There's a pizza company in Alaska called 'Airport Pizza' that delivers by plane to remote villages. Based in Nome, they fly pizzas to communities with no road access, with delivery sometimes included for bulk orders to nearby villages.
This Alaska Pizza Shop Delivers by Plane
In Nome, Alaska, getting a hot pizza delivered doesn't involve a teenager in a Honda Civic. It involves a bush pilot, a single-engine aircraft, and enough determination to fly through some of the harshest weather conditions on Earth.
Airport Pizza has been serving Nome since 1993, and they've turned aircraft delivery into an art form. When your nearest road-connected city is literally nonexistent—Nome has no roads leading in or out—you adapt.
How Bush Plane Pizza Delivery Works
The logistics are surprisingly straightforward. Customers in remote villages like Shishmaref, Gambell, or Little Diomede (yes, the island you can see Russia from) call in their orders. The pizzas get loaded onto scheduled bush flights that connect these isolated communities.
Here's what makes it work:
- Bush planes already fly regular routes between villages
- Pilots often grab food orders as a community service
- Insulated bags keep pizzas warm during the 20-60 minute flights
- Some villages pool orders to make delivery more economical
The arrangement benefits everyone. Villagers get access to prepared food that would otherwise require a flight to Nome. Pilots get a few extra dollars. And Airport Pizza gets customers from hundreds of miles away.
The Realities of Arctic Delivery
Don't expect Domino's-style guarantees out here. Weather delays are constant—a pizza order might sit for days waiting for flyable conditions. Prices reflect the reality of Alaskan bush life, where a gallon of milk can cost $10 and fresh produce is a luxury.
The pizza itself runs $28-35 depending on toppings, comparable to what you'd pay in many U.S. cities. The real cost variable is getting it to you. Some bush pilots include delivery in their regular cargo fees. Others charge based on distance and weight.
During the Iditarod, Airport Pizza becomes legendary. Mushers and volunteers along the trail have been known to arrange pizza drops at checkpoints—a bizarre luxury in the middle of a thousand-mile dog sled race through frozen wilderness.
Why This Matters
Airport Pizza isn't a gimmick. It's a window into how isolated communities actually function. In a state where 82% of communities aren't connected to the road system, bush planes are the lifeline for everything: medicine, mail, groceries, and yes, pizza.
The restaurant itself is a Nome institution, covered in Iditarod memorabilia and serving as an unofficial gathering spot for locals and the adventurous tourists who make it this far north.
Next time you complain about a 45-minute delivery estimate, remember there are people waiting for their pepperoni to arrive by aircraft—and they're completely fine with it.