Neapolitan Pizza Dough: Recipe, Calculator & Step-by-Step Guide

What is Neapolitan pizza dough?

Neapolitan pizza dough is a traditional dough from Naples, made from only four ingredients: flour, water, salt and yeast. The official specifications are defined by the AVPN Disciplinare (Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana). Characteristic features are a high, airy rim (cornicione), a thin, soft base and short bake times of 60-90 seconds at 450-500°C.

Unlike Romana, New York Style or pan pizza, Neapolitan dough is soft, stretchable and wet - it is shaped by hand, not rolled. The high water content (typically 60-65 %) and long fermentation (at least 8 hours, ideally 24-48 hours) produce an open crumb with large, irregular pores.

The AVPN values (simplified)

  • Flour: Tipo 00 or Tipo 0, W 280-320, P/L 0.50-0.65
  • Water: 1 litre per 1.6-1.8 kg flour (= 55-62 % hydration)
  • Salt: 40-60 g per litre of water (≈ 2.5-3 % of flour)
  • Yeast: 0.1-3 g fresh yeast per litre of water (depending on fermentation time)
  • Fermentation: at least 8 hours at 20°C, split into 6 hours bulk and 2 hours ball ferment
  • Dough ball: 200-280 g for a 30 cm pizza
  • Bake temperature: 430-485°C, bake time 60-90 seconds

If you want it strict, read the full AVPN Disciplinare. For home practice the grid above is enough - with two adjustments: hydration closer to 65 % for more moisture and longer bake times in a regular oven (3-6 minutes at 250-280°C), since few home ovens hit 450°C.

Quantities for 4 pizzas (250 g balls)

For 4 pizzas at 250 g per ball, Neapolitan, 65 % hydration, 24 hours cold ferment:

IngredientQuantityBaker’s %
Tipo 00 (W 280)605 g100 %
Water (cool)393 g65 %
Salt15 g2.5 %
Dry yeast0.3 g0.05 %
Total~1013 g

These are the values PizzaPlan computes for you with a precision of 0.05 g - using a built-in yeast curve that interpolates the correct yeast amount for any fermentation time between 4 and 72 hours. At 4 hours of direct fermentation you would need 4-5 g of dry yeast instead of 0.3 g.

Step by step: Neapolitan dough in 24 hours

  1. Weigh out water (393 g, cool). Dissolve the salt completely in the water. Dissolve the yeast separately in a small portion of the water.
  2. Add the flour and mix roughly by hand or in a stand mixer.
  3. Work in the yeast mixture. Knead for 5-7 minutes in a mixer or 12-15 minutes by hand until the dough is smooth, shiny and elastic (windowpane test: thin enough to see light through without tearing).
  4. Bulk ferment: 30-60 minutes covered at room temperature.
  5. Refrigerate: in a covered container at 4°C for 18-22 hours.
  6. Bring back to room temperature: take the dough out 2-3 hours before baking.
  7. Form dough balls: divide into 4 equal pieces (260 g per ball for a small safety margin), shape into rounds and let them rest separately in a covered container.
  8. Ball ferment: 2-4 hours at room temperature, until the balls have visibly grown and slowly push back when you press them.
  9. Shape by hand: place the ball on semola, press with fingertips from the centre outwards, leaving the cornicione (a 1-2 cm rim) untouched. Do not roll - rolling pushes the air out.
  10. Top and bake: at 450-500°C for 60-90 seconds, or in a regular oven with stone/steel at 250-280°C for 4-6 minutes.

Which flour works best?

  • Caputo Pizzeria (W 280-300): the all-purpose choice for Neapolitan pizza in a home oven. Stable, easy to shape, forgives beginner mistakes.
  • Caputo Cuoco / Chef (W 300-320): slightly stronger, suited for 24-48 h ferments.
  • Le 5 Stagioni Napoletana (W 280-310): used by nearly every Neapolitan pizzeria, very balanced.
  • Molino Grassi Tipo 00 (W 320): protein-rich, fits longer fermentations.
  • Petra 5063 (W 280-300): an Italian stone-milled flour with slightly more character in the aroma.

At a regular supermarket, German Type 550 flour or French T55 also works as a substitute - the gluten structure is different, but absolutely fine for first attempts. PizzaPlan Pro has profiles for over 50 specific flour brands with individual hydration ranges.

Common problems and fixes

  • Dough sticks while shaping: hydration too high or not enough flour/semola on the work surface. Fix: drop hydration to 62 %, use semola instead of flour to dust.
  • Base stays soft, no leoparding: bake surface too cool. Fix: preheat the stone or steel for at least 45 minutes at max temperature, in a home oven let it rest under top heat for another 10 minutes after preheating.
  • Crumb tears apart, flat cornicione: dough not fermented enough or not kneaded enough. Fix: at least 24 h cold fermentation, at least 12 minutes by hand (6-8 minutes by mixer).
  • Pizza sticks to the peel: hydration too high or dough sat on the peel for too long. Fix: semola on the peel, top quickly and launch within 30 seconds.
  • Bitter-sweet, alcoholic taste: over-fermented. Fix: less yeast or shorter fermentation. PizzaPlan calculates the yeast amount based on planned fermentation time.

Direct vs. cold fermentation

VariantTotal fermentDry yeastAromaDigestibility
Direct express4-6 h1-1.5 g/kgflat, yeastymedium
Direct standard8-12 h0.3-0.5 g/kgmildly sweetgood
Cold standard24 h0.1-0.2 g/kgnutty, complexvery good
Cold long48-72 h0.03-0.08 g/kgvery complexexcellent

The classic Naples version is typically 8-12 hours at room temperature. At home, 24-48 hours cold is the sweet spot: maximum aroma while still plannable (mix the night before or two days ahead, relaxed pizza day).

Who is behind PizzaPlan?

PizzaPlan comes from Forstinning near Munich, written by Christoph Bimmer - home pizza baker with his own wood-fired oven and an Effeuno P134H. The numbers in this article are the same he uses for his weekend pizzas; no simplifications, no marketing figures. More about the app on the about page.

The app is free for Android and iOS. PizzaPlan Pro for a one-time €2.99 (no subscription) unlocks pre-ferments (Biga, Poolish - see the dedicated page on Biga and Poolish), 50+ flour brands and all future pro features. Play Store · App Store.