New Haven & Sicilian-style pies, plus calzones & some Greek dishes, in a small storefront.
Hours
| Sunday | Closed |
| Monday | 11 AM–7 PM |
| Tuesday | 11 AM–7 PM |
| Wednesday | 11 AM–7 PM |
| Thursday | 11 AM–7 PM |
| Friday | 11 AM–7 PM |
| Saturday | 11 AM–7 PM |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 25 Whitney Ave, New Haven, CT 06510
Phone: (203) 865-6065
Website: http://www.townpizzarestaurant.com/
Menu Photos
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Reviews
My car broke down, hours from home, right in front of this shop. The hospitality was phenomenal as the owners let me stay and watch the Celtics game with them as AAA worked at a snails pace on my car for 4 hours. The owners provided great service, and welcomed me in as if I were family. The beautifully delicious chicken souvlaki distracted me from my car kicking the bucket outside. The stuffed grape leaves were top-notch as well. Amazing restraunt with great owners!
The worn ceiling tiles tell you stories if you’re willing to listen. They speak of four decades of steam rising from plates where Italian and Middle Eastern dreams collide: a gyro platter that arrives like a peace treaty, the meat carved thin enough to read yesterday’s news through, laid beside potatoes that gleam like old gold under fluorescent lights that have seen better days.
But here’s the hard truth, the kind that sticks in your throat like olive pits: every restaurant in this city is a battlefield of reputation. Town Pizza fights its wars on multiple fronts – against the whispers about rodents that may or may not march at midnight, against the conspiracy theorists who see shadows where there’s only za’atar dust, against the politics that somehow found their way onto plates meant for breaking bread, not breaking spirits.
The vinyl booths hold you like an old friend who’s seen better days but never lost their dignity. They’ve cradled students, lawyers, dreamers, and doubters. The tables between them are clean enough – not operating-room clean, but honest-clean, like weathered hands that have worked all day.
What you get here is real – real in the way that makes some people uncomfortable. The Greek salad comes sharp with olives and truth, the tzatziki sauce cool against the heat of questions about inspection reports and political alignments that shouldn’t matter when hunger is the only argument worth having.
This is America in miniature: complicated, controversial, but still serving plates heavy with possibility. The pizza boxes go out the door under the same star that guides both the critics and the faithful. The pita bread still arrives warm, regardless of which side of the political divide you choose to butter it on.
Should you eat here? That’s between you and whatever god you thank for your daily bread. But know this, places like Town Pizza don’t survive 41 New Haven winters by accident. They survive because they offer something true in a world starving for authenticity, even if that truth comes with a side of controversy and a slice of doubt.
The food is good, good in the way that matters when you’re hungry and tired of pretense. But this isn’t just about food. It’s about whether you believe in places that show their scars, that refuse to apologize for their complexity, that serve their story alongside their shawarma.
Check the health reports if you must. Read the reviews until your eyes blur. But remember – sometimes the most honest meals come from places that have weathered every storm the city could summon, and still open their doors each morning, ready to serve whoever walks through them, carrying their own hunger and their own truth.
Town Pizza stands there on Whitney, neither hero nor villain, just human – deeply, unapologetically human. Take from that what you will, and order accordingly.