BEST Homemade Margherita Pizza
My search for the best homemade margherita pizza (made in a standard oven with everyday ingredients) is over! You’ll want to make this homemade pizza recipe over and over again. For step-by-step dough instructions, check out the margherita pizza video below!

The time has come! I’ve been teasing you on Instagram for weeks, and I sincerely apologize. I was busy eating this margherita pizza.
Ok, so let me be honest. I rarely ever, EVER tell you that a recipe is the best of anything. Let alone, put it in caps! Sure, I’ll say that something is delicious, but declaring such bold statements generally makes me extremely uncomfortable. I’m terrified that you will go home and make said best-ever-recipe and be disappointed. I would hate that.
But I’m feeling very good about this best margherita pizza recipe and I’m confident that you will love it.

I’m not an authority on homemade pizza by any means, but I’ve definitely eaten my share of pizza, both excellent and not so great.
The best margherita pizza that I’ve ever eaten in my entire life was in Naples, Italy a few years ago during our trip to the Amalfi Coast. We stood in line in a cobblestone street just off of Via Tribunali in the historic neighborhood (known for having the best pizza places in the entire world), and snagged a table at the famous Gino Sorbillo.
It’s always a good sign when you’re in Italy and a million other Italians are standing in line for the exact same pizza. No tourists, just Italians. It wasn’t fancy in the slightest. There was a disco light hanging from the ceiling and the cups were of the flimsy plastic variety.
Oh, but it was glorious. The pizzas cost only three euros and arrived flopping off of the plates. Literally, flopping. They were huge. I ate every last bite of that pizza and came back for another one the very next day.

So, when I say that today’s recipe is the best homemade margherita pizza, I’m taking all of these pizza-eating experiences into account. I’m not going to claim that this pizza tastes identical to a true Neapolitan pizza or that you’ll never taste a better pizza outside of your kitchen again. That would be ludicrous (and slightly obnoxious) and just not true.
But I do believe that this is the best margherita pizza that you’ll be able to make in your own kitchen, with a standard oven, with normal everyday ingredients (no fancy flours required), and without preparing an incredibly time-intensive pizza dough days in advance.
Homemade Pizza Equipment Recommendations:
First things first. Let’s talk equipment. A baking stone or steel is a must for great pizza at home. A few years ago, I replaced my traditional baking stone with a baking steel. It is a game-changer.
Baking steels are expensive, but I genuinely believe they are 100% worth the investment if you are interested in making pizza or bread at home. Baking steels absorb the heat from your oven and allow you to mimic brick-ovens, which generally reach temperatures in excess of 800 degrees Fahrenheit. They help you achieve crispy crusts by pulling moisture from whatever dough you are baking, including pizza crusts.
I also recommend a pizza peel, because it will make pizza-making so much easier. Wooden or metal, it will allow you to slide the pizza quickly onto the baking stone and make it much easier to remove the pizza from the oven once it is done.
If you don’t own a pizza peel (or don’t want to own a pizza peel), you can use the back of a large baking sheet or flat cookie sheet to transfer the pizza onto the stone – but it is tricky!

Tips for Margherita Pizza Success:
For the best margherita pizza, you will want to preheat your oven to the highest temperature possible. For my oven, that is 550 degrees Fahrenheit. I allow my baking steel to preheat for at least 30 minutes (regardless of whether my oven is ready as it takes time for your baking stone to come to temperature). The higher the temperature the better.
This recipe makes two 10-inch pizzas, and they should be able to properly cook in 7 to 8 minutes at that temperature.

Best Homemade Margherita Pizza
Ingredients
Homemade Pizza Dough:
- 2½ cups (300 g) unbleached all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon granulated sugar
- ½ teaspoon active dry yeast or SAF instant yeast
- ¾ teaspoon kosher salt
- 7 ounces (105°F to 115°F) warm water
- 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
- semolina and all-purpose flour for dusting the pizza peel
Pizza Sauce:
- 1 cup pureed or crushed canned San Marzano tomatoes (or canned Italian plum tomatoes)
- 2-3 fresh garlic cloves grated with a microplane or pressed
- 1 teaspoon extra virgin olive oil plus more for drizzling
- 2-3 large pinches of kosher salt to taste
- ¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Toppings:
- 2-3 tablespoons finely grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese plus more for serving
- 7 ounces fresh mozzarella cheese (not packed in water) cut into ½-inch cubes
- 5-6 large fresh basil leaves plus more for garnishing
- dried red pepper flakes optional
Instructions
- Prepare Pizza Dough: In a medium bowl, whisk together the all-purpose flour, sugar, yeast and salt. Add the warm water and olive oil, and stir the mixture with a wooden spoon until the dough just begins to come together. It will seem shaggy and dry, but don’t worry.
- Scrape the dough onto a well-floured counter top and knead the dough for three minutes. It should quickly come together and begin to get sticky. Dust the dough with flour as needed (sometimes I will have to do this 2 to 3 times, depending on humidity levels) – it should be slightly tacky, but should not be sticking to your counter top. After about 3 minutes, the dough should be smooth, slightly elastic, and tacky. Lightly grease a large mixing bowl with olive oil, and place the dough into the bowl.
- Cover the bowl with a kitchen towel (or plastic wrap) and allow the dough to rise in a warm, dry area of your kitchen for 2 hours or until the dough has doubled in size. Proofing Tip: If your kitchen is very cold, heat a large heatproof measuring cup of water in the microwave for 2 to 3 minutes. This creates a nice warm environment. Remove the cup and place the bowl with the dough in the microwave until it has risen. [If you are preparing the dough in advance, see the note section for freezing instructions.]
- Preheat Oven and Pizza Steel or Stone: Place the pizza steel (or stone) on the second to top rack of your oven (roughly 8 inches from the broiler element), and preheat the oven and steel (or stone) to 550°F (285°C) for a minumum of 1 hour. If your oven does not go up to 550°F (285°C) or you are using a delicate pizza stone, I recommend heating it to a maximum of 500°F (260°C)
- As the oven is preheating, assemble the ingredients. In a small bowl, stir together the pureed tomatoes, minced garlic, extra virgin olive oil, pepper, and salt. Set aside another small bowl with the cubed mozzarella cheese (pat the cheese with a paper towel to remove any excess moisture). Set aside the basil leaves and grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese for easy grabbing.
- Separate the dough into two equal-sized portions. It will deflate slightly, but that is OK. Place the dough on a large plate or floured counter top, cover gently with plastic wrap, and allow the dough to rest for 5 to 10 minutes.
- Assemble the Pizza: Sprinkle the pizza peel (if you do not own a pizza peel, you can try using the back of a half sheet pan - but it is tricky!) with a tablespoon of semolina and dusting of all-purpose flour. Gently use both hands to stretch one ball of pizza dough into roughly a 10-inch circle (don’t worry if its not perfectly uniform). If the dough springs back or is too elastic, allow it to rest for an additional five minutes. The edges of the dough can be slightly thicker, but make sure the center of the dough is thin (you should be able to see some light through it if you held it up). Gently transfer the dough onto the semolina and flour dusted pizza peel or baking sheet.
- Drizzle or brush the dough lightly (using your fingertips) with olive oil (roughly a teaspoon. Using a large spoon, add roughly ½ cup of the tomato sauce onto the pizza dough, leaving a ½-inch or ¾-inch border on all sides. Use the back of the spoon to spread it evenly and thinly. Sprinkle a tablespoon of parmigiano-reggiano cheese onto the pizza sauce. Add half of the cubed mozzarella, distributing it evenly over the entire pizza. Using your hands, tear a few large basil leaves, and sprinkle the basil over the pizza. At this point, I’ll occasionally stretch the sides of the dough out a bit to make it even thinner. Gently slide the pizza from the peel onto the heated baking stone. Bake for 7 to 8 minutes, or until the crust is golden and the cheese is bubbling and caramelized and the edges of the pizza are golden brown. Note: If you're looking for more color, finish the pizza under the low or medium broil setting, but watch it carefully! Remove the pizza carefully from the oven with the pizza peel, transfer to a wooden cutting board or foil, drizzle the top with olive oil, some grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese, and chiffonade of fresh basil. Slice and serve immediately and/or prepare the second pizza.
- Serving Tip: If you’re serving two pizzas at once, I recommend placing the cooked pizza on a separate baking sheet while you prepare the other pizza. In the last few minutes of cooking, place the prepared pizza into the oven (on a rack below the pizza stone) so that it is extra hot for serving. Otherwise, I recommend serving one pizza fresh out of the oven, keeping the oven hot, and preparing the second pizza after people have gone through the first one! The pizza will taste great either way, but it is at its prime within minutes out of the oven!.
Video
Tips for Success:
- Semolina flour has a higher burn point than regular flour, and ensures that the dough will not stick to the peel when transferring the pizza to the oven.
- There is no need to dissolve the yeast in warm water before using (as commonly believed). Active dry yeast has been reformulated in recent years to contain significantly smaller granules and will not have trouble dissolving into the dough. However, it is important to ensure that your active dry yeast is indeed alive and well. Double check your expiration date and when in a doubt, proof it.
- If preparing the dough in advance: once the dough has rested for two hours, separate into two portions, wrap each piece of dough well in plastic wrap, and place them in a freezer-safe bag. The dough can be chilled in the refrigerator for up to 24 hours or frozen for 3 months. Thaw the dough in the refrigerator, and allow it to stand at room temperature (in a greased bowl, covered with a kitchen towel) for at least 30 minutes before using.

202 Comments on “BEST Homemade Margherita Pizza”
This pizza looks amazing- I’m Going to try this today! I do not have a pizza stone or peel- just a regular electric oven (I’ve been begging for a gas oven!). What do you recommend for temp and baking? Should I just heat it to 450 or higher and use a regular baking sheet? Or scale it down a bit so it doesn’t burn on the baking sheet? Thanks!
Hi Jessica! I haven’t made this particular pizza on a baking sheet – but I do know that a lot of people have success using that method – I just can’t say for sure what you should do for this pizza. Some people preheat sheet pans and turn them upside down to use as a faux pizza stone – but without a peel, it will be difficult to transfer the pizza onto it (unless you have one of those one-sided cookie sheets where you can slide things off? I would personally recommend keeping the temperature high (at least 475-500), because it will be hard to get a crispy crust otherwise – and shape the pizza into an oblong oval shape and drizzle oil on the sheet pan instead? The cooking time might also increase by a few minutes too. I hope this works for you – please let me know if it does!
Thank you for your response! I heated my oven to 450 and just baked it on the cookie sheet for 10 minutes and it was perfect! This is my new favorite recipe! Loved the San Marzano tomatoes…
Best pizza dough recipe. I was wondering how much you stretch the pizzas. Seems that when you stretch it out to have light through the center, the pizza are alot larger than two 10 inch pizzas.
Great pizza! Thanks, JoeP
Just realized I never asked your question! I think I was a bit conservative – so they really do make more like 11-12 inch pizzas! You don’t want a LOT of light coming through, you just want it to be thin!
It looks awesome, congrats 😛 I was wondering if you can put the ingredients in grams…I’m from Europe and I would love to make this recipe, but there are different measurements on sites…Thank you
Hi Laura:
When you say 3€ what that means? For a regular pizza? Here in Madrid for that price you can get just a slice! I loved this post.
Best regards
Hi Ricardo! A huge pizza in Naples was just three euros and that was only a few years ago in 2013. I’m sure it varies all over the place, but pizzas in Naples were incredibly cheap!
Thanks for such detailed instructions – looks great!
Looks yammy, however, surely you’re aware traditional Naples pizza dough can only have 4 ingredients – flour, water, yeast, salt. I.e. no sugar or oil. Cheers.
OH MY PIZZA GODDESS!
Made this pizza tonight for me and my husband and we are both in awe! The simplicity is genius. The only change i made, right out of the oven i covered the pizza with plenty of spinach.
This is now my go-to pizza recipe FOREVER.
Amazing!!! Thanks so much for the feedback Delilah. Nothing makes me happier!
I have a brick oven for pizza in my backyard, would you change the dough at all or do you think the result would be the same?
I just made this last night and it was, by far, the best pizza I’ve made at home. I used a cast iron pizza pan in the oven instead of a pizza stone and it worked great! Thanks for sharing such a wonderful recipe.
Thank you so much Courtney! So thrilled to hear that! I love the cast iron pan method (haven’t done it in a while now that I own a pizza stone!). Thanks for sharing that it worked for you!!! 🙂
I made this tonight for dinner and it was by far the BEST pizza I’ve ever made. SO SO good!
Yay! Oh my gosh, that makes me so happy. We’re literally making a version of this pizza almost every week 🙂
Good evening Laura! I have to say that Margherita pizza is hands down my favorite kind of pizza. Something about those simple ingredients sing to me in a heavenly way – my eyes get kind of glazed and my heart flutters (yes this is love). I am truly excited to make this. I am not readily a make your own pizza at home person, but this is inspired and beautiful. Prompt enjoyment is necessary!
I’m so excited that you are going to try it! Please let me know what you think!!! Also, my heart totally flutters when it comes to pizza too 🙂
Made this pizza today, the best pizza and crust I have made so far! Thank you Laura.
Yay! Wonderful! Thank you.
Aargh! Feeling forced to make this pizza now, looks very delish!
Napoli pizza is the best!! Hands down. Loving your version girl!
Now I’m regretting that we didn’t go to Naples!! Next time. 🙂 I was pretty sure I made a damn good pizza for a long time…but now I have my doubts. Need to try this for our next pizza night!
Wow, seriously 100x thank you for the free pizza making school! I was wondering about the pizza stone thing- dang nab it, I will just have to suck it up and get one. The crust on this baby looks heavenly.
Gah this is gorgeous.
And now I want pizza.
Thanks Lindsay! Hope you had a great time at the White Lily Baking Retreat! Looked like a lot of fun!
That pizza looks fabulous. I keep trying diff recipes, so this is next! Thanks
Yes! I’ve gone through a ton of them too. I REALLY hope you like this! I’m a big fan of this pizza dough recipe, and for me, it was all about nailing the toppings (and amount of toppings). Let me know if you try it!!!
Used this recipe now a few times and its always a winner.
The sauce is perfect had never done with raw tomatoes before but it so much better. Thank you so much.
Do you cook it on the stone or on the stone with grease proof paper? To get it on and off thank you
Just on the stone, the peel is dusted with semolina and/or flour.
This looks fabulous and much more appetizing than our usual “doctored” frozen pizza! Going to try this on Sunday night after doing the Peach Burrata salad on Saturday night! Great recipe, Laura, and very clearly explained, which I appreciate, particularly the note about the “second” pizza!
PS definitely dragging Dad to Naples for this pizza!
This definitely looks mouth-watering, and I do take your “best” recommendation seriously! I’ve never made pizza from scratch, though that is a task I’d like to attempt someday. I get a little intimidated with recipes call for dry yeast, etc., but I need to give it a shot, anyway! 🙂
Thanks Meg! Don’t be scared by the yeast! You don’t even have to proof the yeast for this recipe, just throw it all together in a bowl (and make sure your water is warm, and not too hot). Buy some of those little packets, promise it’s easy! 🙂
This might be a silly question but first time making this….. the dough seemed to turn out just like you explained, ( I was SO excited!)
I placed it in the bowel to raise for 2 hrs.
I unexpectedly had to leave to help a friend with a problem. The dough was left to raise for 3 to 4 hours…..have I ruined this crust recipe?
It should still work! It’s not ideal, but I don’t think it will be a problem at all. Let me know how it turns out (and there are no silly questions 🙂 )
This was fantastic delicious. I’ve always had a few toppings. This was the easiest pizza I’ve made so far because of the few ingredients. I had been searching for a margherita pizza for long even though are many recipes and yours was good at first try. I had made my pizza sauce and dough and couldn’t manage fresh basil so used dried instead which was fine in flavor and gobbled up by children mostly haha. Bookmarked this page for the future. Thank you!
So glad to hear that!