Skip to Main Content
Traditional Neapolitan Pizza

Google: 4.3 · 925 reviews

← Collection
Naples, Italy

La Notizia

Price≈$20
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceCasual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
50 Top Pizza

Opened in 1994 by third-generation pizzaiolo Enzo Coccia, La Notizia sits at the point where Neapolitan tradition and considered innovation meet. The menu moves between classical and gourmet registers, making it a reference address for understanding how Naples thinks about its defining dish. Located on Via Michelangelo da Caravaggio in the Fuorigrotta neighbourhood, it draws both serious pizza enthusiasts and the city's own residents.

Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.

La Notizia restaurant in Naples, Italy
About

Where Naples Argues With Itself, on a Pizza

Via Michelangelo da Caravaggio is not the street tourists tend to photograph. The Fuorigrotta district sits west of the historic centre, past Mergellina, closer to the Campi Flegrei than to the Duomo. Arriving here on foot, you pass apartment blocks, a tabacchi, a fruit vendor with a hand-lettered sign. Nothing about the approach signals pilgrimage site. And yet the Neapolitan pizza community — which treats the subject with the kind of seriousness other cities reserve for opera — has been making this trip since 1994.

La Notizia opened that year under Enzo Coccia, a third-generation pizzaiolo whose family lineage runs back through two earlier generations of the craft. That credential matters in Naples not as biography but as shorthand for a particular kind of institutional knowledge: the timing instincts, the feel for hydration and fermentation, the understanding of what changes when a wood-fired oven runs hotter than usual on a July afternoon. Third-generation practitioners in any artisan tradition carry a weight of tacit knowledge that no amount of formal training replicates, and in Naples that weight is visible in what arrives at the table.

A Menu That Argues a Position

The structure of La Notizia's menu is itself an editorial statement about where Neapolitan pizza sits in the early twenty-first century. Rather than committing entirely to the classical canon or to the gourmet-pizza movement that has gathered pace since the 2010s, the menu runs both tracks in parallel. Alongside the marinara and margherita , whose credentials here are impeccable in the sense that they are made with the ingredients and technique those names imply , sit compositions that use seasonal toppings, less common cheeses, and combinations that would have seemed eccentric to a previous generation of Neapolitan pizzaioli.

This dual architecture is not unique to La Notizia, but very few addresses in Campania handle the tension as coherently. The risk in running a gourmet tier alongside a classical one is that the classical pizzas start to feel like entry-level options, the thing you order if you don't know better. At addresses where the balance tips wrong, that's exactly what happens. Here, the classical register holds its own weight because the technique is consistent across both sections. A marinara is not a baseline. It is, arguably, the harder pizza to execute well, since there is nowhere to hide.

For those mapping this approach against the broader Naples scene, the contrast with 50 Kalò di Ciro Salvo is instructive. Ciro Salvo's project foregrounds dough science and hydration research almost programmatically, and the menu is built to showcase that. La Notizia's dual-register approach reflects a different intellectual position: that tradition and innovation are not a spectrum on which you choose your point, but two active practices that need to remain in conversation. Diego Vitagliano Pizzeria takes a third route again, leaning further into contemporary formats. Palazzo Petrucci Pizzeria and Bro. Ciro e Antonio Tutino Pizzeria each occupy their own positions in this spread. Ciro Cascella 3.0 represents a different lineage entirely. The point is that Naples is not one pizza argument , it is several, happening simultaneously, and La Notizia's menu structure is one of the more articulate contributions to the debate.

Tradition as a Technical Standard

The language around Neapolitan pizza tradition can become nostalgic to the point of obscuring what tradition actually demands. The Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana's technical specifications , dough fermentation times, oven temperatures above 430°C, specific flour grades, the 35-centimetre diameter ceiling , exist precisely because the tradition is exacting, not sentimental. What Enzo Coccia's three-generation background provides is not heritage branding but accumulated calibration: the ability to read a dough's readiness without a timer, to know when the oven floor needs a few minutes without a thermometer.

That calibration shows most clearly in the crust. In Neapolitan pizza, the cornicione , the rim , is the primary technical indicator. Charring that is carbon-bitter rather than lightly smoky, a crust that collapses rather than holds its structure, a centre that pools liquid rather than holding the topping: these are the failure modes. At the level La Notizia occupies in the Campanian hierarchy, those failures are not acceptable, and they do not occur. What that leaves is a pizza where the structure and the toppings are in proper proportion, which turns out to be rarer than it sounds even in Naples.

Planning a Visit

La Notizia is on Via Michelangelo da Caravaggio, 94, in the Fuorigrotta neighbourhood , accessible by metro from the city centre, roughly 20 to 25 minutes from Piazza Garibaldi depending on your starting point. Given its standing in the Campanian pizza hierarchy and the size constraints typical of serious pizzerias in Naples, visiting without a reservation is a risk not worth taking, particularly on weekend evenings. Contacting the venue directly to confirm current booking procedures and opening hours before you travel is the sensible approach, since both can shift seasonally. The Fuorigrotta location means it pairs naturally with an afternoon at the seafront at Posillipo or a visit to the Phlegraean Fields , the pizzeria is not a detour from something else; it is a destination that shapes the itinerary around it.

For a fuller picture of dining in the city, see our full Napoli restaurants guide, which maps addresses across neighbourhoods and price tiers. Those building a longer Naples trip should also consult our full Napoli hotels guide, our full Napoli bars guide, our full Napoli wineries guide, and our full Napoli experiences guide.

For context on where serious Italian dining sits internationally, the fine-dining tier from Osteria Francescana in Modena to Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, Enrico Bartolini in Milan, Le Calandre in Rubano, Dal Pescatore in Runate, and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico illustrates the breadth of Italian culinary ambition. Internationally, the contrast with technically rigorous addresses like Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City underlines how different the Neapolitan model is: here, the craft is embedded in a format that has been stable for over a century, and the challenge is to honour that stability while remaining intellectually alive to what it can still become.

Signature Dishes
pizza a portafogliompustarellapizza del fornaio
Frequently asked questions

Reputation First

A quick peer list to put this venue’s basics in context.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Classic
  • Cozy
  • Iconic
Best For
  • Family
  • Casual Hangout
  • Date Night
Experience
  • Historic Building
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleCasual
Meal PacingStandard

Cozy and welcoming with a traditional Neapolitan feel, featuring nice paintings and a tidy, homey atmosphere.

Signature Dishes
pizza a portafogliompustarellapizza del fornaio