl in the Barrio de San Miguelito. Open only Friday through Sunday. Handmade pizzas. A 4.7 rating from 168 reviews. The limited schedule creates its own demand, the kind of place you plan your weekend around.
The MX$100–200 tier is where the big names sit. Euro Pizza on Av. Nereo Rodríguez Barragán in Fuentes del Bosque is the most-reviewed pizza spot in the city with 2,757 ratings and a 4.6 average. The menu goes wide: pasta alfredo, German pizza, pretzels, tiramisu, bolognese spaghetti, plus vegan options and micheladas. It functions more as a full Italian-adjacent restaurant than a pizza counter, open daily from 1 PM with weekend hours stretching to 11:45 PM. Tibiri Tibara 7B over in Las Lomas matches that 4.6 rating but takes a completely different approach, with craft beers, a vegan-friendly menu, late hours (open until midnight on weekdays, 1 AM on Fridays), and a clear focus on atmosphere. They skip Mondays and don't open until 6 PM on weekdays, built for the after-work crowd who want cold beer alongside their slice. Ambigú Pizza Pasta Café rounds out the mid-range at 4.7 from 363 reviews.
The scheduling differences across these places reveal who they serve. Cherry's Pizza and Euro Pizza stay open every day for the steady lunch-and-dinner crowd. Los Pinos compresses all its energy into three weekend days. Tibiri Tibara runs as a nighttime-only operation. If you want pizza before 2 PM on a Saturday in SLP, your options thin out fast.
Here is the value math. Cherry's Pizza at under MX$100 rates 4.5 on Google. Euro Pizza at MX$100–200 rates 4.6. That extra hundred pesos per person gets you a wider menu and a more established room, but not a meaningfully better rating. For anyone focused on what lands on the plate, the budget tier in San Luis Potosí is winning per peso. The obvious gap in the market? No high-end Neapolitan concept exists here. Nobody is doing imported 00 flour, San Marzano tomatoes, a proper 900-degree oven, and a curated natural wine list. Either potosinos have a hard ceiling on what they will pay for a pie, or somebody is leaving serious money on the table.





