Bread Machine Pizza Dough: The Hands-Off Recipe That Actually Works
Bread Machine Pizza Dough:
The Hands-Off Recipe That Actually Works
Press start, walk away, come back to perfect dough. Here’s everything your bread machine manual didn’t tell you.
You bought a bread maker. It lived on the counter for two months, made one loaf, then got quietly exiled to the back of a cabinet. I get it. But here’s the thing you might have missed — that machine is quietly one of the best tools for homemade pizza in your entire kitchen. Better than hand-kneading. Arguably better than a stand mixer. Because it doesn’t just mix the dough, it ferments it at a controlled temperature while you do literally anything else.
This bread machine pizza dough recipe is genuinely foolproof once you know two things: ingredient order matters, and the DOUGH cycle (not the bread cycle — more on that in a minute) is your setting. Get those right, and you’ll have stretchy, flavorful homemade pizza dough ready for the oven with about five minutes of actual work. That’s a proper pizza night sorted, with almost zero effort. Let me show you exactly how.
⚡ Key Takeaways
- Always use the DOUGH cycle, never the bread cycle — the machine will try to bake your pizza dough otherwise
- Liquids go in first, flour on top, yeast last — layer order prevents premature activation
- Bread flour gives you a chewier, more pizzeria-style crust; all-purpose works but produces a softer result
- Use instant yeast (also sold as bread machine yeast) — it’s more forgiving than active dry and is what this recipe is built around
- Water temperature should sit between 105–110°F — too hot kills yeast, too cold and it won’t activate
- Let the dough rest 10–15 minutes on the counter before shaping — it relaxes the gluten and stretches much easier
- Dough freezes brilliantly for up to 3 months; thaw overnight in the fridge
The Recipe
This bread machine pizza dough recipe makes enough for two 12–14 inch pizzas — thin crust pizza or thick, it handles both. If you only need one pizza, freeze the second dough ball right after the cycle finishes. It holds perfectly for up to 3 months.
The ingredient list is deliberately unfussy. Good bread flour, water at the right temperature, a splash of olive oil for tenderness, and instant yeast. That’s it. According to King Arthur Baking’s bread machine guidance, ingredient order is one of the most common places people go wrong — and they’re right. Get liquids in first so the yeast never touches salt before mixing begins.
Bread Machine Pizza Dough
Elastic, chewy, hands-off. Two pizzas’ worth of proper homemade dough — press start and walk away.
- Warm water (105–110°F) 180 ml
- Olive oil 1½ tbsp
- Sugar 1 tsp
- Salt 1 tsp
- Bread flour 300 g ~2½ cups
- Instant yeast (bread machine yeast) 1¼ tsp
- Add warm water and olive oil to the bread machine pan first. Then add sugar and salt on top of the liquid.
- Spoon the bread flour directly on top of the liquid, covering it completely. This layer of flour acts as a barrier.
- Make a small well in the centre of the flour and add the yeast. It should not touch the liquid or the salt directly at this stage.
- Insert the pan into the machine, select the DOUGH cycle, and press start. Walk away — the machine handles everything from here.
- When the cycle finishes (around 90 minutes on most machines), the dough should have roughly doubled in size. If it hasn’t, leave it in the pan with the lid closed for an extra 15–20 minutes.
- Remove the dough onto a lightly floured surface. Divide into two equal portions. Cover both with a clean tea towel and let rest for 10–15 minutes before shaping. This is not optional — skip it and the dough will fight you like a toddler at bedtime.
- Stretch by hand (or use a rolling pin for a thinner pizza crust). Top and bake at 475–500°F (245–260°C) on a preheated stone or steel for 8–12 minutes. A pizza pan or baking sheet works too — just add a few extra minutes at 425°F and expect a slightly softer base.
Which Flour Should You Use?
This is where most bread machine pizza dough recipes let you down. They say “any flour works” and leave it there. That’s technically true, but your results will vary a lot depending on what you put in. Here’s the breakdown.
| Flour Type | Protein % | Result | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bread flour★ Recommended | 12–13% | Chewy, structured, great crust | NY-style, everyday pizza |
| All-purpose flour | 10–12% | Softer, slightly less chew | If that’s all you have — works fine |
| 00 flour | 11–12% | Silky, extensible | Neapolitan-style; needs higher bake temp |
| Whole wheat (blend) | 13–14% | Nutty, denser pizza crust | Use 25% whole wheat flour + 75% bread flour for best results |
For a bread maker specifically, bread flour is the strongest choice. The higher protein content builds the gluten structure that makes dough elastic and easy to stretch. Serious Eats’ deep dive on pizza dough chemistry explains this well — more gluten development equals a pizza crust that puffs, chars, and chews like the real thing. The machine’s kneading cycle really helps develop that gluten, so give it the right flour to work with.
Also worth noting: if you want to experiment with bread flour vs 00 flour for pizza, the difference really comes down to your oven temperature. 00 flour shines at 800°F+ in a pizza oven; at home oven temperatures, bread flour typically wins on crust texture. And while you’re building out your pizza night setup, don’t overlook the sauce — a good homemade pizza sauce makes a bigger difference than most people expect.
“The bread machine doesn’t just mix the dough — it ferments it at a controlled temperature. That’s the bit most people don’t realize, and it’s exactly why the dough tastes better than anything you’d rush by hand.”— Zach Miller, That Pizza Kitchen
Machine Settings Explained
Different machines label things differently, but the core settings you need to understand are the same across all of them. The single most important rule: never use the Basic or White Bread cycle for homemade pizza dough. That cycle will bake the dough inside the bread pan. You’ll end up with a misshapen loaf, not pizza dough. Voice of experience.
DOUGH Cycle
This is your setting. The DOUGH cycle handles kneading and the first rise, then stops — it doesn’t bake. On most machines, it runs for 1 hour 20 minutes to 1 hour 45 minutes. Some machines call it DOUGH/PASTA or MANUAL. If you’re not sure, check your manual for the cycle that skips the bake phase entirely.
Loaf Size Setting
If your machine asks for a loaf size, select 1.5 lb for this recipe (300g flour batch). Going up to 2 lb is fine if you want a larger batch — just scale the ingredients proportionally and add an extra ¼ tsp of yeast.
Crust Setting
On the DOUGH cycle, this setting is usually greyed out or ignored completely. Don’t worry about it.
The Full Timeline: Start to First Bite
Add ingredients in order (liquid → salt/sugar → flour → yeast). Select DOUGH cycle. Press start. Done.
Machine mixes then kneads. After ~5 minutes, peek in: dough should form a smooth ball that sticks slightly to the sides then pulls away cleanly. If too wet (sticks persistently), add 1 tbsp flour. Too dry (shaggy)? Add 1 tsp water.
Machine keeps the dough warm while it proofs. Leave it alone. The dough should roughly double in size.
Machine beeps. Remove dough, divide into 2 balls, cover and rest on a floured surface for 10–15 minutes.
Stretch by hand or roll out. Add sauce, cheese, toppings. Bake immediately or refrigerate for up to 2 days for even better flavour.
Your pizza is on the table. Total active time? About 10 minutes.
Pro Tips for a Better Crust
Water Temperature
105–110°F is the sweet spot. Too hot and you kill the yeast. Too cold and nothing happens. Use an instant-read thermometer — it’s worth it.
Don’t Skip the Oil
Olive oil prevents the crust from drying out at home oven temps and adds tenderness. 1–1.5 tbsp per batch is all you need.
Cold Ferment Bonus
After the cycle, pop dough balls in the fridge for 24–72 hours. The slow ferment develops complex flavour that you just can’t rush.
Stretch by Hand
Skip the rolling pin if you can. Hand stretching preserves the air pockets built up during proofing. Flat rolling pin = denser crust.
Pizza Pan vs Stone
A pizza stone or steel gives you the crispiest base. A pizza pan is more forgiving and great for beginners — use one if you’re not ready to deal with a peel yet.
Preheat Properly
Preheat your stone or steel for at least 45 minutes at max temp. A properly preheated oven makes a bigger difference than any ingredient tweak.
Cornmeal on the Peel
Dust your peel or parchment with cornmeal before laying the dough. It acts like tiny ball bearings — dough slides right off into the oven.
One thing that doesn’t get mentioned enough: the rest period after the bread machine finishes is non-negotiable. If you skip it and try to stretch the pizza crust immediately, the gluten will be tight as a drum and the dough will spring back at you. Ten minutes on the counter fixes all of that. As King Arthur Baking explains in their shaping guide, gluten relaxes quickly at room temperature — giving you a dough that stretches without a fight.
For more on getting the most out of your home oven with this homemade pizza dough, see our guide to best oven settings for pizza at home and how a pizza stone vs baking steel affects your crust. Spoiler: the pizza stone wins on crunch, the steel wins on speed.
🔧 Troubleshooting: When the Dough Goes Wrong
The dough didn’t rise at all
Almost always a yeast problem. Either the yeast was past its expiry date, the water was too hot (above 115°F kills yeast), or the salt touched the yeast directly before mixing. Try a fresh packet of yeast, double-check water temp, and follow the layering order exactly.
The dough is sticky and won’t hold its shape
Too much moisture. During the kneading phase (the first 5–10 minutes), peek in and add 1 tablespoon of flour at a time until the ball pulls cleanly away from the sides. Humidity affects flour absorption — on humid days you may need slightly less water.
The dough feels dry and tears when stretching
Either over-floured or not rested long enough. Let it sit covered for an extra 10 minutes. If it’s still tearing, the dough may be under-proofed — leave it covered on the counter for 20–30 minutes before trying again.
The machine stopped mid-cycle / power cut
As long as the dough had at least 20 minutes of kneading, you can often rescue it. Remove the dough, shape it into a ball, cover it, and let it rise at room temperature until doubled. It won’t be identical but it’ll be usable.
The crust is doughy in the middle even after baking
This is a baking problem, not a dough problem. Check our guide on why pizza is undercooked in the middle — the fix is nearly always a hotter oven and a longer preheat for your stone or steel.
Storing & Freezing Your Dough
One of the best things about bread machine recipes like this one is how well the dough stores. Make a double batch on Sunday, use one dough ball immediately for pizza night, and you’ve got homemade pizza covered for the rest of the week with zero extra effort.
Refrigerating (Up to 3 Days)
Once the dough cycle finishes, divide the dough into portions, coat each dough ball lightly with olive oil, and place in a container at least double the size of the ball. The dough will continue to ferment slowly in the fridge, which actually improves flavour significantly. Use within 3 days for best results. When you’re ready to bake, pull it out and let it come to room temperature for 30–45 minutes before stretching.
Freezing (Up to 3 Months)
Freeze dough balls immediately after the bread machine cycle finishes — before any cold ferment. Coat each portion in olive oil, place in a zip-lock bag with the air pressed out, and freeze. To use: thaw overnight in the fridge, then bring to room temperature before shaping. For everything you need on freezing pizza dough the right way, we’ve got a full guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to Level Up Your Dough?
Now that the machine’s doing all the hard work, it’s time to get serious about what comes next — the bake.
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