That’s only the cost of the pizza itself. A large part of those “outrageous prices” pay for things like the building rent and maintenance, employee costs, advertising costs, electricity, etc. Once you factor in all of that, the price isn’t quite so outrageous.
Just about anything you buy only costs a tiny fraction of what you pay for it.
McDonalds and everyone else is gouging you just as badly.
Could this be regional too? I just checked Papa Johns online and the special has changed from my last post, but is now any large, your choice of toppings, $10. (Not limited to 5 toppings.)
I can’t say I am hating the cheaper delivery pizzas, but if this keeps up my family might end up extremely fat. We have had delivery pizza more in the past month than we have in the past several years combined I think.
This is annoying, and I complained about it the last time I had Domino’s deliver. (For the record, their new recipe still tastes like ketchup on cardboard.) Including tip, I think I paid about $23 for a large pizza with one topping. Ridiculous.
Their whole business model is based on delivery. Any fees for delivery should be baked-in to the cost of the product. They should give walk-ins a $2 discount instead.
I can walk two blocks to the local sports bar and order a great $12 large pizza and carry it home myself for free. Delivery businesses are going to have to bring their prices way down before I’ll be tempted to buy from them again.
Yeah there’s a price war. Pizza Hut was charging $18+ for a large not so long ago. Dominoes had all sorts of deals but it usually involved getting 2 or 3 medium pizzas instead of the one large for a reasonable price I wanted. That was about the time I stopped going to them and started going to a local Italian place.
I have tried the new Dominoes pizza recently though, it’s quite good.
We get Little Caesar’s quite often. Two large one-topping pizzas cost $11.70, I believe. That’s one dinner and a couple lunches sometime during the next week. Total bargain as far as I’m concerned. The frozen pizzas in the grocery cost more — at least the good ones. (All hail Totino’s.)
I picked up a pizza from Papa John’s on Saturday, just to try it out and take advantage of the ten-dollar deal. So now I know what DiGiorno means when they say their pizza takes like one delivered from a restaurant. But, wow, was that a terrible pizza.