Frozen Cheese Pizza
Compare prices for No Name frozen cheese pizza across sizes.
Retail Frozen Cheese Pizza: Supply Chain Overview - Edmonton, Alberta
Frozen pizza is one of the most consolidated frozen food categories in Canada. Globally, Nestlé has historically led with roughly 13 percent share, followed by Dr. Oetker at 8 percent and Schwan's Company at 7 percent, with McCain Foods, Freiberger, and General Mills each holding 3 to 5 percent. The Canadian market has been substantially reshaped over the last several years, most notably by Nestlé's February 2023 announcement that it would wind down and exit the frozen meals and pizza business in Canada within six months, ending the run of Delissio, the long-time leading frozen pizza brand in the country. Nestlé had originally acquired this business as part of its USD 3.7 billion 2010 purchase of Kraft Foods' frozen pizza portfolio, which also included DiGiorno, Tombstone, California Pizza Kitchen, and Jack's. Following the Canadian exit, the share previously held by Delissio was redistributed across the remaining branded competitors and private label.
Dr. Oetker has been the most direct beneficiary on the branded side. The German-headquartered company opened its first North American pizza factory in London, Ontario in May 2014, expanded the facility in 2018 with a high-speed line that nearly doubled output to roughly 18,000 pizzas per hour, and now produces approximately 400,000 frozen pizzas per day for both the Canadian and U.S. markets. The London plant employs around 430 people and has the capacity to produce up to 50 million frozen pizzas per year. McCain Foods, headquartered in New Brunswick, has retained a niche frozen pizza presence in Canada through prior acquisitions including Aloro Foods of Mississauga, although it sold its Argentine Sibarita brand and plant in September 2024 and is not the dominant pizza player in its home market. Specialty Canadian manufacturers including Rustica Foods of Montreal supply both branded and private label channels.
The No Name line sits inside Loblaw's private label portfolio alongside President's Choice. Loblaw is the largest food retailer in Canada and operates No Name as its discount value tier, with the brand carrying an average shelf price approximately 25 percent below comparable national brands. Loblaw committed to a price freeze on more than 1,500 No Name SKUs from October 2022 through the end of January 2023 in response to grocery inflation pressure, and in 2024 piloted three standalone No Name discount stores in Ontario built around a tightly limited assortment of roughly 1,300 SKUs. By October 2025 Loblaw had closed two of the three pilot stores, but the No Name brand inside conventional banners (Loblaws, Real Canadian Superstore, No Frills, Independent) remains a central pillar of the company's value strategy.
Loblaw does not operate its own frozen pizza manufacturing facility. No Name frozen pizza is produced under contract by third party co-packers, a pattern that holds across most of the No Name frozen portfolio. The economics of private label frozen pizza favour large dedicated production lines that can spread tooling, blast freezing, and packaging costs across long runs at low per-unit margin, which is why retailers contract this category out rather than build it in-house. This structure means the underlying ingredient cost stack — cheese, wheat, tomato sauce — flows directly to the No Name shelf price with limited buffering, since the co-packer's margin is thin and the retailer's margin on No Name is intentionally narrow.
For a cheese pizza, mozzarella is the single largest ingredient cost line, and in Canada that cost is shaped almost entirely by the supply management system. Canadian dairy operates under a national production quota administered by the Canadian Dairy Commission, with farm gate milk prices set above world levels and protected by tariff rate quotas (TRQs) on imports. Above-quota cheese imports face a Most-Favoured-Nation tariff of roughly 245 percent, which in practical terms blocks meaningful out-of-quota trade. Industrial cheese used as an ingredient in further processing — including the mozzarella destined for retail frozen pizza — is priced under Class 4 of the harmonized milk classification system, which provides processors with milk at lower-than-fluid prices in order to remain cost-competitive in the domestic packaged goods channel.
Importantly, the well-known Class 3(d) discount that the Canadian Dairy Commission introduced in 2014 — which allows pizzeria restaurants to buy mozzarella at a reduced price for pizza prepared and cooked on site — does not apply to retail frozen pizza. Frozen pizza manufacturers source under industrial pricing classes rather than the restaurant carve-out. The result is that the mozzarella going into a No Name frozen pizza is meaningfully more expensive than what a pizzeria pays for the same cheese, even though the end product is sold at a deep discount. The No Name 700-gram pizza mozzarella block sold in the dairy aisle and the mozzarella ingredient inside the No Name frozen pizza both reflect this Canadian structural cost premium relative to U.S. equivalents. The supply management system also dampens volatility: Canadian dairy prices move on Commission-set support price adjustments rather than spot dairy markets, which insulates retail frozen pizza from the kind of cheese price spikes that hit U.S. retailers but also prevents the corresponding price relief.
Under CUSMA, the United States gained expanded but capped access to the Canadian dairy market through 14 product-specific TRQs. The cheese TRQ ramps to a combined 12,500 metric tonnes by year six of the agreement and grows one percent annually thereafter for an additional thirteen years. Within quota, U.S. cheese enters duty-free; over quota it again faces the 245 percent MFN rate. CUSMA contains a mandatory review of the dairy provisions after six years, which falls in the 2025 to 2026 window and is now an active area of bilateral negotiation. None of these TRQ volumes are large enough to displace domestic supply for retail frozen pizza, but they set the ceiling on import-driven price competition.
The crust is the second major cost line and is overwhelmingly Canadian-sourced. The Canadian flour milling industry comprises 23 wheat mills with daily capacity of roughly 201,000 hundredweight, plus five durum mills, generating approximately CAD $4.0 billion in industry revenue in 2025. In 2024, Canadian millers processed 3.3 million tonnes of wheat into 2.5 million tonnes of flour, with the United States taking roughly 94 percent of Canada's $179 million flour export market.
Hard wheat for bread and pizza dough applications is grown primarily in Saskatchewan and Alberta, with Canada Western Red Spring (CWRS) the dominant class for high-protein bread flour. The 2025 Prairie crop was a record year. Saskatchewan harvested wheat acreage was down 4.3 percent year over year to 13.5 million acres, but yields rose 10.9 percent to 49.7 bushels per acre, lifting provincial wheat production 6.1 percent to 18.2 million tonnes. National production approached 40 million tonnes, with the bulk grading in the top two quality categories. Saskatchewan milling wheat prices fell roughly 22 percent across 2024, and the average retail price for a 2.5 kilogram bag of flour was down 10.3 percent year over year, reflecting the broad easing of farm gate prices that has carried into 2025 with CWRS trading near $7.25 per bushel delivered for the West-Central Saskatchewan winter delivery window.
For a frozen pizza co-packer in Ontario or Quebec, this means wheat flour input cost has been a tailwind rather than a headwind through the most recent procurement cycles. The seeding window for spring wheat on the Prairies runs from late April through May, harvest is concentrated from late August through October, and the bulk of the crop moves into the milling and export channel through the following twelve months. Because flour is shelf stable, processors typically lock pricing on multi-month forward contracts, which means current shelf prices reflect wheat economics from earlier in the previous crop year rather than spot quotes.
Tomato paste for the sauce layer is the third major ingredient stream. North American industrial tomato paste is dominated by California processors — Morning Star, Ingomar, and Olam each operate at very large scale in California's Central Valley, which produces approximately 95 percent of U.S. processing tomatoes and a meaningful share of the industrial tomato paste consumed in Canadian food manufacturing. Ontario also has a domestic processing tomato industry centred around Leamington, supplying both branded and private label canners and food processors. Processing tomatoes are a once-a-year crop, harvested mechanically from late July through early October, and converted into aseptically packaged paste that holds twelve months or longer, allowing year-round draw against a single annual pack.
Yeast, oils, sugar, and seasonings are commodity inputs that move on global markets and represent a small fraction of the total bill of materials. Packaging — paperboard cartons, shrink film, and corrugated shippers — is a meaningful but stable line, with paperboard prices having softened across 2024 and 2025 after the post-pandemic pulp price peak.
Frozen pizza sits at the intersection of two trade policy structures: the supply-managed dairy regime described above, and the broader Canada-U.S. tariff environment under CUSMA. The 2025 tariff cycle was material. Effective March 4, 2025, Canada imposed 25 percent counter-tariffs on approximately CAD $30 billion in U.S. goods in response to U.S. tariff actions, a move that directly raised the landed cost of any U.S.-origin ingredient streams flowing into Canadian food manufacturing. Effective September 1, 2025, Canada removed most of those counter-tariffs in recognition of the U.S. honouring tariff-free entry for most Canadian goods under CUSMA, retaining the additional duties only on steel, aluminum, and automobiles. Food ingredient flows therefore returned to largely tariff-free CUSMA-compliant status in the second half of 2025.
For a frozen pizza supply chain that draws on Canadian dairy, Canadian wheat, and a mix of Canadian and California tomato paste, the net effect of the 2025 cycle was a transient cost spike concentrated in the March-to-August window, followed by relief from September forward. The dairy supply management system was unaffected by the counter-tariff cycle since it operates on a separate TRQ-based structure. The CUSMA dairy review now in progress through 2025-26 is the more consequential medium-term policy variable for this category.
Frozen pizza must be held at -18 degrees Celsius from the freezing tunnel at the manufacturing plant through to the retail freezer case. Most frozen pizza destined for Loblaw banners in Western Canada is produced in Ontario or Quebec and moves westward by refrigerated truck or intermodal rail in temperature-controlled containers. The distance from the London, Ontario manufacturing corridor to the Edmonton market is approximately 3,400 kilometres by road, which represents three to four days of transit and several days of cold storage at intermediate distribution points. Loblaw operates large frozen distribution capacity in Calgary and the Edmonton area to serve its Western Canadian banner footprint.
Cold chain integrity is structurally expensive. Refrigerated trucking carries a premium of roughly 20 to 30 percent over dry van rates on equivalent lanes, and frozen distribution centres operate at significantly higher per-pallet costs than ambient warehousing due to refrigeration energy load. Edmonton's inland location adds further freight cost relative to Toronto or Montreal, where frozen pizza typically reaches the retail freezer within one to two days of production. Fuel cost, refrigerated capacity availability, and seasonal trucking conditions across Northern Ontario and the Prairies in winter all contribute to a freight premium that is built into the Western Canadian shelf price.
Two pack formats compete for the same consumer occasion in this category. The single 365-gram pizza is the impulse and trial format, often promoted on flyers and stocked at end caps, and carries a higher per-100g price reflecting its packaging-to-product ratio and slower velocity. The 4-pack at 1.74 kilograms (435 grams per pizza on average) consolidates four units into a single shipper carton, reduces packaging material per pizza, and amortizes both retail handling and logistics cost across more grams. As a general structural matter, the 4-pack carries a meaningful per-100g discount when not on promotion, while flyer-driven single-pack promotions can intermittently invert that relationship.
Discount private label brands like No Name typically operate on retail margins in the single digits, well below the margins that branded competitors carry. This means that movement in the underlying inputs — primarily mozzarella, then wheat flour, then tomato paste, then freight — flows through to the shelf price relatively quickly. With wheat input cost easing, dairy cost held stable by supply management, and the 2025 counter-tariff cycle resolved, the input picture entering 2026 is more favourable for retail frozen pizza pricing than it was in early 2025, although the outcome of the CUSMA dairy review and ongoing freight cost inflation in Western Canada remain the key variables to watch.
- Just Food — Dr. Oetker North American pizza strategy: https://www.just-food.com/features/focus-oetker-wants-bigger-slice-of-north-american-pizza/
- Food In Canada — Dr. Oetker London plant turns 10: https://www.foodincanada.com/food-business/dr-oetker-canadas-london-plant-turns-10-158395/
- Food In Canada — Dr. Oetker expands capacity in London, Ont.: https://www.foodincanada.com/food-in-canada/dr-oetker-expands-capacity-in-london-ont-139572/
- Newswire — Dr. Oetker Opens New Production Facility in London, Ontario: https://www.newswire.ca/news-releases/dr-oetker-opens-new-production-facility-in-london-ontario-514332321.html
- CBC News — Nestlé to stop selling Delissio pizza in Canada: https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/nestle-delissio-wind-down-1.6735082
- Nestlé — Acquisition of Kraft Foods frozen pizza business: https://www.nestle.com/media/pressreleases/allpressreleases/kraftpizzas
- McCain Foods — Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCain_Foods
- Grocery Business Magazine — Loblaw freezing prices on 1,500 no name products: https://www.grocerybusiness.ca/loblaw-freezing-prices-on-1-500-no-name-products/
- CBC News — Loblaw No Name price freeze: https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/loblaw-grocery-inflation-no-name-1.6618829
- BNN Bloomberg — Loblaw closing second of three ultra-discount No Name stores: https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/business/company-news/2025/10/02/loblaw-closing-second-of-three-ultra-discount-no-name-stores/
- Canadian Dairy Commission — Class 3(d) Restaurants: https://www.cdc-ccl.ca/en/node/845
- Canadian Dairy Commission — Harmonized Milk Classification System: https://www.cdc-ccl.ca/en/node/717
- Better Farming — Pizza cheese eludes Canadian tariff: https://www.betterfarming.com/online-news/pizza-cheese-eludes-canadian-tariff-11157
- Government of Canada — Key dates and access quantities for supply-managed TRQs: https://www.international.gc.ca/trade-commerce/controls-controles/trq-dates-ct.aspx?lang=eng
- USDA Foreign Agricultural Service — Canada Dairy and Products Annual: https://apps.fas.usda.gov/newgainapi/api/Report/DownloadReportByFileName?fileName=Dairy+and+Products+Annual_Ottawa_Canada_CA2024-0047
- University of Wisconsin Extension — U.S.-Canada Dairy Trade Dispute: https://farms.extension.wisc.edu/articles/u-s-canada-dairy-trade-dispute-quotas-trade-flows-and-economic-impacts/
- Statistics Canada — Milled wheat and wheat flour produced 2024: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/250513/dq250513a-eng.htm
- Statistics Canada — Production of principal field crops, November 2025: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/251204/dq251204a-eng.htm
- Cereals Canada — 2025 New Wheat Crop Report: https://cerealscanada.ca/2025-new-crop-report/
- Farms.com — Wheat Prices in Saskatchewan for Milling Fell by 22 percent in 2024: https://m.farms.com/ag-industry-news/wheat-prices-in-saskatchewan-for-milling-fell-by-22-percent-in-2024-256.aspx
- IBISWorld — Flour Milling in Canada Industry Analysis 2025: https://www.ibisworld.com/canada/market-research-reports/flour-milling-industry/
- Government of Canada — Canada's Response to U.S. Tariffs: https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/programs/international-trade-finance-policy/canadas-response-us-tariffs.html
- Government of Canada — Counter-Tariffs List September 2025: https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/programs/international-trade-finance-policy/canadas-response-us-tariffs/complete-list-us-products-subject-to-counter-tariffs.html