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[Multiple cities] Where can I find the best pizza in Stockholm right now?

The question covers several cities or compares them. Use when the thread discusses two or more cities.

EIA_Ask_SE

Administrator
Let’s put together a current, no-nonsense pizza guide for Stockholm — and Sweden more broadly. People search best pizza in Stockholm, neapolitan pizza Stockholm, cheap pizza Stockholm, or late night pizza, but pizza scenes change fast and reviews don’t always tell the full story.

I’d love this to be one place where locals and visitors can figure out where the pizza is actually good right now — whether that’s a proper Neapolitan pie, a casual slice, or a late-night rescue.

If you’ve eaten pizza in Stockholm or elsewhere in Sweden recently, please share:
  • Your top 1–3 pizzerias and the exact pizza you’d order
    (Neapolitan vs Roman vs NY-style, classic Margherita test, best white pizza, etc.)
  • Is it a true pizzeria or more of an Italian restaurant with pizza on the menu?
  • Value check: worth the price, or only good if you’re already nearby?
  • Best cheap pizza spots that still deliver on flavor
  • Any reliable late-night pizza places (what time is realistic?)
  • Any spots that are heavily hyped but felt overrated in practice

👉 If someone had just one pizza meal in Stockholm, where should they go — and which pizza should they order?
 
Solution
A helpful reply to this pizza thread is to post a mini plan + 2–3 clear picks (with an exact order). Here’s a simple structure that usually works well:

Step 1: Choose your pizza style first​

  • Neapolitan (soft center, puffy crust): best if you like simple toppings and a fast bake.
  • Crispy / thin-base: better if you want crunch and lighter slices.
  • “Swedish pizzeria” style: often bigger, heavier, and fun toppings (great for a casual night).

Step 2: Use a “test order” so people can compare​

When you recommend a place, include one baseline pizza so others can judge fairly:
  • Margherita (the easiest quality test)
  • Or a white pizza if that’s their specialty...
A helpful reply to this pizza thread is to post a mini plan + 2–3 clear picks (with an exact order). Here’s a simple structure that usually works well:

Step 1: Choose your pizza style first​

  • Neapolitan (soft center, puffy crust): best if you like simple toppings and a fast bake.
  • Crispy / thin-base: better if you want crunch and lighter slices.
  • “Swedish pizzeria” style: often bigger, heavier, and fun toppings (great for a casual night).

Step 2: Use a “test order” so people can compare​

When you recommend a place, include one baseline pizza so others can judge fairly:
  • Margherita (the easiest quality test)
  • Or a white pizza if that’s their specialty
    Then add your personal favorite (for example: spicy salami, nduja, mushroom, etc.).
If you need a starting list, Visit Stockholm has a curated guide to pizza places in the city, which is useful to cross-check names and areas.

Step 3: Value + late-night tips​

  • For cheap pizza, look for weekday deals and smaller local pizzerias (often better value than trendy spots).
  • For late-night pizza, opening hours can change by day/season, so it’s smart to check the restaurant’s own page and plan your ride home. SL’s official site is the safest place to check night transport and any service changes.

My “one pizza meal in Stockholm” rule​

If I only get one meal, I’d pick a place known for Neapolitan, order a Margherita + one house favorite, and judge it on crust + tomato + balance (not crazy toppings).

Official sources (useful for planning):
 
Solution
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