One oversized café slice runs 510–670 calories, and a whole pie is five slices.
Lowest Slice
Mid Slice
Highest Slice
Basic Cheese
- Five jumbo slices per pie
- Most calorie-dense slice
- Easy to split or pair with salad
Hearty
Meat Options
- 4 Meat runs close to cheese
- Pepperoni ~650 per slice
- Bold flavor, bigger sodium
Rich
Veggie Build
- Lowest slice calories
- Plenty of volume per bite
- Good pick for balance
Lighter
Warehouse slices are large and filling. You get five big wedges per 16-inch pie at the café counter, and the calorie range depends on the topping: veggie is the lightest, cheese is the heaviest, and meat pies land in between. If you’re deciding between a slice and a full box, the math is simple: multiply the slice by five.
Sam’s Club Pizza Calories: Slice Counts And Whole Pie Math
Sam’s café labels show calories per single slice, and each label also lists “5 servings per container.” That tells you two things: the slice size is big, and a whole pizza is exactly five of those slices. Below is a quick table that covers the common flavors you’ll see at most clubs.
| Pizza Type | Per Café Slice | Per Whole Pie (5 Slices) |
|---|---|---|
| Cheese | 670 calories | 3,350 calories |
| Pepperoni | 650 calories | 3,250 calories |
| 4 Meat | 660 calories | 3,300 calories |
| Pepperoni & Jalapeño | 650 calories | 3,250 calories |
| Veggie | 510 calories | 2,550 calories |
The numbers above come straight from the café labels posted by the club, which also list slice weights in the 246–268 g range. If you’re tracking intake, that large serving explains why a single wedge can match two standard chain slices.
Planning a day’s menu gets easier once you set your daily calorie needs. With a target in mind, you can fit a slice into lunch and keep dinner light, or share a pie with friends and log a half slice if you just want a taste.
How The Slice Size Affects Your Count
Not all wedges are identical. A cheese slice on the label is about 268 g, pepperoni sits near 246–256 g, and veggie is about 263 g. Heavier slices pack more dough and cheese, which pushes calories up. Lighter builds with more vegetables leave the count lower for the same cut.
Another way to sanity-check any slice is by using calorie density per 100 g. Generic chain cheese pizza sits around 266 calories per 100 g. If your wedge is roughly 260 g, the ballpark comes out near 690 calories, which lines up with the café label for cheese.
Which Topping Has The Most Calories?
Cheese carries the highest slice count. Meat-heavy builds like “4 Meat” land close behind. Pepperoni is just under cheese, and veggie drops the number by more than 100. If you want the classic flavor but lower energy, ask the counter to cut thinner wedges and share a slice; you’ll still get the same taste with fewer total grams.
Cheese
This wedge is rich with low-moisture mozzarella. That extra cheese weight boosts both calories and sodium. It’s a satisfying choice when you’re hungry and want a simple flavor.
Pepperoni
Pepperoni’s count is a touch lower than the cheese wedge, but still firmly in the “hearty” camp. Expect a similar crust weight, plus added cured meat calories and salt.
Veggie
Vegetable toppings add volume without much extra fat, so you feel like you’re eating a lot while landing closer to the 500-calorie mark. If you’re watching numbers, this is the easiest pick.
How Many Calories Are In A Whole Café Pizza?
Use “slice × 5.” A cheese pie is about 3,350 calories, pepperoni about 3,250, and the veggie option about 2,550. If you’re serving a group, cut each wedge in half and plan two half-slices per person for a balanced plate with salad or fruit.
Smart Ways To Fit A Slice Into Your Day
Pick Your Portion
A half wedge pairs nicely with a side salad. If you’d rather eat a full wedge, keep sides light and lean on water or unsweetened tea.
Balance The Rest Of The Plate
Add a crunchy salad, roasted vegetables, or a broth-based soup. That adds volume and fiber without stacking more dough and cheese.
Watch Sauces And Extras
Ranch, creamy dips, and extra cheese add up fast. If you need a dip, pick marinara.
Ingredient Lists And Sodium Notes
Each café label lists a full ingredient panel along with calories, fat, carbs, protein, and sodium. The meat pies and pepperoni options carry higher sodium than veggie. If you’re sensitive to salt, splitting a wedge or choosing the veggie build helps. You can review the official labels in the Sam’s Club nutrition PDF (pizza pages show calories and “5 servings per container”).
Calorie Math By Weight
When a club’s label isn’t handy, calorie density gets you close. Generic chain cheese pizza sits near 266 calories per 100 g. Multiply by the weight of your slice to estimate intake. If your wedge weighs 250 g, the rough count is about 665 calories. This method tracks well with the café label data above.
| Pizza Variety (Per 100 g) | Calories | Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| Cheese, regular crust (generic chain) | ~266 | Quick estimate when labels aren’t nearby |
| Pepperoni, regular crust (generic chain) | ~282 | Use for meat-topped slices when weighing |
| Veggie, regular crust (generic chain) | ~244 | Lightest of the common topping styles |
How This Guide Was Compiled
Numbers for the café pies come from Sam’s published nutrition pages, which show a nutrition panel for each topping and the serving statement of “1 slice” with “5 servings per container.” For density math, we used a widely cited dataset based on USDA FoodData Central for chain-style cheese pizza per 100 g. That dataset matches real-world slice weights and helps you estimate intake when you only know the weight of a wedge.
Ordering Tips For Different Goals
Keep Lunch Light
Pick the veggie pie, split a slice, and add a salad. That keeps energy closer to a typical lunch target while still hitting the craving.
Feeding A Crowd
Grab multiple pies and cut wedges in halves or thirds. Offer a mix: one cheese, one pepperoni, and one veggie so guests can match taste to appetite.
Watching Sodium
Meat toppings tend to push salt up. If that’s a concern, lean toward the veggie option and sip water, not soda.
FAQ-Free Quick Answers, Baked Into The Copy
Is A Single Wedge A Meal?
For many people, yes. A 500–670-calorie slice with a simple side lands near a typical lunch range. If you’re hungry after, add fruit or a broth-based soup.
How Many People Does One Pie Feed?
Five big wedges can feed five light eaters or two to three hungry friends. For parties, plan two half-slices per person when you have sides.
What If I’m Tracking Macros?
Cheese and meat pies skew higher in fat and protein; veggie skews lower in fat with similar carbs. If protein is the goal, pair a half slice with grilled chicken or a protein-rich salad.
A Note On Take ’N Bake Vs. Café
Sam’s sells refrigerated Member’s Mark “Take ’N Bake” pies in the deli case. Those products have their own labels and can differ from the hot café pies in slice weight and calories. Check the product sticker for oven-ready items before baking so you log the right numbers.
Want a longer primer on managing intake? Give our calories and weight loss guide a read.