REVIEW · NEW YORK CITY
A Slice of Brooklyn Pizza Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by A Slice of Brooklyn Bus Tours · Bookable on Viator
Pizza plus bridge views beats the typical bus tour. I like how this route links classic Brooklyn Bridge photo moments with two real neighborhood pizza stops, so you’re sightseeing and eating on the same clock. The standout for me is the skip-the-line advantage at Grimaldi’s, which keeps the Dumbo portion fun instead of stressful.
I also love that you get both Brooklyn pizza styles in one day: thin-crust Neapolitan at Grimaldi’s and thick Sicilian at L&B Spumoni Gardens. The local guides doing the rounds, including Tony and Marc, tend to bring Brooklyn film-location stories and street-level context that make the drive feel like more than transport.
One consideration: the tour is long and you will walk in bursts, and the bus leaves on time. If you’re hoping for a slow stroll at Coney Island, plan for a bit of a time crunch.
In This Review
- Key things you should know before you go
- A Brooklyn Pizza Tour That Actually Uses Your Time
- Starting at Union Square: Quick Orientation, Then Off You Go
- Brooklyn Bridge Waterfront Stops: The Photos Work, Even If You Don’t Plan Them
- Dumbo and Grimaldi’s: Why Skip-the-Line Changes Everything
- More Than Pizza: Movie Locations and the Brooklyn Army Terminal Elvis Detail
- Bensonhurst and L&B Spumoni Gardens: Thick Sicilian Pizza With Serious Character
- Shore Road Views and Million-Dollar Homes: Drive-By Luxury, With Local Context
- Coney Island Boardwalk: Use the 30 Minutes Like a Pro
- What the 4.5 Hours Feels Like (and How to Prepare)
- Price and Value: $16 Is Cheap for Two Named Pizza Stops
- Guides Can Make or Break This Kind of Tour
- Who Should Book This Pizza and Sightseeing Mix
- Should You Book A Slice of Brooklyn Pizza Tour?
- FAQ
- How much does the tour cost?
- How long is the A Slice of Brooklyn Pizza Tour?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- What time does the tour start?
- Is the pizza included in the price?
- What kind of pizza will I eat?
- Is the pizza vegetarian?
- Do I need to skip waiting lines at Grimaldi’s?
- Is the tour walking-heavy?
- Does it run in bad weather?
- Can I get a refund if I cancel?
Key things you should know before you go

- Two pizza styles, pulled from opposite ends of Brooklyn so the comparison is easy to taste
- Grimaldi’s under the Brooklyn Bridge with skip-the-line access for less waiting
- Bridge-view photo stops that hit Brooklyn, Manhattan, Williamsburg, and Verrazano-Narrows perspectives
- Coney Island boardwalk time to round out the beach-and-movies Brooklyn feeling
- Local guide storytelling (often high-energy) that connects neighborhoods to pop culture
A Brooklyn Pizza Tour That Actually Uses Your Time

This tour makes a smart move: it treats pizza as a window into Brooklyn, not just a meal. You’re not stuck doing one big “sit and look” loop. Instead, you get bus rides between short, high-impact stops—then two tastings that show why Brooklyn is split on crust style.
And yes, the pizza part matters. Neapolitan-style at Grimaldi’s is thin, blistered, brick-oven comfort food. Sicilian-style at L&B Spumoni Gardens is thicker, heavier in the best way, and it scratches a different itch.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in New York City.
Starting at Union Square: Quick Orientation, Then Off You Go
The tour launches at the Union Square area, in front of Love Mi Yogurt on the northeast corner of East 13th Street and 4th Avenue. Meeting at a Manhattan crossroad is handy because it’s easy to reach by public transportation, and it gives you a clean jump-off point before the borough-changing drive.
The vibe here is straightforward: get on the bus promptly, because the schedule is tight. You’ll use the first stretch to get bearings for the neighborhoods you’re going to see, plus you’ll hear the setup for why these two pizza places sit at opposite ends of Brooklyn.
Brooklyn Bridge Waterfront Stops: The Photos Work, Even If You Don’t Plan Them

You’ll get time for views from the waterfront around the Brooklyn Bridge, with classic angles that usually draw people in for a reason. This isn’t just “look at a landmark”; the guide frames what you’re seeing so you can connect the bridges, skylines, and the geography of the borough.
You’ll also learn how the Brooklyn waterfront and bridge corridors shape the way neighborhoods developed and how people move across the water. It’s a good moment to pause, take pictures, and reset your brain before the pizza part kicks into gear.
Dumbo and Grimaldi’s: Why Skip-the-Line Changes Everything

Dumbo is the kind of place where you can feel the neighborhood right away—cobbled energy, waterfront light, and that under-the-bridge setting that’s pure Brooklyn. Then comes the reason so many people book: Grimaldi’s Pizzeria under the Brooklyn Bridge, with skip-the-line access.
That time savings is the whole point. Without it, Grimaldi’s can turn into a waiting-game that steals the pleasure from the meal. With skip-the-line, you spend your 30 minutes eating pizza, not negotiating the queue.
Pizza expectations: you’re getting award-winning, Neapolitan-style slices from a place that locals and regular pizza nerds talk about for a reason. If you like thin crust with charred bubbles and melty, simple toppings, this stop is your best bet.
More Than Pizza: Movie Locations and the Brooklyn Army Terminal Elvis Detail

Between pizza stops, you’ll do more than watch the scenery go by. The route includes famous movie locations and a string of Brooklyn landmarks that make the borough feel like a film set you’re actually passing through.
One detail I’d put in your mental highlight reel: the tour includes the Brooklyn Army Terminal, tied to Elvis shipping off to Germany in 1958. It’s specific. It’s memorable. And it adds a layer that you don’t get from just staring at buildings from the bus window.
Bensonhurst and L&B Spumoni Gardens: Thick Sicilian Pizza With Serious Character

After the Dumbo section, you swing toward Bensonhurst for your Sicilian pizza stop at L&B Spumoni Gardens. This is the “thicker crust” counterpart to Grimaldi’s, so you’ll taste the difference right away instead of thinking about it later.
If Neapolitan is your thin and snappy preference, you might be convinced by Sicilian’s heft. L&B’s slices are known for their thicker, more filling style—great if you want something that feels substantial and a little richer.
You’ll get about 30 minutes here, which is usually enough time to eat without feeling rushed, especially since the tour keeps the other sightseeing stops structured and spaced out.
Shore Road Views and Million-Dollar Homes: Drive-By Luxury, With Local Context

One of the more fun “wait, look at that” segments is along Shore Road in Bay Ridge, where you’ll see million-dollar homes from the roadway. The highlight called out here is the famous “Gingerbread House,” a quirky visual that gives the whole area a lighter, more storybook flavor.
This isn’t a museum stop. It’s a perspective stop. You’re learning how neighborhoods change from waterfront bustle to residential grandeur, and how Brooklyn’s topography and views shape what people build and where they live.
Coney Island Boardwalk: Use the 30 Minutes Like a Pro

Coney Island is your final big flavor. You’ll stroll the boardwalk with time to walk and take in the beach-town feel that makes Brooklyn feel different from the rest of NYC.
The one practical caveat: 30 minutes sounds like plenty, but when you’re walking, snapping photos, and letting the guide’s stories land, it can feel tight. If you’re the type who wants to linger, consider that you’ll be doing a quick hit, not a full beach day.
Still, it’s a nice ending. You get the landmark energy, the classic boardwalk texture, and a last sweep of the tour’s bridge-and-neighborhood theme as you move back toward your return point.
What the 4.5 Hours Feels Like (and How to Prepare)
The total duration is about 4 hours 30 minutes, and it mixes bus time with short walking stretches. Most of the day is planned, so the pace won’t feel random—but it is active enough that you’ll want to show up prepared.
Bring comfortable walking shoes. Even if you’re not doing long-distance hiking, you’ll move more than you think. Also dress for weather, because the tour runs rain or shine.
Small group energy helps a lot here. The tour caps at 50 travelers, which usually means you’re not lost in the crowd. And in some runs, the group can be much smaller, so you can actually hear the guide without leaning forward the whole time.
Price and Value: $16 Is Cheap for Two Named Pizza Stops
At $16, you’re paying for a rare combo: organized transportation, guided city context, and two pizza tastings. The biggest value lever is the Grimaldi’s skip-the-line access—time you don’t spend waiting is time you get back for eating and sightseeing.
Also, you’re not just paying for one generic slice at a random place. You’re tasting two styles tied to Brooklyn’s pizza identity. That makes the comparison meaningful, and it’s why the tour feels like more than a food stop.
Pizza notes you should plan around: all pizza tastings are vegetarian. If you need gluten-free or vegan options, you should advise at booking.
Guides Can Make or Break This Kind of Tour
This tour leans on storytelling. When the guide is good, the whole day clicks—bridge views connect to neighborhoods, landmarks connect to movie moments, and the pizza stops feel like chapters, not errands.
The names that show up with the strongest praise include Tony and Marc, with bus drivers such as Holly and Edwin also getting credit for making things smooth. You’ll likely feel a more personal touch than with tours that treat Brooklyn like a checklist.
So if you’re the type who enjoys hearing how locals see their city, this format fits you well.
Who Should Book This Pizza and Sightseeing Mix
I’d book this if you:
- want two iconic pizza styles in one day without planning subway routes
- love street-level sightseeing with short photo stops and quick explanations
- are interested in Brooklyn’s pop-culture side, from film locations to specific landmark stories
- prefer a guided route that keeps time moving
I’d think twice if you:
- hate walking between short stops
- want a long, unhurried beach-and-ride day at Coney Island
- need lots of flexibility once the bus starts rolling (it’s set up for punctual departures)
Should You Book A Slice of Brooklyn Pizza Tour?
If you want a day that mixes bridge views, real neighborhood pizza, and local stories without spending half your vacation planning logistics, this is an excellent value play. The $16 price makes it especially hard to argue against, and the skip-the-line advantage at Grimaldi’s is the kind of “small detail” that can totally change your mood.
Book it if you like your NYC days with a plan, but not a tight schedule that kills fun. Pass if your priority is a totally slow beach day or if you strongly dislike any walking at all.
FAQ
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $16.
How long is the A Slice of Brooklyn Pizza Tour?
It runs about 4 hours 30 minutes.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at East 13th Street and 4th Avenue (in front of Love Mi Yogurt in the Union Square area) and ends back at the same meeting point.
What time does the tour start?
Start time is 11:00 am.
Is the pizza included in the price?
Pizza at Grimaldi’s and L&B Spumoni Gardens is included. Other stops are sightseeing time.
What kind of pizza will I eat?
You’ll have Neapolitan-style pizza at Grimaldi’s and Sicilian-style pizza at L&B Spumoni Gardens.
Is the pizza vegetarian?
Yes. All pizza tastings are vegetarian. Gluten-free and vegan options are available if you request them at booking.
Do I need to skip waiting lines at Grimaldi’s?
Yes, there is skip-the-line access at Grimaldi’s.
Is the tour walking-heavy?
There is some walking, mainly during stops. Comfortable walking shoes are recommended, but it is not described as long-distance hiking.
Does it run in bad weather?
Yes, the tour runs rain or shine.
Can I get a refund if I cancel?
No. The experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason.





























