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    Restaurant in New York City, United States

    Don Antonio

    1,105Pearl Points

    Legit Neapolitan pizza at Midtown prices.

    Don Antonio, Restaurant in New York City

    About Don Antonio

    Don Antonio brings a direct line of Neapolitan pizza technique to Midtown Manhattan, with a Michelin Plate and nearly 1,900 Google reviews averaging 4.6. The Montanara Starita, a lightly fried base finished in the wood-fired oven, is the order that sets it apart. At $$ pricing with a Wednesday-only schedule, it rewards a deliberate visit from anyone serious about pizza.

    Should You Book Don Antonio?

    Yes, with one condition: check the hours before you go. Don Antonio operates on a narrow Wednesday-only schedule at its Midtown location (11:30 am to 10 pm), which makes it a deliberate destination rather than a spontaneous stop. If you can work around that, you are getting one of the most technically grounded Neapolitan pizza operations in Manhattan, with a 2024 Michelin Plate, a Google rating of 4.6 across nearly 1,900 reviews, and a lineage that traces directly back to a Naples original running since 1901. At a $$ price range, the value case is direct.

    What Don Antonio Does Here

    The Montanara Starita is the reason to come. This is a lightly fried pizza base finished in the wood-fired oven, topped with house-made tomato sauce, smoked mozzarella, and basil. The technique is specific: frying the dough before the oven pass creates a texture that a standard baked pizza cannot replicate. The base stays airy inside while the exterior develops a char-edged crust. It is a method associated with the Starita family in Naples, and the version served here carries that provenance directly.

    The wood-fired oven is central to everything on the menu. Over 30 Neapolitan pizza varieties are on offer, including pizza fritta, a fried format less common on Midtown menus. For those willing to move beyond the Montanara, the salsiccia e friarielli pizza with fennel sausage and broccoli rabe is a frequently cited second order. The frittatine, where chopped spaghetti and ham are combined with Buffalo mozzarella, breaded, and fried, functions as a serious starter rather than a routine appetiser.

    Giorgia Caporuscio, who leads the kitchen, learned the craft from her father Roberto Caporuscio, who himself trained in Naples. That direct transmission of technique matters here in a way it does not at most pizza operations in New York. The result is a kitchen that executes Neapolitan pizza the way it is made at the source, not an adaptation for local tastes. The wine list is also worth attention, which is less common at this price tier.

    For the explorer who wants to understand what separates authentic Neapolitan pizza from the broader New York pizza category, Don Antonio is the clearest reference point in Midtown. The Opinionated About Dining ranking climbed from #171 in 2024 to #330 in the 2025 North America Cheap Eats list, reflecting continued recognition in a competitive field. The Michelin Plate designation confirms a baseline of consistent quality.

    Compared to other serious pizza addresses in New York, the distinction at Don Antonio is the dual-technique approach: fried and wood-fired in the same dish. Angelo's Coal Oven Pizza and Leading Pizza both have strong followings, but neither works with the Montanara format. Artichoke Basille's is a useful lower-stakes alternative if you want fried pizza without the Neapolitan formality, while Emmy Squared is the right call if Detroit-style is on the table. Denino's Pizzeria and Tavern covers the bar-and-pizza format if that is more useful for your group. For a wider view of what Manhattan has to offer across all categories, see our full New York City restaurants guide.

    If you are travelling and want to benchmark Don Antonio against serious pizza operations in other cities, Ken's Artisan Pizza in Portland and 11th Street Pizza in Miami are both worth knowing. For higher-end dining on the same trip, Le Bernardin, Eleven Madison Park, and Per Se are in a completely different price tier but cover the range of what Manhattan can do at the leading end. Beyond New York, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans round out the national fine dining picture for anyone planning a broader trip. For hotels, bars, and other options in the city, see our New York City hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Google: 4.6 / 5 (1,878 reviews)
    • Michelin: Plate 2024
    • Opinionated About Dining: Cheap Eats North America #330 (2025); previously #171 (2024)

    Know Before You Go

    Address309 W 50th St, New York, NY 10019Open DaysWednesday only (11:30 am to 10 pm). Closed Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.Price Range$$ (budget-friendly for Midtown)Booking DifficultyEasy. Walk-ins are feasible given the limited operating schedule, but Wednesday slots can fill during peak hours.Leading Time to VisitEarly Wednesday evening for the most relaxed experienceWhat to Order FirstMontanara Starita. After that, frittatine as a starter and salsiccia e friarielli pizza as a follow-up.Group SuitabilityWorks for small groups; no specific private dining data availableDress CodeCasual. No dress requirement at this price tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Don Antonio?

    Don Antonio is a pizzeria, not a tasting-menu format — so the real question is whether the pizza justifies the trip. At $$ per head with a Michelin Plate and an OAD Cheap Eats ranking (ranked #171 in North America in 2024, #330 in 2025), it does. Start with the Montanara Starita and the frittatine; if you want a benchmark margherita, this kitchen has that covered too. For a formal tasting-menu experience in NYC, look at Atomix or Per Se instead.

    What should I wear to Don Antonio?

    This is a casual Midtown pizzeria priced at $$, so come as you are — jeans and a jacket are more than enough. No dress code is documented for this venue. If you are heading to a show at nearby Broadway venues, you will fit right in dressed up or down.

    Can Don Antonio accommodate groups?

    Nothing in the available venue data specifies a private dining room or group booking policy, so check the venue's official channels if you are planning a large party. As a pizzeria operating on a Wednesday-only schedule at this Midtown address, availability for bigger groups will be limited — plan ahead and call early in the week.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Don Antonio?

    Don Antonio opens at 11:30 am on Wednesdays, making it one of the few options in the category for a proper Neapolitan lunch in Midtown. The kitchen operates the same menu across service, so the choice comes down to pace: lunch is likely quieter, dinner busier given the Midtown foot traffic from nearby theatres. Either way, the current hours are Wednesday only, so your options are limited to that window.

    What should a first-timer know about Don Antonio?

    Check the hours first: as of the latest data, Don Antonio operates Wednesday only (11:30 am to 10 pm) at 309 W 50th St, Midtown Manhattan. The Montanara Starita — a lightly fried base finished in the wood-fired oven with house-made tomato sauce, smoked mozzarella, and basil — is the dish that defines this kitchen, and it is the reason Giorgia Caporuscio's pizzeria earned a Michelin Plate and two consecutive OAD Cheap Eats North America rankings. At $$, this is one of the more affordable ways to eat at a credentialed Neapolitan pizza counter in Manhattan.

    Location

    Don Antonio's Pizza, 309 W 50th St, New York, NY 10019

    New York City, United States

    Compare Don Antonio

    Price vs. Value: Don Antonio
    VenuePriceBooking Difficulty
    Don Antonio$$Easy
    Le Bernardin$$$$Unknown
    Atomix$$$$Unknown
    Eleven Madison Park$$$$Unknown
    Masa$$$$Unknown
    Per Se$$$$Unknown

    How Don Antonio stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    Don Antonio and the $$$$ venues most visible on New York's dining radar are solving completely different problems. Le Bernardin, Eleven Madison Park, Per Se, Atomix, and Masa are all operating in the $$$$ tier with tasting menus, reservation difficulty, and service infrastructure to match. Don Antonio sits at $$, operates one day a week, and is recognised by Michelin for food quality alone. The comparison matters because it clarifies the booking decision: if you want a full-evening experience with wine pairings and a set progression, go to one of those rooms. If you want technically authoritative Neapolitan pizza at a fraction of the cost with no booking friction, Don Antonio is the answer.

    Within the New York pizza category specifically, Don Antonio's advantage is the dual-technique format. The Montanara Starita requires both frying and wood-firing in sequence, which most pizza operations in the city do not attempt. Angelo's Coal Oven Pizza and Best Pizza are both credible addresses but work in different traditions. For pure Neapolitan provenance and technique depth, Don Antonio has the clearest credentials in Midtown.

    The practical trade-off is the schedule. One operating day per week is a genuine constraint, and if Wednesday does not work, the decision is made for you. In that case, Artichoke Basille's covers the fried pizza format with broader availability, and Emmy Squared is worth considering if the Detroit-style category is acceptable. But for the specific combination of Neapolitan lineage, Michelin recognition, and $$ pricing in Manhattan, nothing in the current comparison set matches Don Antonio on a Wednesday.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    11:30 am–10 pm
    Thursday
    Closed
    Friday
    Closed
    Saturday
    Closed
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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