How to Reheat Pizza (Oven, Air Fryer, Microwave) – Simple Tricks for Better Leftovers

By: Kelly Barlow

Leftover pizza can be great, or it can turn rubbery, soggy, dry, or weirdly tough in under 2 minutes. Most of the difference comes down to heat level, timing, and how much moisture escapes during reheating.

Food safety matters too. Pizza should be refrigerated within 2 hours, kept cold at 40°F or below, and reheated to 165°F if you want to follow USDA and CDC leftover guidance. FoodSafety.gov also lists leftover pizza at 3 to 4 days in the fridge and 1 to 2 months in the freezer.

A good reheating method depends on what you care about most. If you want a crisp crust and can wait a few minutes, use the oven. If you want speed and surprisingly strong texture, use the air fryer. If you just need lunch hot fast, the microwave still has a place, though it usually gives the weakest crust.

Our recommendations are air fryer and skillet methods above the microwave, with the oven close behind when done on a hot surface.

Why Reheated Pizza So Often Goes Wrong

Texture loss comes from uneven heat and moisture imbalance across ingredients|Shutterstock

Pizza is a mix of bread, cheese, sauce, oil, and toppings that all react differently to heat. Crust wants dry heat so it can crisp. Cheese wants gentle heat so it melts without breaking. Toppings, especially vegetables and cured meats, can release extra moisture or dry out fast.

Serious Eats explains the core problem well: reheating drives off water, and once too much moisture leaves the crust, texture suffers.

Their testing and explanation of starch behavior point to a simple rule. Gentler reheating preserves texture better than blasting a slice with harsh heat right away.

In practical terms, that means:

  • Very high heat can crisp the bottom fast, but dry the top
  • Microwave heat works quickly, but often warms unevenly
  • Covered heat can help melt cheese without turning toppings leathery
  • A hot surface under the slice usually helps more than hot air alone

First, Store It Properly

Good leftovers start before reheating. Pizza that sat out half the night is a different story from pizza boxed and chilled after dinner.

FoodSafety explains that perishable leftovers should go into the refrigerator within 2 hours, or within 1 hour if the temperature is above 90°F.

Leftovers generally keep 3 to 4 days in the fridge. FoodSafety’s cold storage chart specifically lists pizza at 3 to 4 days refrigerated and 1 to 2 months frozen.

Best Storage Habits for Pizza

  • Cool slices quickly and refrigerate them within 2 hours
  • Stack with parchment or wax paper between slices if needed
  • Use an airtight container or wrap well
  • Avoid crushing toppings under heavy containers
  • Freeze extra slices early if you know you will not eat them within 3 to 4 days

Cold pizza straight from the fridge reheats more predictably than pizza that has spent too long warming and cooling on the counter.

The Best Method for Most People: Oven

The oven remains the safest all-around choice when you want a slice that feels close to fresh. It handles more than one slice well, gives the crust a chance to crisp, and heats toppings more evenly than a microwave.

Food & Wine tested several methods and gave oven reheating high marks when slices were placed on a preheated pizza stone or heavy pan at 475°F for 2 to 4 minutes. Their testers found the crust crisp, and the toppings evenly warmed.

How to Reheat Pizza in the Oven

Even heat and a hot surface deliver the most consistent reheating results|Shutterstock

For 1 to 6 slices:

  1. Put a sheet pan, pizza stone, or heavy upside-down cast-iron pan in the oven.
  2. Preheat to 425°F to 475°F.
  3. When hot, place the pizza directly on the pan or stone.
  4. Heat for 3 to 6 minutes.
  5. Pull it when the cheese loosens and the bottom is crisp.

For thicker slices, deep-dish, or heavily topped pizza, stay closer to 425°F and add another minute or two. For thin New York-style slices, 450°F to 475°F usually works better.

Oven Tips That Actually Help

  • Preheat the surface, not just the oven air
  • Keep slices spaced apart
  • Check early, especially with thin crust
  • For dry-looking pizza, loosely tent the top with foil for the first half of reheating
  • Avoid leaving slices in too long after the cheese melts

Oven reheating is especially good for:

  • Several slices at once
  • Thin crust
  • Large foldable slices
  • Pizza with a soft center and crisp bottom

Fastest Crisp Results: Air Fryer

Short cooking time at moderate heat restores crispness efficiently|Shutterstock

Air fryers are excellent for pizza, especially one or two slices. The result is a very crisp crust and nicely revived toppings, though the tip of the slice could dry a bit.

How to Reheat Pizza in the Air Fryer

  1. Place 1 or 2 slices in a single layer
  2. Set the air fryer to 350°F
  3. Heat for 2 to 4 minutes
  4. Check after 2 minutes
  5. Remove as soon as the cheese is hot and the bottom firms up

Heavier slices may need 4 to 5 minutes. Thin slices can overcook quickly, so keep an eye on them.

When the Air Fryer Works Best

Air fryer reheating shines when you want:

  • One quick lunch slice
  • Crisp pepperoni edges
  • Firm bottom crust
  • Minimal wait time

It is less ideal when you have a full box to reheat or when the slice has delicate toppings like fresh basil, arugula, or burrata that can scorch or wilt too hard under circulating heat.

Air Fryer Mistakes to Avoid

  • Overlapping slices
  • Starting too hot
  • Walking away for 5 minutes
  • Reheating very greasy slices until the cheese separates

A short cook time matters more than a high setting. Pizza goes from revived to overdone fast in an air fryer.

The Emergency Option: Microwave

The microwave gets a bad reputation for good reason. You get tough outer crust and uneven heating, even when a mug of water sits beside the plate.

Still, the microwave can be useful when speed matters more than texture.

How to Reheat Pizza in the Microwave

Speed comes at the cost of texture and even heat distribution|Shutterstock
  1. Put the slice on a microwave-safe plate
  2. Cover loosely, or use a microwave-safe cover
  3. Heat in 30-second bursts
  4. Rotate or reposition between bursts if needed
  5. Stop as soon as the cheese is hot

USDA guidance for microwave reheating says leftovers should be covered and rotated for even heating, and CDC says reheated leftovers should reach 165°F.

A Few Tricks That Improve Microwave Pizza

  • Put a plain microwave-safe paper towel under the slice to absorb some moisture
  • Heat in short bursts instead of one long cycle
  • Let the slice rest for 30 seconds before eating
  • For better texture, finish it for 1 minute in a hot skillet if possible

Even with good technique, microwave pizza usually ends up softer and chewier than oven or air fryer pizza. That does not make it useless. It just makes it the convenience choice.

Quick Comparison Table

Method Best For Typical Temp Typical Time Texture Result
Oven 2 to 6 slices, balanced results 425°F to 475°F 3 to 6 min Crisp bottom, even melt
Air Fryer 1 to 2 slices, fast reheating 350°F 2 to 4 min Very crisp crust, fast
Microwave Fastest option, office lunch High power, short bursts 30 to 90 sec Soft crust, less even heating

Test kitchen reporting from Food & Wine strongly favored air fryer and covered-skillet reheating, while Serious Eats pointed to lower, gentler reheating as a key reason some methods preserve texture better than others.

How Different Pizza Styles Behave

Reheating success depends on crust type, thickness, and toppings|Shutterstock

Not all leftover pizza reheats the same way.

Thin-Crust Pizza

Thin crust reheats quickly and benefits from high heat and short cook times. Oven and air fryer both work well. Microwave often turns the outer edge tough.

New York-Style Slices

Big foldable slices usually do best in the oven or in a pan. A hot preheated tray helps restore the bottom. Air fryer works too, but the pointed tip can dry before the middle fully warms.

Deep-Dish and Pan Pizza

Lower heat for slightly longer works better here. Too much top heat too fast can burn the cheese before the dense interior warms. Aim for the oven at about 400°F to 425°F, and give it extra time.

Toppings-Heavy Pizza

Vegetable-loaded slices release moisture as they warm. Give them space and check often. Air fryer can work, but oven reheating is often easier to control.

FAQs

How Long Is Leftover Pizza Good in the Fridge?
3 to 4 days. After that, risk rises and quality drops.
Can You Freeze Pizza?
Yes. FoodSafety lists pizza at 1 to 2 months in the freezer for best quality.
What Temperature Should Reheated Pizza Reach?
USDA and CDC guidance for leftovers points to 165°F. A food thermometer is the safest way to verify, especially for thick slices or pizza with meat toppings.
Can You Reheat Pizza More Than Once?
USDA says leftovers can be reheated to 165°F, then returned to the refrigerator within 2 hours if unused, though quality keeps slipping with every cycle. Reheating only what you plan to eat is the smarter move.

Small Habits That Make Leftovers Taste Better

A few simple choices have an outsized effect on the final slice:

  • Reheat from refrigerated, not room-temperature, pizza
  • Use a hot surface for better crust
  • Avoid overcrowding
  • Pull the slice the moment it is ready
  • Add fresh basil, chili flakes, or grated parmesan after reheating, not before
  • For very dry slices, a light cover during part of reheating can help

One more practical point: pepperoni, sausage, and cheese pizzas usually bounce back better than veggie slices loaded with watery toppings. Mushrooms, tomatoes, and peppers can soften the crust during storage, so even perfect reheating has limits.

Final Thoughts

Good leftover pizza comes down to control. Oven reheating gives the most reliable all-purpose result. Air fryer wins on speed and crispness for one or two slices. Microwave works when time matters more than texture.

Store pizza properly, heat only what you need, and stop reheating the moment the slice is hot. That is usually the difference between sad leftovers and a lunch you genuinely want.