Quick Answer: The Ooni Koda 16 is worth its ~$599 price in 2026 for anyone who wants a gas pizza oven big enough for a 16-inch pie. It reaches roughly 950°F (500°C) in about 20 minutes and bakes a Neapolitan-style pizza in about 60 seconds, per Ooni. Its standout feature is the L-shaped burner, which wraps flame along the back and one side for more even heat than the single rear flame on smaller ovens. It’s gas-only (propane out of the box, with an optional natural gas kit), weighs about 40 lb, and carries a 5-year warranty. If you don’t need the 16-inch deck, the lighter, cheaper Ooni Koda 12 saves you money.
The Koda 16 is the oven that reviewers keep coming back to. Forbes Vetted calls it “a versatile, affordable pizza oven that makes amazing pizza,” and Tom’s Guide named it the best outdoor pizza oven it has tested. We ran real bakes on it to answer the only question that matters: at around $599, is the big gas Ooni the one to buy?
Ooni Koda 16 by the numbers
- ~950°F (500°C): the max temperature Ooni rates for the Koda 16 — versus roughly 550°F for a typical home kitchen oven, per the U.S. Department of Energy. That gap is the difference between a soft home-oven crust and a leopard-spotted Neapolitan one.
- ~20 minutes: Ooni’s stated preheat to full temperature, so the cordierite stone is fully saturated before you launch and won’t leave a soggy base.
- ~60 seconds: the bake time for a Neapolitan-style pizza at full heat, in line with the 60-90 second bake at ~905°F the Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana (AVPN) specifies for authentic Neapolitan pizza.
- 16-inch stone: the deck size — big enough for a full family-size pizza or two personal pies, the main reason to step up from a 12-inch oven.
- ~40 lb (18 kg): the Koda 16’s weight, and a 5-year warranty from Ooni on registration.
Ooni Koda 16 (Gas)
- ~950°F gas heat in ~20 minutes bakes a true Neapolitan pizza in ~60 seconds, per Ooni.
- L-shaped burner wraps flame along the back and side for more even heat than a single rear flame.
- 16-inch stone fits a full family-size pie; gas-only with an optional natural gas conversion kit.
Ooni Koda 16 at a glance
| Spec | Ooni Koda 16 |
|---|---|
| Max temperature | ~950°F (500°C) on gas |
| Fuel | Propane (natural gas kit optional) |
| Max pizza size | 16 inches |
| Burner | L-shaped (back + side) for even heat |
| Preheat | ~20 minutes |
| Weight | ~40 lb (18 kg) |
| Cook time (pizza) | ~60 seconds at full heat |
| Warranty | 5 years (with registration) |
| Price | ~$599 |
| Rating | ★★★★½ |
How it performs on pizza
The headline number is 950°F, and the Koda 16 gets there fast — about 20 minutes from cold to launch temperature, per Ooni. On gas it’s genuinely set-and-forget: you turn the dial, wait for the stone to saturate, and launch. There’s no fire to build, no ash to sweep, and the flame holds steady rather than swinging the way live-fire ovens do. A Neapolitan-style pizza cooks in about 60 seconds at full heat, with the puffed, charred cornicione that only 900°F+ can produce.
The one skill you still need is turning. Even with the improved burner, the far edge of the deck runs hottest, so you rotate the pizza every 20 seconds or so with a turning peel. That’s true of every high-heat oven, not a Koda 16 flaw — and the wide 16-inch deck actually gives you more room to spin the pie without crowding the mouth.
The L-shaped burner is the real upgrade
What separates the Koda 16 from smaller gas ovens is the L-shaped burner. Instead of a single flame across the back, it wraps heat along the back and one side of the chamber. On a 16-inch deck that matters: a single rear burner would leave the front of a big pizza cooler than the back, forcing more aggressive turning. The L-burner narrows that gap, so the bake is more even edge to edge and a beginner gets a more forgiving result. Forbes Vetted specifically credits the L-shaped burner for the oven’s even heat distribution, and in our bakes it’s the feature you notice most when you scale up from a 12-inch oven.
Ooni Koda 16 Cover
- Weatherproof cover cut to the Koda 16's footprint so it can live outside year-round.
- Keeps moisture out of the burner and off the stone between pizza nights.
- The first accessory most owners add after the oven itself.
Size and portability
At about 40 lb the Koda 16 is heavier and wider than a 12-inch oven, and that’s the trade-off for the bigger deck. It’s still transportable — folding legs, no chimney, a manageable footprint — but it’s a two-hands lift rather than a one-arm grab. If your oven mostly lives on a patio or a sturdy outdoor oven stand, the size is pure upside: more cooking surface and a more even bake. If you plan to haul it camping or tailgating every weekend, the lighter Ooni Koda 12 or a portable pizza oven is the easier companion.
How the Ooni Koda 16 compares
| Oven | Max temp | Fuel | Max pizza | Weight | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ooni Koda 16 | ~950°F | Gas | 16" | ~40 lb | ~$599 |
| Ooni Koda 12 | ~950°F | Gas | 12" | ~20 lb | ~$399 |
| Gozney Roccbox | ~950°F | Gas (+ optional wood) | 12" | ~44 lb | ~$499 |
| Gozney Arc XL | ~950°F | Gas | 16" | ~46 lb | ~$700 |
| Ooni Karu 16 | ~950°F | Multi-fuel | 16" | ~62 lb | ~$799 |
The pattern is clear. Against the Ooni Koda 12, the Koda 16 costs about $200 more and weighs twice as much, but it fits a family-size pizza and spreads heat more evenly with the L-burner. Against the Gozney Roccbox, the Koda 16 gives up the Roccbox’s dense insulation and dual-fuel path but adds a bigger deck and saves $100 — see our Gozney Roccbox review for that side. Against its 16-inch rivals, the Gozney Arc XL ($700) and the multi-fuel Ooni Karu 16 ($799), the Koda 16 is the cheapest way into a 16-inch gas deck. Cross-shopping the whole gas category? Start with our best gas pizza oven roundup, or the wider best outdoor pizza oven guide.
Who should buy it
- Buy it if you want a gas oven big enough for a 16-inch pizza, value the L-burner’s even heat, cook for groups, or want the cheapest way into a 16-inch gas deck with a 5-year warranty behind it.
- Skip it if you mostly cook 12-inch personal pies (the Ooni Koda 12 saves $200 and half the weight), want live-fire wood flavor (look at the multi-fuel Ooni Karu), or want the best heat retention in a portable body (the Gozney Roccbox).
Whatever oven you land on, a turning peel and an infrared thermometer are the two accessories that most improve your results — cheap upgrades that carry over even if you change ovens later.
Infrared Thermometer
- Confirm the stone is fully up to temp before you launch — the #1 cause of soggy bases.
- Instant, no-contact reads well into the 900°F+ range the Koda 16 works in.
- Works with every oven, so it carries over if you ever upgrade.
The bottom line
The Ooni Koda 16 is one of the best gas pizza ovens you can buy in 2026, and at ~$599 it earns its price for anyone who wants a 16-inch deck. You pay more than a 12-inch oven, but you get a family-size cooking surface, the L-shaped burner’s more even heat, a ~20-minute preheat to 950°F, and a 5-year warranty. The only real reasons to look elsewhere are wanting maximum portability, live-fire wood flavor, or the Roccbox’s heat retention. For a patio cook who wants big, pizzeria-grade Neapolitan pies for years to come, the Koda 16 is an easy recommendation. Pair it with a good pizza peel and a pizza steel for your indoor oven, and you’re set year-round.
Specs cited from Ooni product information; temperature benchmarks from the AVPN and the U.S. Department of Energy; review context from Forbes Vetted and Tom’s Guide.