Great homemade pizza is less about technique and more about having the right setup. The gap between a soggy home oven pizza and a genuinely restaurant-quality pie comes down to three things: heat, flour quality, and the right baking surface. These five picks each solve a specific part of that equation - together they cover everything you need to build your own custom pizza operation at home.
Whether you’re after a wood-fired Neapolitan or a crispy New York slice, here’s what’s worth investing in for 2026.
| Product | Best For | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|
| Ooni Karu 12G Pizza Oven | Authentic high-heat pizza | Reaches 950°F, multi-fuel |
| Solo Stove Pi Pizza Oven | Gas convenience + heat | Propane-powered, 900°F max |
| King Arthur ‘00’ Pizza Flour Kit | Dough quality | Professional-grade ‘00’ flour + recipe guide |
| Antimo Caputo Pizzeria Flour | Authentic Italian flour | Naples-certified ‘00’ flour |
| Cuisinart CPS-445 Pizza Stone Kit | Home oven upgrade | 13-inch stone + peel + rack kit |
Ooni Karu 12G Pizza Oven
The Ooni Karu 12G is the benchmark for outdoor pizza ovens at this price point. It reaches 950°F in about 15 minutes and accepts wood, charcoal, or a gas burner attachment (sold separately), giving you full control over heat source and flavor profile. The 12-inch baking stone is cordierite-grade, holds heat consistently, and produces a fully cooked Neapolitan pie in under 90 seconds. The hinged door and viewing window are genuine quality-of-life improvements over the previous generation.
Pros: Multi-fuel flexibility, genuine Neapolitan temperatures, hinged door with viewing window Cons: Gas burner attachment sold separately, 12-inch max pizza size, requires outdoor or well-ventilated space
Solo Stove Pi Pizza Oven
The Solo Stove Pi takes a gas-first approach - instant ignition, precise temperature control via a dial, and no charcoal or wood management required. It reaches 900°F and bakes a 12-inch pie in under 2 minutes, with surprisingly even heat distribution for a propane-powered outdoor oven. The Pi is a strong choice for people who want high-heat pizza results without the fuel management learning curve of a wood-fired setup.
Pros: Gas convenience, quick ignition and temperature control, 900°F capability Cons: Propane only (no wood option), slightly less char character than wood-fired, tank not included
King Arthur ‘00’ Pizza Flour Kit
King Arthur’s pizza flour kit pairs their American-milled ‘00’ style flour with a comprehensive recipe guide covering Neapolitan, New York, Detroit, and pan pizza doughs. The flour is finely milled with a protein content calibrated for extensible, tear-resistant dough - the kind that stretches smoothly without snapping back. This is the easiest entry point for home bakers who want to upgrade from all-purpose flour without having to import from Italy.
Pros: American-milled and widely available, recipe guide included, works in standard home ovens Cons: Not identical to Italian ‘00’ in protein structure, kit pricing higher than buying flour alone
Antimo Caputo Pizzeria Flour
Caputo Pizzeria flour is what many Naples-trained pizzaiolos reach for when they want the reference standard. It’s milled in Naples to Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana specifications, with a protein level (12.5%) and grind fineness specifically designed for high-temperature wood-fired baking. At home, it performs best when paired with an outdoor pizza oven reaching 700°F or above - though it makes excellent results in a standard oven with a preheated steel as well.
Pros: Naples-certified reference flour, ideal for high-temperature ovens, exceptional gluten development Cons: Requires ordering online (less available in stores), imported pricing adds up for frequent bakers
Cuisinart CPS-445 Pizza Stone Kit
For anyone who isn’t ready to invest in a dedicated outdoor pizza oven, the Cuisinart CPS-445 kit is the best home oven upgrade available. The 13-inch cordierite stone absorbs and radiates heat more evenly than a bare oven rack, producing a significantly crispier bottom crust. The kit includes a stainless peel with a fold-flat handle for easy launch and retrieval, plus a grilling rack that doubles the stone’s usefulness for bread and other baked goods.
Pros: Complete kit (stone + peel + rack), works in any home oven, significant crust quality improvement Cons: Cordierite stone takes 45 minutes to fully preheat, 13-inch maximum pizza size, not for high-heat outdoor ovens
What to Look For
Temperature ceiling is the most important spec. If an oven can’t reach at least 700°F, it cannot produce a true Neapolitan crust regardless of other features. Home ovens cap at 500-550°F; dedicated pizza ovens start at 700°F and go up.
Fuel type matches your lifestyle. Wood and charcoal produce flavor compounds that gas cannot replicate, but they require more management, longer heat-up time, and a consistent fuel supply. Gas is simpler and more consistent for busy weeknight use.
Flour protein content and grind match your style. High-protein (12-14%), fine-milled flour for Neapolitan and thin-crust. Lower protein (10-12%) bread flour for pan pizza and focaccia. Using the wrong flour for the style is the most common home pizza mistake.
Stone thickness affects heat retention. Thicker cordierite stones (3/4-inch or more) hold heat through multiple pizzas in a row. Thinner stones cool down between pies and produce inconsistent results in outdoor ovens.
Peel material affects launch reliability. Perforated aluminum peels slide pizza off more easily than wood. Wooden peels are better for building and resting the dough before launch. Having one of each is ideal.
Final Thoughts
The Ooni Karu 12G is the best single investment if you’re serious about high-heat pizza at home. The Solo Stove Pi is the right call for gas convenience without sacrificing temperature. Caputo flour is the reference standard for authentic dough quality. King Arthur is the accessible domestic alternative. And the Cuisinart stone kit is the essential upgrade if you’re staying with your home oven. Start with the flour and stone, then add an outdoor oven when you’re ready to go further.
Frequently asked questions
What temperature do you need to make authentic Neapolitan pizza at home?+
Authentic Neapolitan pizza requires 850-900°F (450-480°C) to cook in 60-90 seconds and achieve the characteristic leopard-spotted char. Most home ovens max out at 500-550°F, which produces acceptable pizza but not true Neapolitan. Dedicated pizza ovens like the Ooni Karu 12G and Solo Stove Pi reach the required temperatures and are essential if that style is your goal.
What is '00' flour and why does it matter for pizza?+
'00' refers to the flour's grind fineness - it's milled to a much finer texture than all-purpose or bread flour. This produces a smoother, more extensible dough that stretches without tearing and develops a light, airy crust with good chew. King Arthur and Caputo '00' flours are the standard references. Regular all-purpose flour will work but gives a denser, less elastic result.
Is a pizza stone or a pizza steel better for home ovens?+
Pizza steel conducts heat faster and more evenly than stone, producing a crispier bottom crust in a standard home oven. Stone is cheaper and more forgiving of thermal shock but takes longer to preheat. For home ovens below 550°F, steel generally outperforms stone for crispness. For dedicated outdoor pizza ovens that reach 700°F+, a cordierite stone is more appropriate and less expensive.