Yes, you can reheat food in an air fryer; aim for 165°F (74°C) inside the leftovers for safety and crisp texture.
If your goal is hot, crisp leftovers without soggy edges, a countertop air fryer works well. The rapid air movement revives fries, pizza, fried chicken, veggies, and even roasted meats with minimal fuss. This guide shows simple settings, safe temperatures, and smart container choices so you get reliable results without drying things out.
Why Air Fryers Reheat So Well
Air fryers circulate hot air around the food, which drives off surface moisture and restores crunch. You get speed from the compact chamber and better browning than a microwave. With a light spritz of oil on dry items, you can refresh texture while keeping the inside tender.
Reheating Food In An Air Fryer Safely: Temps And Times
Safety comes first. Leftovers should reach 165°F (74°C) in the center. That target aligns with public-health guidance for reheating cooked foods. Use a probe thermometer when size or density is tricky, and check more than one spot in thick pieces.
Quick Reference: Common Leftovers
Use this table as a starting point. Basket load, piece size, and model strength change timing, so treat these as ranges. Shake or flip halfway for even heat. If the center reads below 165°F (74°C), add 1–2 minute bursts.
| Food | Temp (°F/°C) | Typical Time* |
|---|---|---|
| Pizza Slices | 320–350 / 160–175 | 3–5 min |
| French Fries / Tots | 360–380 / 180–195 | 4–6 min |
| Fried Chicken (pieces) | 350–370 / 175–188 | 6–10 min |
| Breaded Fish | 340–360 / 171–182 | 4–7 min |
| Roast Veggies | 330–360 / 166–182 | 4–8 min |
| Steak (sliced) | 300–320 / 149–160 | 3–5 min |
| Rice (in oven-safe dish) | 300–320 / 149–160 | 6–10 min |
| Pasta/Bake (covered dish) | 300–330 / 149–166 | 8–12 min |
| Burgers (cooked patties) | 330–360 / 166–182 | 4–7 min |
*Times assume a single layer in a roomy basket. Add time for thick or saucy items.
Core Safety Rules You Should Follow
Cold storage and reheating go hand in hand. Chill leftovers within two hours of cooking (one hour in hot weather), then reheat to a safe internal temperature. Those two steps reduce risk from bacteria that grow while food sits out and from uneven warming later.
For safe temperature targets, see the USDA leftovers guidance. For storage windows and handling tips across common foods, review the FDA’s Safe Food Handling page.
Step-By-Step: Reliable Reheat Method
1) Preheat Briefly
Set the unit to your target temperature and run 2–3 minutes to warm the chamber. A warm basket helps crisp edges from the first minute.
2) Arrange A Single Layer
Spread pieces so hot air can pass around each side. Crowding traps steam and softens crusts. For small snacks, a shake halfway through keeps coloring even.
3) Start Lower, Finish Hot
Dense or rich foods benefit from a gentler start to warm the center. Begin 20–30°F (10–15°C) below your end point, then raise heat for the last 1–2 minutes to refresh the crust.
4) Add A Light Spritz When Needed
Dry, breaded foods come back to life with a quick spray of oil before heating. Use neutral, high-smoke-point oil. Greasy takeout needs no extra oil.
5) Check The Center
Probe thick pieces (chicken thighs, casseroles). Target 165°F (74°C). If it falls short, return to the basket in short bursts and recheck.
Food-Specific Tips That Save Texture
Pizza
Run slices at 320–350°F (160–175°C) for 3–5 minutes. If cheese darkens before the base crisps, set a square of parchment under the slice to limit direct heat on the top while the bottom firms up.
Fries, Tots, And Wedges
Use 360–380°F (180–195°C) and shake at the halfway mark. A quick spritz of oil sharpens the crunch.
Breaded Chicken
Pieces reheat well at 350–370°F (175–188°C). Drumsticks and thighs take longer than strips. Check the thickest spot with a thermometer.
Fish
Breaded fillets handle 340–360°F (171–182°C). Unbreaded, flaky fish dries out fast; lower heat and shorter runs help.
Rice And Starches
Move rice to a shallow, oven-safe dish. Break up clumps and add a splash of water or broth, then cover the dish with a loose lid or foil to trap steam while warming. Chill cooked rice promptly after meals; toxins from certain bacteria can persist through reheating if rice sat out too long before refrigeration.
Casseroles And Bakes
Cover in a small oven-safe dish to keep the top from drying while the center warms. Remove the cover for the last minute if you want a bit of browning.
Containers And Liners That Work
Think “oven-safe.” If a dish is safe in a conventional oven, it usually fits air-fryer heat. Keep liners flat and perforated so air still moves freely. Avoid anything that blocks the basket vents.
What You Can Use
- Small metal or cast-aluminum pans
- Oven-safe glass or ceramic (thermal shock is still possible if it’s icy cold)
- Perforated parchment liners sized for your basket
- Foil packets or foil-lined pans weighed down with food (keep foil from contacting the heating element)
What To Skip
- Loose foil sheets that can lift into the element
- Paper bowls or thin plastic containers not rated for ovens
- Any liner that blocks airflow holes across the basket base
When Not To Reheat
If a dish sat at room temperature longer than two hours (one hour in hot conditions), skip reheating and discard. Prompt chilling and solid storage habits are as important as the final temperature target. Starchy foods like rice need quick cooling and refrigeration; if they lingered on the counter, don’t try to revive them.
Practical Troubleshooting
Food Is Hot But Not Crisp
Bump heat by 20–30°F (10–15°C) for the final minute. Space the food out, dry the surface with a paper towel, and use a light oil spritz.
Edges Are Dry Before The Center Warms
Drop the temperature. Cover dense items in a small dish for the first part of the run, then uncover to finish.
Coating Separates
Let breaded foods warm at a modest setting first so steam softens the crumb layer from underneath. Finish with a brief hotter burst.
Suggested Starting Points By Category
Use the chart below to dial in settings fast. Always verify the center temp on meaty or thick items.
| Category | Best Setup | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Crispy Takeout (fries, wings) | 370°F / 188°C, single layer | Shake once; brief oil spritz helps. |
| Cheesy Or Saucy (pizza, lasagna) | 320–340°F / 160–171°C, rack or tray | Parchment under cheesy items; finish hotter for 60–90 sec. |
| Protein Pieces (chicken, pork) | 340–360°F / 171–182°C, spaced out | Probe the thickest spot; rest 2–3 min. |
| Moist Grains (rice, quinoa) | 300–320°F / 149–160°C, covered dish | Add splash of liquid; stir once. |
| Roasted Veggies | 330–360°F / 166–182°C, roomy basket | Oil spritz only if dry; don’t crowd. |
| Baked Goods (rolls) | 300–320°F / 149–160°C, short run | Cover loosely at first to avoid hard crust. |
Cleaning Steps That Keep Flavors Fresh
Residue in the basket or on the element can smoke and carry stale flavors into a new batch. Cool the unit, remove the basket and tray, wash with warm soapy water, and dry fully. Wipe the interior with a damp cloth. A clean basket also improves airflow and color.
Model Differences And Smart Adjustments
Some units run hotter than the display suggests. If you see dark spots while the center still feels cool, drop the set point next time and lengthen the cycle. If you own a basket with a separate rack, lift foods on the rack to boost underside airflow. For tiny pieces, a mesh tray keeps items from flying around while still letting air move.
Safety Notes For Rice And Other Starches
Cooked rice, pasta, and similar grains need fast cooling and prompt refrigeration. If a pan sat out on the counter past the two-hour mark (one hour on a hot day), play it safe and discard. Some toxins can persist through reheating once formed, so prevention is the best defense. Store these foods in shallow containers to chill faster, then reheat only what you plan to eat and return the rest to the fridge.
Simple Game Plan For Any Leftover
- Preheat the air fryer 2–3 minutes.
- Set food in a single layer; add a light oil spritz if dry.
- Start with a moderate setting; flip or shake at the halfway mark.
- Finish hotter for browning, if needed.
- Confirm 165°F (74°C) in the center on thick items.
Quick Takeaways
- Yes—air fryers handle reheating well and bring back crunch.
- Hit 165°F (74°C) inside for safety; chill leftovers on time and reheat only what you’ll eat now.
- Use oven-safe dishes, keep airflow open, and lean on a short hot finish for texture.