$1.50 Hot Pizza

1751 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, NY 11233
Pizza
Last inspected: Apr 25, 2025
70
Score
Medium Risk NYC Grade: A

Public records currently show only one inspection for $1.50 Hot Pizza. The most recent visit was on Apr 25, 2025. A medium risk score generally means inspectors found things to fix, though most weren't urgent.

The most common issue across all inspections has been wiping cloths not stored clean and dry, showing up one time.

$1.50 Hot Pizza's latest score of 70 falls below the Brooklyn average of 77. Nothing in the record is alarming, but there's room to improve.

1
Inspections
2
Critical latest
0
Major latest
1
Minor latest
Inspection History
Apr 25, 2025
Pre-permit (Operational) / Initial Inspection
2 critical violations. 1 minor violation.
View 3 violations
Wiping cloths not stored clean and dry, or in a sanitizing solution, between uses.
06F
Personal cleanliness is inadequate. outer garment soiled with possible contaminant. effective hair restraint not worn where required. jewelry worn on hands or arms. fingernail polish worn or fingernails not kept clean and trimmed.
06A
Non-food contact surface or equipment made of unacceptable material, not kept clean, or not properly sealed, raised, spaced or movable to allow accessibility for cleaning on all sides, above and underneath the unit.
10F
70

Frequently Asked Questions

When was $1.50 Hot Pizza last inspected?

The most recent health inspection at $1.50 Hot Pizza on file is from Apr 25, 2025. The public record contains one inspection in total.

What is the most common violation at $1.50 Hot Pizza?

Across the inspection record, wiping cloths not stored clean and dry has been cited one time, more than any other issue at $1.50 Hot Pizza.

How does $1.50 Hot Pizza compare to other restaurants in Brooklyn?

$1.50 Hot Pizza most recently scored 70 out of 100, which is lower than the Brooklyn average of 77.

What does a medium risk rating mean?

A medium risk rating at $1.50 Hot Pizza means the most recent inspection turned up a handful of issues that the health department wrote up but did not classify as critical.