We don’t publish exact nutrition data for every item, and we’re not going to make up numbers for the sake of a chart. What we can tell you is how to order lighter or heavier depending on what you need — crust, toppings, and portions all factor in. Here’s the honest breakdown.
What Affects the Calories in Your Pizza
Pizza calories aren’t one number — they change based on four things: crust type, topping load, sauce, and size. A thin-crust veggie pizza and a golden-crust All-Meat Combo are both pizza, but they’re not in the same calorie conversation.
Our crust options are where most of the calorie difference happens. Thin crust is lighter in carbs and overall calories than our Golden crust, which is thicker, denser, and more filling. The Original crust sits in the middle. If you’re counting, start with the crust choice.
After that, it’s toppings. A pizza loaded with multiple meats will run significantly more calories per slice than a veggie or plain cheese pie. That’s not a surprise — it’s just true, and it’s worth factoring in when you order.
Lighter Options Worth Knowing
If you’re watching calories but still want real pizza, here’s where to look on our menu.
Thin crust — the lightest crust option we have. Less carb load per slice, same sauce and toppings. It holds up well but isn’t quite as thick or filling as the Golden. If you’re managing calories, start here.
Veggie ($13.99–$34.50) — Signature Sauce, black olives, green peppers, mushrooms, onions, tomatoes, mozzarella. No meat, lower fat per slice. One of the more calorie-aware specialty options on the board.
BBQ Chicken ($13.99–$34.50) — BBQ sauce, chicken, red onions, mozzarella. Chicken runs leaner than beef or pork, and the topping count is simpler. Lower fat profile than the meat-heavy pies.
Cheese or Pepperoni on thin crust — starting at $7.99 and $9.99, these are the cleaner options if you want control over what’s on the pizza without going full custom.
For gluten-free options, that’s a separate conversation about dietary needs vs. calorie reduction — gluten-free doesn’t automatically mean lower calorie, but it’s relevant for anyone managing both.
Heavier Options (If Calories Aren’t the Goal)
When the goal is maximum pizza and nothing else, here’s what clears the plate fastest.
Golden crust — the thickest, densest crust we make. Adds significant carb and calorie weight versus thin. This is the choice when you want something filling that sticks.
All-Meat Combo ($13.99–$34.50) — ham, pepperoni, bacon, beef, Italian sausage, sausage. That’s six meats. It’s the highest-fat specialty pizza on the menu by a wide margin. Absurdly good, and nobody eats this one while thinking about calories.
Super Combo ($15.99–$37.75) — everything from the All-Meat plus black olives, green peppers, mushrooms, onions, and tomatoes, with extra cheddar. The kitchen sink. Order it when the goal is maximum pizza, full stop.
Stuffed crust — cheese inside the crust adds more calories before you’ve even gotten to the toppings. Worth it, but worth knowing.
How to Customize for Your Dietary Needs
The Create Your Own option (starting at $7.99) gives you the most control. You pick the crust, the sauce, the cheese, and every topping. That means you can build exactly the pizza you want — loading up on vegetables, skipping certain meats, or keeping the topping count simple.
If you’ve got specific dietary needs or allergens to work around, the best move is to call us at (210) 750-2222. We can walk through the menu with you and tell you exactly what’s in any item. Our ordering system can also help you customize when you order online.
Our popular picks page shows the specialty pies people order most. If you’re not sure where to start, that’s a good reference for what works before you decide how to adjust it for your order.
For Exact Nutrition Information
We don’t publish a full nutrition chart here because we want to give you accurate numbers, not approximations that might mislead you. For the most accurate calorie and nutrition data for our specific recipes and portion sizes, call us at (210) 750-2222 or reach out through our contact us page and we’ll get you what we have.
General pizza nutrition data is available through national sources, but our recipes, portioning, and ingredients may differ from chain estimates. When accuracy matters, the direct call is the right move.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many calories are in Godfather’s Pizza?
We don’t publish exact per-slice calorie counts, but the main variables are crust type, topping load, and size. Thin crust with veggie toppings is on the lighter end; Golden crust with multiple meats is the heavier end. For specific nutrition data on our recipes, call us at (210) 750-2222.
What’s the healthiest pizza option at Godfather’s?
Thin crust with the Veggie or BBQ Chicken specialty pie is the lightest combination on our menu. Or build your own on thin crust with vegetable toppings and standard mozzarella. Both options reduce calories compared to thicker crusts and meat-heavy pies.
Does Godfather’s Pizza have a gluten-free option?
See our gluten-free options page for current details. Gluten-free and calorie-light aren’t the same thing, but if dietary restrictions are driving the order, we have that information available.
Which Godfather’s crust has the most calories?
Golden crust and Stuffed crust are the most calorie-dense options — thicker, denser, and more filling than Original or Thin. If you’re managing calorie intake, Thin crust is the lowest-calorie base we offer.
Order What Works for You
There’s a version of Godfather’s pizza that fits almost any eating approach — lighter crust, more vegetables, simpler toppings. And there’s a version that goes the other direction entirely and is absolutely worth it on the days you want that. Either way, we’ll make it the way you ask.
Order online or call us and tell us what you’re working with. We’ll help you find the right order.





