If you are cooking for one and want the best ooni pizza oven for widowers, the short answer is the Ooni Koda 2 (14-inch propane) for its single-knob simplicity, 60-second bake, and zero ash cleanup. If you want a smaller footprint and the option of wood-fired flavor on weekends, the Ooni Karu 12 Multi-Fuel is the runner-up. Both fit a 10-12 inch personal pie perfectly, store on a balcony or patio shelf, and require no big setup. Below I walk through why these two are the right calls for solo cooks in 2026, plus a few budget alternatives worth knowing about.
Why solo cooks need a different pizza oven than families
Cooking for one after losing a spouse comes with a quiet but real problem: most kitchen gear, recipes, and appliances assume a household of four. You end up with leftovers you don't want, a sink full of dishes for a single meal, and the heaviness of a kitchen that suddenly feels too big. A portable outdoor pizza oven flips that. It is fast, it is outside (which gets you out of the house), it makes exactly one personal pie, and cleanup is almost nothing because nothing touches a pan or a pot.
The best ooni pizza oven for widowers is the one that turns on quickly, bakes a 10-12 inch pizza in under two minutes, doesn't require splitting wood or babysitting a fire, and stores in a small space. That rules out the big 16-inch family models and points us squarely at the Koda 2 and Karu 12.
Quick comparison: top solo-portion pizza ovens for 2026
| Oven | Pizza size | Fuel | Max temp | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ooni Koda 2 | 14 inch | Propane | 950F+ | Top pick: one-knob, no mess |
| Ooni Karu 12 | 12 inch | Wood / charcoal / gas (with kit) | 950F | Flavor + smallest footprint |
| Ninja Artisan Electric | 12 inch | Electric (120V) | 700F | Apartment patios, no propane |
| BIG HORN 12-inch | 12 inch | Wood / gas / electric | 1110F | Budget multi-fuel |
| WOOCIT 12-inch | 12 inch | Multi-fuel | 720F | Lowest entry price |
Top pick: Ooni Koda 2 (14-inch propane)
The Ooni Koda 2 is the oven I would buy a friend living alone. You connect a standard 20-lb propane tank (the same one most backyard grills already use), turn one knob, and in about 15 minutes you have a 950F stone deck ready to bake a Neapolitan-style pie in 60 to 90 seconds. There is no wood to chop, no pellets to refill, no ash pan to empty. For a widower who just wants dinner without a project, that simplicity is the entire ballgame.
The 14-inch deck is generous enough that a 10-inch personal pie has plenty of room to launch and turn, but the oven itself stays light enough (around 40 lbs) to carry from a shed to a patio table one-handed. The auto-ignition means no lighter or matches. Build quality is the usual Ooni standard: powder-coated steel shell, ceramic-fiber insulation, a cordierite stone you can flip when one side gets sooty. If you are only going to own one outdoor pizza oven and you live alone, this is it.
Runner-up: Ooni Karu 12 Multi-Fuel
The Ooni Karu 12 is the move if you want the option of real wood-fired flavor some nights and the convenience of gas on others (the gas burner attachment sells separately). At 12 inches the deck is sized exactly for one personal pizza, which is part of its appeal for solo cooking: you are not staring at a half-empty cooking surface. It also weighs only about 26 lbs, which makes it the most portable Ooni for taking to a friend's house, a camping trip, or a family member's backyard when you visit.
Trade-off: wood-fired mode does need attention. You feed small chunks of kiln-dried hardwood through the rear hatch, and the fire wants tending across a 20-30 minute session. Some widowers I have spoken with say that is actually the point — it gives them something to do with their hands outside on a quiet evening. Others find it more fuss than they want, which is why the Koda 2 takes the top spot.
Budget alternative: Ninja Artisan Electric
If you live in an apartment, a condo with a small balcony, or anywhere propane tanks are a hassle, the Ninja Artisan Electric Outdoor Pizza Oven plugs into a standard 120V outlet and bakes a 12-inch pizza in about 3 minutes at 700F. It will not give you the leoparded char of a 950F deck, but it is honestly very close, and the trade-off for never owning a propane tank is worth it for a lot of solo cooks.
It doubles as a small countertop oven for reheating leftovers, baking cookies, or roasting a chicken thigh — which matters when you are cooking for one and want gear that earns its shelf space. For widowers who do not want to wrestle with fuel logistics, this is the easiest entry point in 2026.
Budget multi-fuel: BIG HORN 12-inch
The BIG HORN 12-inch Multi-Fuel is the well-reviewed budget option that handles wood, gas (with adapter), and electric inserts. Build quality is a step below Ooni — thinner steel, less insulation, slightly slower recovery between pies — but it routinely sells for a fraction of the Ooni price and produces respectable solo pizzas. If you are not sure whether you will use a pizza oven enough to justify the Ooni premium, BIG HORN is a low-regret way to find out.
Lowest price entry: WOOCIT 12-inch
The WOOCIT 12-inch Multi-Fuel Outdoor Pizza Oven tops out at 720F, which is meaningfully cooler than the Ooni line. That means longer bake times (3-4 minutes instead of 90 seconds) and a less puffy crust, but for someone who just wants a hot stone deck for occasional solo pies without a big spend, it does the job.
How to choose if you are buying for one
Three honest questions answer the choice for most widowers:
1. How often will you really use it? If the answer is once a week or more, buy the Koda 2 — the convenience compounds. If it is once a month, the BIG HORN or Ninja Artisan will not feel like a waste sitting in the garage.
2. Do you want the ritual, or do you want the dinner? Wood-fired ovens like the Karu 12 reward people who enjoy tending a fire. Gas ovens like the Koda 2 reward people who want to eat in 20 minutes and clean up in two.
3. Where will it live? If you have a patio with a propane grill already, the Koda 2 piggybacks on the same tank. If you have a small balcony or no outdoor storage, the Ninja Artisan electric wins.
For more on portable models, see our portable pizza ovens for small patios guide. If you are weighing wood-fired versus gas, our wood vs gas pizza ovens comparison walks through the flavor and cleanup trade-offs in detail. And for sourcing the right flour and dough for personal pies, see best flour for Neapolitan personal pizza.
Frequently Asked Questions
What size pizza oven is best when cooking for one person?
A 12-14 inch deck is the sweet spot. Smaller than 12 inches and you cannot launch a typical frozen or homemade pie comfortably; larger than 14 inches wastes heat and counter space. The Ooni Koda 2 (14 inch) and Ooni Karu 12 (12 inch) are both sized correctly for a single personal pizza.
Is the Ooni Koda 2 worth it for just one person?
Yes, if you will use it at least twice a month. The Koda 2 pays back in convenience: no wood prep, no ash cleanup, one knob, 15 minutes from cold to bake. For solo cooks who want dinner without a project, it is the lowest-friction option in the Ooni lineup.
Can I use a regular propane tank with the Ooni Koda 2?
Yes. The Koda 2 connects to a standard 20-lb propane tank — the same one most backyard gas grills use. A full tank will give you roughly 20-25 hours of cooking, which for a solo cook is many months of weekly pizza nights.
What is the easiest pizza oven to clean for someone cooking alone?
The Ooni Koda 2 and the Ninja Artisan Electric are tied for easiest. Neither produces ash. You brush the stone after it cools, wipe the exterior, and you are done. Wood-fired ovens like the Karu 12 require emptying ash after each session.
Do I need a pizza peel and other accessories?
Yes — a 12-inch perforated aluminum peel and an infrared thermometer are the two accessories worth buying with the oven. The peel lets you launch and turn the pie cleanly; the thermometer tells you when the stone has reached cooking temperature so you do not undercook the crust.
Can I make things other than pizza in these ovens?
Absolutely. A 950F deck oven is excellent for steaks, salmon fillets, cast-iron cookies, roasted vegetables, and flatbreads. For someone cooking for one, the ability to sear a single ribeye in 90 seconds is a genuine quality-of-life upgrade over a kitchen broiler.
Is an electric pizza oven hot enough for real Neapolitan crust?
At 700F, the Ninja Artisan is hotter than any home oven and produces a crust that is 80-90% of the way to true Neapolitan. You will not get the leopard-spot char of a 950F wood-fired pie, but for a solo cook who values convenience and no propane tanks, the gap is small.
What if I only want to spend under $200?
Look at the BIG HORN 12-inch or the WOOCIT 12-inch. Both will get you into outdoor pizza for well under the Ooni price. Build quality and insulation are noticeably lower, but for occasional use by one person they are reasonable starting points before you commit to a Koda 2 or Karu 12.
Key Takeaways
- Choosing the right best ooni pizza oven for widowers means matching capacity and output ports to your actual devices
- Always check actual watt-hours (Wh), not just watts — runtime depends on Wh, not peak output
- Also covers: solo pizza oven for one person
- Also covers: ooni for single cooks
- Also covers: small portion pizza oven
- Compare price-per-Wh across models to find the best value for your budget