CAVA Pita Menu

The bowl gets most of the attention in CAVA menu, but the pita deserves far more credit than it gets.

It is the same proteins, the same scratch-made dips, the same free toppings and dressings, but wrapped instead of layered, and built around one of the most carefully designed pieces of bread in fast-casual dining. CAVA’s pita is not an afterthought. It was developed through over a dozen iterations with Damascus Bakery in Brooklyn before landing on what it is today: a fluffy, perfectly chewy sprouted-grain flatbread that holds a full load of fillings without tearing, without going soggy, and without getting in the way of the flavors inside it.

The story behind the bread itself. Every signature pita includes an honest description of what makes each one worth ordering. The complete build-your-own guide. And the practical answers, calories, allergens, whether it is vegan, whether it is gluten-free, and how it compares to the bowl.

The Bread That Makes It Work, CAVA’s Damascus Bakery Pita

Before getting into the pita options, it is worth understanding what you are actually eating, because the bread is a bigger deal than most people realise.

CAVA’s pita was developed exclusively for them by Damascus Bakery through roughly a dozen iterations to determine the right size, weight, and density. Made with a blend of freshly-milled flour and sprouted grains using all clean-label ingredients, the revamped pita is larger at 8½ by 9½ inches, big enough to hold up to eight toppings in a single wrap.

Damascus Bakery is one of the oldest and most respected pita bakeries in the United States, based in Brooklyn, New York. To create the light, pillowy texture, the dough is mixed gradually so as not to break down the fermentation, similar to artisanal home baking techniques.

The pita is crafted from sprouted grains and is free of artificial preservatives, offering a chewy texture that is perfect for holding a variety of fillings.

What sprouted grains mean for you: Sprouting the grain before milling it partially breaks down the starch, which reduces the glycaemic impact compared to standard white flour pita. It also increases the bioavailability of certain nutrients. This is not health-food marketing, it is a genuine ingredient distinction that most fast-casual chains do not bother with.

Pita nutrition baseline (plain, unfilled):

  • Calories: 230 cal
  • Protein: 8g
  • Carbs: 40g
  • Fat: 5g
  • Sodium: 370mg
  • Allergens: Wheat, sesame, soy

The pita contains gluten. There is currently no gluten-free pita option at CAVA, anyone avoiding gluten should order a bowl instead. The pita itself is vegan; whether your full pita order is vegan depends on the fillings you choose.

steak feta pita

CAVA Signature Pitas
(All Options)

Price Range: ~$10.97–$15.75 (varies by location)
Signature pitas are pre-built combinations, every filling already chosen for the best flavor balance. You can make minor adjustments at the counter, but they are designed to be ordered as-is.

🫓 Greek Chicken Pita

870 cal

What’s in it: Grilled chicken · hummus · tzatziki · salt-brined pickles · tomato + onion · kalamata olives · crumbled feta · romaine · Greek vinaigrette

The most straightforward pita on the menu and one of the most consistently satisfying. Grilled chicken delivers 33g of protein. Hummus and tzatziki together create a creamy, cooling base that every other ingredient sits on top of. The kalamata olives add a briny punch that keeps each bite from feeling flat. The Greek vinaigrette ties everything together with a clean, herby acidity.

If you want to understand what CAVA does well with a pita, fresh ingredients, bold dips, no unnecessary complexity, start here.

Best for: First-timers · High-protein eating · Anyone who wants clean Mediterranean flavors in a wrap

🫓 Steak + Feta Pita

805 cal

What’s in it: Grilled steak · Crazy Feta® · red pepper hummus · pickled onions · crumbled feta · salt-brined pickles · romaine · garlic dressing · Greek vinaigrette

One of the two best pitas on the menu, and the one that most benefits from the wrap format specifically. The steak, Mediterranean-seasoned and sliced thin, concentrates in flavor when enclosed in the pita in a way it does not quite manage in a bowl. The Crazy Feta adds creamy spice. The red pepper hummus adds sweetness. The pickled onions cut through the richness of both. The garlic dressing and Greek vinaigrette together sound like too much dressing, but work perfectly, one bold and creamy, one light and acidic.

This is the pita to order if you want to see what CAVA can do with steak.

Best for: Steak lovers · Anyone who wants maximum flavor in a wrap · Regular customers wanting something richer

🫓 Chicken Shawarma Pita

640 cal

What’s in it: Harissa honey chicken · garlic sauce · hummus · tomato + onion · pickled onions

The lightest signature pita on the menu at 640 calories and the most focused in flavor. Five ingredients, every one chosen deliberately. The harissa honey chicken is sweet and spicy. The garlic sauce, Lebanese toum-style, white, creamy, and intensely garlicky, is the dominant flavor note and the reason this pita works. The hummus adds creaminess. The tomato and onion add freshness. The pickled onions cut through the richness of the garlic sauce.

If you like garlic and you like shawarma, this is the most direct expression of both on the CAVA pita menu.

Best for: Garlic sauce fans · Anyone who wants a lighter, more focused pita · Shawarma lovers

🫓 Spicy Chicken + Avocado Pita

970 cal

What’s in it: Harissa honey chicken · Crazy Feta® · hummus · avocado · salt-brined pickles · crumbled feta · fire-roasted corn · pickled onions · hot harissa vinaigrette

The most loaded pita on the menu at 970 calories, and every calorie is accounted for. The harissa honey chicken brings sweet heat. The Crazy Feta and avocado together create a rich, creamy layer that carries the spice. The fire-roasted corn adds sweetness. The pickled onions cut through everything. The hot harissa vinaigrette finishes it with a tangy, spicy kick.

This is not a light lunch option. It is a full, satisfying meal that rewards people who want everything working at once inside a single wrap. One of the most popular pita orders at CAVA locations nationwide.

Best for: Fans of the Harissa Avocado Bowl who want it in pita form · Anyone who wants maximum flavor and substance · Bold, spicy Mediterranean flavors

🫓 Lemon Herb Chicken Pita

700 cal

What’s in it: Grilled chicken · tzatziki · lemon herb tahini · tomato + cucumber · crumbled feta

Clean, bright, and herb-forward. This pita is built around the lemon herb tahini dressing, CAVA’s most popular sauce system-wide, and gives it more room to work than most bowls do. The grilled chicken is mild enough to let the dressing be the star. The tzatziki adds a cool, creamy layer. The tomato and cucumber add freshness without weight. The crumbled feta adds salt without overpowering anything.

At 700 calories it is also one of the more calorie-moderate signature pita options for how filling it actually feels.

Best for: Lemon herb tahini fans · Clean, fresh eating · Anyone who wants a well-balanced pita without bold heat

🫓 Spicy Lamb Meatball Pita

750 cal

What’s in it: Spicy lamb meatballs · Crazy Feta® · harissa · pickled onions · cabbage slaw (sumac)

The boldest, most characterful pita on the menu. The spicy lamb meatballs, seasoned with cumin, coriander, and chili, are the most complex protein CAVA offers, and the wrap format concentrates their flavor significantly. The Crazy Feta adds creamy, jalapeño-spiked richness. The harissa adds smoky heat. The pickled onions add sharp acidity. The sumac slaw brings a citrusy crunch that stops the whole thing from feeling heavy.

If you have only ever ordered chicken pitas, this is the one to try when you are ready for something more serious.

Best for: Lamb lovers · Anyone ready for bold, complex Mediterranean flavors · Regular customers wanting a step up in character

🫓 Falafel Veggie Pita

600 cal

What’s in it: Falafel · hummus · roasted eggplant dip · salt-brined pickles · cabbage slaw · garlic dressing

CAVA’s best vegetarian pita, and one of the most underordered items on the whole menu. The falafel, crispy outside, soft inside, made from ground chickpeas and herbs, works exceptionally well in a pita because the wrap keeps the crispness intact longer than a bowl does. The roasted eggplant dip adds a smoky, meaty depth that no plant-based filling can usually achieve. The garlic dressing brings intensity. The sumac slaw adds brightness and crunch.

At 600 calories it is also the lightest full pita on the menu, making it a strong choice for vegetarians who want substance without excess.

Best for: Vegetarians · Falafel fans · Anyone who wants a plant-based pita that actually satisfies

Build your own pita menu at Cava

🫓 Build-Your-Own Pita

540–1,610 cal
Price: ~$10.97 | Starting calories: 230 cal (pita alone)
Full control from start to finish. Same five-step system as the bowls, protein, dips, toppings, and dressing, but built into a pita rather than a bowl. The section below covers every available option in full.

Build-Your-Own Pita Guide

The build-your-own pita follows the exact same system as the build-your-own bowl. Every protein, dip, topping, and dressing available for bowls is available for pitas. The difference is purely format, wrapped versus layered.

One practical note before you build: Pitas have a physical limit. The Damascus Bakery pita is designed to hold up to eight toppings comfortably. Beyond that, it gets difficult to eat without everything falling out. Bowls handle heavy topping loads better. If you want avocado, crumbled feta, corn, pickled onions, and pita crisps all at once, a bowl is the more practical format. For a pita, pick your best five or six toppings and let the dip and dressing do the rest of the flavor work.

All proteins are available in pitas. Same preparation, same calories, same nutritional profile as in bowls.

ProteinCaloriesProteinNotes
Grilled Chicken250 cal33gClean, versatile, works with everything
Harissa Honey Chicken260 cal30gMost ordered protein, sweet-spicy glaze
Spicy Lamb Meatballs220 cal21gBold, cumin and chili, best in wrap format
Braised Lamb280 cal19gRich and shredded, pairs well with lighter toppings
Grilled Meatballs190 cal20gMild beef, 0g carbs, reliable and substantial
Falafel270 cal9gCrispy chickpea, stays crispier in pita than in bowl
Roasted Vegetables70 cal2gBest doubled up or paired with a second protein
Roasted White Sweet Potato190 cal2gStarchy, nutty, distinctive plant-based option

Which protein works best in a pita? The spicy lamb meatballs and grilled steak both perform better in pita format than in bowls. The wrap concentrates their flavors and keeps the heat more contained. Falafel also benefits from the pita, the casing keeps it crispier for longer than an open bowl does. Braised lamb and roasted vegetables work fine but can make the pita harder to eat cleanly if over filled.

Up to three dips are included free. In a pita, dips function differently than in a bowl, they coat the inside of the wrap and act as a sauce layer rather than sitting underneath everything else. Choose dips that complement your protein and are not all the same texture.

DipCaloriesBest Pita Pairing
Hummus50 calWorks with everything, always a safe first dip
Crazy Feta®60 calBest with chicken or lamb, adds creamy spice
Tzatziki25 calBest with spicy protein, cools the heat
Harissa60 calBest with chicken, adds smoky depth
Roasted Red Pepper Hummus25 calBest as a secondary dip alongside standard hummus
Eggplant & Red Pepper Dip15 calBest with falafel, adds smoky Mediterranean depth

Tip: In a pita, two dips are often better than three. With heavy toppings and a dressing already in the wrap, a third dip can push the flavor balance over the edge. Hummus plus one bold dip, Crazy Feta, or harissa, is the most reliable combination.

All toppings are free. In a pita, prioritize toppings that add texture and freshness over toppings that add bulk. Avocado, pickled onions, and the sumac slaw are the three toppings that work best in wrap format; they add flavor and contrast without making the pita unwieldy.

ToppingCaloriesWorks in Pita?
Avocado160 cal✓ Excellent, adds creaminess without bulk
Crumbled Feta50 cal✓ Great, salty punctuation throughout
Fire-Roasted Corn40 cal✓ Good, adds sweetness
Kalamata Olives45 cal✓ Good, briny depth
Pickled Onions10 cal✓ Essential, cuts through rich fillings
Pita Crisps120 cal✗ Skip in pita, adds unnecessary bulk and breaks the wrap
Tomato + Cucumber Salad5 cal✓ Good, adds freshness
Cabbage Slaw (Sumac)35 cal✓ Excellent, crunch without bulk
Diced Cucumber15 cal✓ Good, cool, clean freshness
Fresno Peppers5 cal✓ Good, mild heat
Salt-Brined Pickles~5 cal✓ Good, sharp tang
Fiery Broccoli~40 cal✗ Better in bowls, too bulky for pita
Shredded Romaine5 cal✓ Good, neutral crunch

One dressing is included free. In a pita, dressings are drizzled inside the wrap before it is folded, they need to be flavors that work when distributed throughout the filling rather than sitting on top. Lighter dressings like lemon herb tahini and yogurt dill work especially well. Heavier ones like garlic sauce need to be used in moderation or they overwhelm.

DressingCaloriesPita Notes
Lemon Herb Tahini70 calBest all-round pita dressing, bright, nutty, works with everything
Garlic Sauce170 calPowerful, use sparingly or pair with ingredients that can match its intensity
Greek Vinaigrette130 calLight and acidic , excellent with chicken or steak pitas
Hot Harissa Vinaigrette70 calAdds heat throughout, best with chicken or lamb
Skhug90 calBold herb heat, best on the side rather than inside the wrap
Tahini Caesar90 calRich and nutty, works well with chicken and feta
Yogurt Dill30 calLightest and most versatile, never overpowers
Balsamic Date Vinaigrette~80 calSweet and complex, best with lamb proteins

Pita Nutrition Guide Signature Pitas Ranked

PitaCaloriesProteinBest For
Chicken Shawarma Pita640 cal~30gLightest signature option
Falafel Veggie Pita600 cal~9gBest vegetarian choice
Lemon Herb Chicken Pita700 cal~33gClean eating
Steak + Feta Pita805 cal~30gSteak lovers
Greek Chicken Pita870 cal~33gFirst-timers
Spicy Lamb Meatball Pita750 cal~21gBold flavors
Spicy Chicken + Avocado Pita970 cal~30gMaximum flavor
Build-Your-Own Pita540–1,610 calVariesFull control

Pita Allergen Guide

CAVA’s pita contains wheat, sesame, and soy, making it unsuitable for those with allergies to these ingredients.

AllergenPresent in Pita
Wheat / Gluten✓ Yes – pita is made with wheat flour
Sesame✓ Yes – present in the sprouted grain blend
Soy✓ Yes
DairyDepends on fillings (feta, tzatziki, Crazy Feta, garlic sauce)
Peanuts✗ No – CAVA’s menu is free from peanuts
Tree Nuts✗ No – CAVA’s menu is free from tree nuts
EggsDepends on specific fillings — check in-store

Key points:

  • There is no gluten-free pita option at CAVA. Anyone avoiding gluten should order a bowl.
  • The pita itself is vegan, whether your full pita order is vegan depends on your filling choices.
  • Cross-contamination is possible in CAVA kitchens. Anyone with a severe allergy should speak directly with staff before ordering.
  • Full allergen information is available at cava.com/nutrition or via the CAVA app.

Pita vs Bowl Which Should You Order?

This comes up more than any other question on the CAVA menu. The honest answer is that it depends on what you want from the meal.

PitaBowl
FormatWrapped, handheldOpen, layered
Eating experiencePortable, compactBetter for heavy topping loads
Best proteinsSteak, lamb meatballs, falafelWorks equally well for all proteins
Calorie range540–1,610 cal (incl. pita)480–1,495+ cal
Gluten-free option✗ No✓ Yes (skip pita crisps)
Topping capacityUp to 8 comfortablyUnlimited
Best forLunch on the go, focused flavorsNutrition tracking, heavy builds, dietary restrictions

The pita wins when: You want something portable. You are ordering steak or lamb meatballs and want the wrap format to concentrate the flavors. You want a lighter meal and are choosing the Chicken Shawarma or Lemon Herb Chicken options.

The bowl wins when: You are tracking macros and want unlimited topping control. You are avoiding gluten. You want avocado, corn, pita crisps, olives, pickled onions, and two dips all at once without anything falling out.

Kids Pita

CAVA’s kids pita is a scaled-down build-your-own wrap sized for younger diners. Same pita, same ingredients, smaller portion.

Price: ~$7.15 | Includes: Mini pita · one protein (half serving) · one dip · one dressing · up to three toppings · choice of pita chips or carrot sticks · small juice or milk

Kids protein options: Grilled chicken and falafel are the most ordered. Both are mild enough for younger palates without asking the kitchen for anything special.

Parents’ note: You can request milder proteins, skip spicy dips like harissa or Crazy Feta, and choose dairy-free fillings. The same customization flexibility that applies to adult orders applies to kids’ orders.

Frequently Asked Questions About CAVA Pitas

No. The pita is made from sprouted wheat flour and contains gluten, sesame, and soy. There is currently no gluten-free pita option at CAVA. Customers avoiding gluten should order a bowl instead; all bowl bases, proteins, dips, and dressings are gluten-free when pita crisps are skipped.

The pita bread itself is vegan. Whether your full pita order is vegan depends on your filling choices. Avoid tzatziki, Crazy Feta, crumbled feta, garlic sauce, and yogurt dill dressing if eating vegan. Falafel, hummus, harissa, eggplant dip, roasted vegetables, and most toppings and dressings are vegan-friendly.

CAVA’s pita is made exclusively for them by Brooklyn-based Damascus Bakery, crafted from sprouted grains and free of artificial preservatives. Damascus Bakery is one of the oldest pita bakeries in the United States.

The plain pita bread without any fillings is 230 calories, with 8g protein, 40g carbs, and 5g fat.

The Spicy Chicken + Avocado Pita and the Steak + Feta Pita are consistently the most ordered signature pitas. The Greek Chicken Pita is the most popular choice for first-time pita orders.

Yes. You can add a second protein to any pita for an additional charge. Note that a double protein pita is harder to eat cleanly, the wrap has physical limits. If you want two proteins, a bowl is a more practical format.

Most fast-casual wraps use a standard flour tortilla. CAVA’s pita is a sprouted-grain flatbread developed exclusively for them by Damascus Bakery, chewy, slightly thicker, and made without artificial preservatives. The fermentation process used in its production gives it a texture and flavour profile that standard wraps do not have.

The Greek Chicken Pita and Build-Your-Own Pita both start at approximately $10.97 at most locations, making them the most affordable pita options on the menu.

The Spicy Chicken + Avocado Pita at 970 calories is the highest-calorie signature pita. A fully loaded Build-Your-Own Pita can reach up to 1,610 calories depending on your choices.

cava menu icon

Final Verdict

The CAVA pita is a genuinely distinct product, not a wrap, not a standard flatbread, but a sprouted-grain pita developed through an extensive collaboration with one of America’s oldest pita bakeries specifically to hold Mediterranean fillings without compromising texture or flavor. That backstory matters because you can taste the difference.
The signature pitas are well-constructed. The Steak + Feta and Spicy Lamb Meatball options are the strongest, both benefit specifically from the wrap format in a way they do not quite match in bowl form. The Falafel Veggie Pita is the most underrated option on the whole pita menu. The Spicy Chicken + Avocado is the one to order when you want everything at once.
If you are building your own, keep it to five or six toppings, choose two complementary dips rather than three, and let the dressing do the finishing work. The pita format rewards restraint more than the bowl does.