
Where to Put Your Outdoor Pizza Oven UK: Placement, Safety and Planning Rules
Choosing the right spot for your outdoor pizza oven is one of the most important decisions you'll make when installing one. Get it wrong and you could damage your garden, upset neighbours, or run into local authority trouble. Get it right and you'll have years of uninterrupted gatherings ahead. Here's what you actually need to know about placement in the UK context.
Do You Need Planning Permission?
The good news: in most cases, you don't. Outdoor pizza ovens are typically considered permitted development under UK planning rules, meaning they don't require prior consent from your local authority. However, there are important exceptions and conditions.
Your pizza oven falls within permitted development if:
- It's a fixed structure (not mobile)
- You're not replacing something that was previously there
- It's located within the curtilage of a residential dwelling
- It doesn't exceed reasonable size limits (typically treated as garden equipment)
You'll need formal planning permission if:
- Your property is in a conservation area or on listed land (many local authorities require consent here even for garden structures)
- Your local council has issued an Article 4 Direction removing permitted development rights
- The oven is unusually large or prominent
- Your garden is very small relative to the structure
Always check with your local planning authority before installation. A 10-minute phone call beats the alternative of being asked to remove it later.
Minimum Clearance Distances
Safety clearances exist for a reason. A pizza oven reaches temperatures of 300–400°C, and the exterior surfaces stay hot enough to ignite materials at distance.
From buildings and structures:
Keep at least 1 metre (ideally 1.5 metres) from any boundary fence, shed, garage or the house itself. Some manufacturers recommend 2 metres. Heat radiates outward and upward, so don't assume a wooden fence is safe at arm's length. If your fence backs onto your neighbour's garden, even greater distance is wise both for safety and neighbour relations.
From overhead structures:
Ensure at least 2 metres clearance above the oven to the nearest overhanging branch, pergola or roof line. Sparks and heat rise, and you don't want to scorch or ignite anything above.
From vegetation:
Position your oven away from overhanging trees, climbing plants or dense shrubs. Dead leaves collect on roof structures and create genuine fire risk. A 2-metre radius of clear ground around the base is sensible.
Ground Preparation and Levelling
Your pizza oven must sit on firm, level ground. An uneven base causes cracking in the oven dome and makes the door hang incorrectly.
Concrete slab: A 100mm reinforced concrete foundation is the standard approach. Dig out soil to a depth of 150–200mm, lay a gravel base for drainage, then pour concrete. This should cure for at least 7 days before the oven goes on top.
Paving: If you're building on existing paving, check it's level and not cracked. Fill any gaps or low spots first.
Avoid: Soil, grass, decking, or loose gravel as a direct base. These settle and shift, destabilizing the structure.
Decking Safety
Placing a pizza oven near decking requires caution. Decking is flammable, and radiant heat can cause ignition or structural damage even from distance.
If your garden is decked and that's where you want the oven, create a fire-safe zone by:
- Building the concrete slab on top of the decking, with a 3-metre clear radius around the oven
- Laying fire-resistant matting or gravel beneath the oven if you can't expose the concrete
- Avoiding any scenario where decking runs directly up to the oven platform
Better still: position the oven on a dedicated paved or gravelled area separate from any decking. Your garden layout might benefit from this visual separation anyway.
Heat-Resistant Stands and Bases
Free-standing pizza ovens (not built-in) need proper support. A poor stand causes uneven heating, cracking, and safety issues.
What to look for:
- Steel construction, welded (not bolted) joints for stability
- A solid base platform at least 900mm × 900mm
- Height of 700–900mm from ground to oven base (comfortable working height)
- Stability when the oven is loaded with food and fully heated
Ready-made stands are widely available and often worth the investment. They're engineered for the weight and heat of a hot oven, and they last longer than DIY concrete plinths that can crack in freezing weather.
Some stands include integrated heat matting or insulation underneath, which protects decking or other surfaces below and improves thermal efficiency by reflecting heat into the oven rather than down into the ground.
Exposure and Weather Considerations
Wind: Place your oven in a spot that's sheltered but not completely enclosed. A gentle breeze helps draw smoke away and prevents pockets of thick smoke. If your garden is very exposed, consider a windbreak panel on the prevailing wind side.
Drainage: Avoid low-lying areas where water pools or runs during rain. Standing water causes rust on metal components and frost damage to masonry.
Sun: A spot with afternoon sun isn't essential (the oven provides its own heat), but it's pleasant for guests and can help dry the dome after rain, reducing frost risk.
Access and Practicality
You'll be carrying wood, food and equipment to and from the oven regularly. Position it within reach of your kitchen or storage without treacherous pathways. A location near a seating or entertaining area means your guests aren't isolated while you cook.
Ensure there's space to stand and work safely in front of the opening without risking bumped heads or tripped feet.
Final Checks
Before committing to a spot, mark out the footprint with rope or spray paint. Live with that layout for a few days. Move around it, imagine guests seated nearby, visualise where smoke will drift, and check sight lines from your house and garden seating areas.
A well-placed pizza oven becomes a natural focal point—get the location right, and it shapes your garden in a way that feels inevitable.
More options
- Ooni Pizza Ovens & Accessories (Amazon UK)
- Gozney Pizza Ovens (Amazon UK)
- Pizza Oven Tools & Accessories Bundle (Amazon UK)
- Kiln Dried Hardwood & Pizza Oven Pellets (Amazon UK)
- Ninja Woodfire & Budget Pizza Ovens (Amazon UK)