Quick Answer

Can you use buffalo sauce on pizza?

Yes — buffalo sauce works well on pizza as either the base sauce (replacing tomato sauce entirely) or as a drizzle over a ranch or olive oil base. As a base sauce: mix buffalo sauce with cream cheese or ranch dressing (2:1 buffalo to ranch) to thicken it enough to stay on the crust without running. Applied straight, buffalo sauce is too thin and will soak into the dough, making it soggy. The combination of buffalo chicken, mozzarella, red onion, and blue cheese crumbles on a buffalo sauce base is one of the most popular non-tomato pizza variations and genuinely stands up to scrutiny as a pizza in its own right.

Base Sauce vs. Drizzle: When to Use Each

Buffalo sauce can be used two ways on pizza, and the choice changes the result significantly:

  • As the base sauce (replacing tomato sauce): Full buffalo flavor throughout every bite. Requires thickening so it doesn't soak into the dough. Best approach: mix equal parts buffalo sauce and cream cheese (warmed together until smooth), or mix 2 parts buffalo sauce with 1 part ranch dressing. The added body prevents the crust from getting soggy and creates a creamy base that pairs well with mozzarella.
  • As a drizzle over a cream/ranch base: The base is ranch dressing or cream sauce; buffalo sauce is drizzled over the cheese after baking. This creates a two-sauce visual effect (white base + orange drizzle) and allows the buffalo flavor to be present without dominating. Better for people who want milder buffalo flavor or who are serving to guests with varied heat tolerance.
  • As a post-bake drizzle over tomato pizza: Buffalo sauce over a standard pepperoni pizza is a surprisingly good combination — the tangy heat of buffalo sauce cuts through the fatty pepperoni and adds brightness to the tomato. This is the easiest application: bake the pizza normally and drizzle buffalo sauce immediately before serving.

Preventing Soggy Pizza with Buffalo Sauce

The main technical challenge with buffalo sauce on pizza is its thin, low-viscosity texture. Standard tomato sauce is thick and stays where you put it. Buffalo sauce is essentially emulsified butter + hot sauce — thinner and more fluid. Solutions:

  • Thicken the base: Mix buffalo sauce with cream cheese, sour cream, or ranch (all of which add body). This is the most effective approach for using buffalo sauce as the primary base.
  • Pre-bake the crust: Bake the pizza dough "blind" (without toppings) for 5 minutes at 500°F before adding any sauce. This creates a sealed surface that resists moisture absorption.
  • Use less sauce than you'd expect: Buffalo pizza base needs 2–3 tablespoons for a 12-inch pizza — significantly less than tomato sauce. Thin coverage is correct; thick coverage is too wet.
  • Pat chicken dry before adding to pizza: Extra moisture in the chicken toppings contributes to sogginess. Squeeze shredded chicken in a towel before tossing with buffalo sauce.
  • Bake at maximum oven temperature: 500–550°F for pizza (with a pizza stone or steel preheated) creates the intense surface heat that sets the sauce quickly. Lower temperatures allow more time for moisture to migrate into the crust.

Buffalo Pizza Sauce Application Comparison

Application MethodBuffalo IntensityCrust SafetyBest For
Straight buffalo sauce base Very high Risk of soggy without technique Advanced, technique-confident
Buffalo + ranch mix base Medium-high Good — ranch adds body Most home pizza
Buffalo + cream cheese base Medium Excellent — thick Creamy, rich pizza
Ranch base + buffalo drizzle after Variable Excellent Mixed heat preference groups
Tomato base + buffalo drizzle after bake Low-medium Excellent Traditional + spicy kick

Best Toppings for Buffalo Pizza

The canonical buffalo chicken pizza combination is:

  • Shredded chicken tossed in buffalo sauce: Use rotisserie chicken for convenience. Toss with 2–3 tablespoons buffalo sauce before adding to pizza. Don't over-sauce — the toppings will cook on the pizza and the sauce intensifies.
  • Mozzarella: The primary cheese. Low-moisture mozzarella melts cleanly and doesn't compete with the buffalo flavor.
  • Red onion (thinly sliced): Caramelizes beautifully and adds sweetness that balances the spice. One of the best toppings for buffalo pizza.
  • Blue cheese crumbles (added after baking): The traditional buffalo wing accompaniment. Added after baking so it stays slightly cool and creamy against the hot pizza — the temperature contrast is part of the appeal.
  • Ranch drizzle after baking: A thin drizzle over the hot pizza creates the buffalo wing experience in pizza form.
  • Celery (very thinly sliced, added after): Provides the classic wing side and a fresh crunch contrast.

💡 The Blue Cheese After-Bake Rule

Blue cheese should always be added to buffalo pizza after baking, not before. When blue cheese bakes on a pizza, the high temperature (500°F) can cause the delicate flavor compounds to volatilize, leaving a less interesting, sometimes bitter cheese flavor. More importantly, baked blue cheese melts into the pizza and loses its distinct chunky, creamy identity — it blends with the mozzarella and disappears as a distinct element. Added cold after baking, blue cheese stays chunky and creamy, provides temperature contrast, and its flavor is at full intensity. The same principle applies to the ranch drizzle — fresh and cold, applied after the hot pizza comes out of the oven.

Cheese Choices for Buffalo Pizza

The cheese selection significantly affects the final pizza:

  • Low-moisture mozzarella: Classic choice. Melts evenly, neutral flavor, allows buffalo sauce to be the star. Pre-shredded works well here (the starches that prevent shredded cheese from clumping also prevent over-browning on the pizza surface).
  • Sharp cheddar + mozzarella blend: Adding 25–30% sharp cheddar to the mozzarella adds a sharp, more assertive flavor that complements the buffalo sauce. The cheddar's orange color also reinforces the visual orange theme of buffalo wings.
  • Monterey Jack: Mild, melty, slightly buttery — a good choice if you want a clean canvas. Pepper Jack adds extra heat that some people enjoy on buffalo pizza.
  • Avoid ricotta: Too much moisture for buffalo pizza applications; contributes to sogginess without adding proportionate flavor.

Frequently Asked Questions

You can replace tomato sauce entirely with a thickened buffalo sauce base — this is the standard 'buffalo chicken pizza' approach. The result is a very different pizza experience: instead of the tomato's sweetness and acidity providing the base note, you get cayenne heat and butter richness. It's not better or worse than tomato-based pizza — it's genuinely different, and fans of buffalo flavor often strongly prefer it. However, as noted above, buffalo sauce needs to be thickened before use as a pizza base to prevent sogginess. The simplest thickening method: mix buffalo sauce with an equal volume of ranch dressing and apply in a thin layer.