Guide

How to Get the Best Deals Ordering Pizza Online in Canada (2026)

By Simran Kaur · · 5 min read

Stop Paying Full Price

I am going to let you in on something that the pizza chains do not want me to say out loud: almost nobody should be paying full menu price for chain pizza in Canada. Whether you are looking at the Little Caesars menu, browsing Domino's app, or checking Pizza Pizza's deals, every major chain runs perpetual promotions. If you are ordering online without checking for deals first, you are essentially volunteering to overpay. I review pizza for a living and even I refuse to order without at least checking for a coupon first.

Here is a practical breakdown of how to get the most pizza for the least money at every major Canadian chain in 2026.

Little Caesars: The Walk-In King

Little Caesars operates on a fundamentally different model than most chains. Their Hot-N-Ready concept means you can walk into any location and grab a large Little Caesars pizza for around $5.99 with zero wait time. No app required, no coupon needed. It is the baseline price and it is already the cheapest option in Canadian fast food. When people search pizza near me or pizza closest to me, Little Caesars is often the answer that makes the most financial sense.

That said, when you place a Little Caesars order online, there are advantages beyond just convenience. The Little Caesars menu online often includes combo deals that are not advertised in-store — things like two pizzas and a Crazy Bread for a bundled price. If you are feeding a group, doing a Little Caesars order online and picking up is almost always cheaper per person than having everyone buy individually. Little Caesars delivery is also available in most Canadian cities now, which means you do not even need to leave the couch.

Pro tip: check their website on Mondays. New weekly specials tend to go live at the start of the week, and the best ones get picked clean by Wednesday. If your nearest location is running a lunch combo, that is usually the best per-dollar deal in their entire system. Some people spell it "lil ceaser" in their search bar — whatever you call it, the deals are the same.

Domino's: The Coupon Machine

Domino's practically runs on coupons. At any given time, there are usually three to five active promo codes available through their app, their website, or through third-party coupon sites. The most reliable one is the 50% off menu-priced items deal, which runs frequently and brings a large pizza down to around $8-9.

Their mix-and-match deal is the real weapon though. Two or more items for $7.99 each — pizzas, pasta, chicken, bread — is one of the best group-order values in the industry. Order through the app rather than the website if you can, because the app sometimes has exclusive deals that do not show up elsewhere.

Never, and I mean never, order Domino's at full price. There is always a deal running. If you cannot find one, close the app, wait twenty-four hours, and open it again. A new promotion will appear. This is not a joke — it is their business model.

Pizza Pizza: The Loyalty Play

Pizza Pizza's loyalty program is genuinely worth signing up for if you order from them more than once a month. Points accumulate quickly and free pizza comes sooner than you would expect. The app also surfaces location-specific deals that are not available on the website, so downloading the app is step one.

Their "any size" deals are the flagship promotion — usually something like any medium for $9.99 or any large for $12.99 with unlimited toppings. When this deal is running, it is legitimately one of the best values in Canadian pizza, because loading up on toppings at most chains costs extra per topping. Here, it is all included.

General Tips That Work Everywhere

The Math

If you order pizza once a week — which is not unreasonable for a lot of Canadian households — the difference between paying full price and using these strategies is roughly $400-500 per year. That is not pocket change. That is a weekend trip, a new pair of winter boots, or about eighty more slices of pizza. The choice is yours, but I know which one I would pick.

Comments (6)

DH
David H. Jan 28, 2026

The "never order Dominos at full price" advice is so true it should be a public service announcement. I genuinely don't understand who pays $16 for a Dominos pizza when the 50% off code exists literally all the time.

52 likes
EL
Emily L. Jan 29, 2026

Saved this article to my phone. As a single parent the $400/year thing really put it in perspective. Already downloaded the Pizza Pizza app. Thank you for writing stuff that actually helps people Simran.

41 likes
SK
Simran Kaur Jan 29, 2026

Comments like this are exactly why I write this blog. Thank you Emily. Hope the deals help.

VN
Vikram N. Jan 31, 2026

Tried the Monday tip for little caesar online and you were right — they had a 2 pizza + crazy bread combo for $13.99 that I'd never seen in-store. Solid advice. Also the ordering was smooth, took maybe 2 minutes.

16 likes
OB
Olivia B. Feb 2, 2026

The UberEats markup is criminal honestly. Ordered the exact same pizza once through the app and once through UberEats on the same day from the same Dominos. UberEats was $7.40 more. SEVEN DOLLARS. For the same pizza. Never again.

67 likes
TJ
Tyler J. Feb 5, 2026

Question — do these deals work the same way in smaller cities? I'm in Sudbury and we have fewer options up here. Little Caesar and Dominos both exist but the deals sometimes seem to be GTA-only. Would love a northern Ontario edition of this guide.

9 likes

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