Myth 1: Air Fryers Always Produce Less Acrylamide Than Other Cooking Methods

This is probably the most repeated health claim surrounding air fryers, and the evidence turns out to be more complicated than the marketing suggests. A 2024 study published in Frontiers in Nutrition found that air-fried potatoes actually contained slightly more acrylamide than deep-fried or oven-fried potatoes. That finding surprised a lot of people, and for good reason.
The highest acrylamide content was measured in potatoes cooked using the air fryer at 12.19 μg/kg, followed by deep frying at 8.94 μg/kg and oven frying at 7.43 μg/kg. Critically, the difference between the three methods was not statistically significant. So the gap is real but not dramatic. What matters more is how you handle the food before it goes in.
Acrylamide is classified as a probable carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), forming when sugars and amino acids react under high heat. Pre-soaking the potatoes resulted in less acrylamide across all three cooking methods. That one simple step, soaking starchy vegetables in water for at least fifteen minutes, consistently reduces acrylamide formation regardless of which appliance you use.
Myth 2: The Non-Stick Coating Is Completely Safe at Any Temperature

Walk into any kitchen store and you will find air fryers labeled “PFOA-free,” which sounds thoroughly reassuring. The problem is that PFOA-free does not mean the coating is entirely free of concern. Most air fryers contain PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene), a type of PFAS, in their non-stick basket coating, and at temperatures above 500°F, PTFE can degrade and release fumes.
PFOA-free does not mean PFAS-free. A product can be entirely free of PFOA and still contain PTFE, which is itself a PFAS compound. Many shoppers simply don’t know this distinction exists. PTFE is widely used in non-stick cookware and some air fryer baskets. It can be stable under normal use, but concerns increase when a non-stick surface is overheated, damaged, peeling, or used against the manufacturer’s instructions.
Under normal cooking temperatures below 400°F, stable PTFE does not appear to release harmful compounds in meaningful quantities, and this is the current scientific consensus. Scratched, damaged, or overheated baskets are where the real risk lives, not the coating itself under controlled conditions. Replacing a scratched basket is not optional. It is a genuine food safety decision.
Myth 3: Overcrowding the Basket Just Slows Things Down

A lot of home cooks treat overcrowding as a minor inconvenience, something that just adds a few minutes to cook time. The reality is more consequential than that. Overcrowding the appliance can prevent enough air circulation to properly cook the food, and when air frying a large amount of food, it may be best to do so in batches rather than all at once.
Overcrowding the basket can result in uneven cooking, affecting both texture and food safety. When food is stacked on top of itself, the circulating hot air simply cannot reach every surface evenly. Some pieces cook properly while others remain undercooked at their core, creating genuine safety concerns with proteins like chicken.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service is clear on this point. Always check that food has reached a safe minimum internal temperature with a food thermometer. No matter how convenient it feels to run one large batch, cutting corners on basket space puts the entire meal’s safety in jeopardy.
Myth 4: Air Frying Fish Is Always the Heart-Healthy Choice

Fish is widely considered one of the best proteins you can eat, rich in omega-3 fatty acids and associated with cardiovascular benefits. Air frying it seems like an obvious win. The science, however, has found a meaningful wrinkle in this assumption. Studies show that using an air fryer can increase the levels of cholesterol oxidation products (COPs) in fish, and COPs are linked to an increase in heart disease, cancer, and other medical conditions.
This study found that air frying increased the formation of cholesterol oxidation products and decreased the essential polyunsaturated fatty acids in sardine fillets. The very nutrients that make fish worth eating can degrade under the high-heat, circulating-air environment of an air fryer. That doesn’t make air-fried fish dangerous, but it does mean temperature control matters enormously.
The lipid oxidation was significantly reduced by adding fresh herbs such as parsley, chives, or a mixture of both herbs that act as natural antioxidants. Cooking fish at lower air fryer temperatures, around 160°C rather than 200°C, and adding fresh herbs to the basket before cooking are practical, research-supported strategies that protect both flavor and nutritional quality.
Myth 5: Air Fryers Eliminate the Risk of Cancer-Causing Compounds

Social media has a tendency to swing between extremes. First, air fryers were declared a cancer risk. Then, the counter-narrative emerged: air fryers eliminate carcinogens. Neither framing is accurate. Air-frying equipment is not known to cause cancer, but the process of air frying does result in the formation of certain compounds, like acrylamide, that are linked to cancer development.
A 2024 comparison study found that the concentration of Benzo[a]pyrene in beef cooked in the air fryer was significantly lower than in beef cooked in the oven. Beef cooked without oil brushing fell below the detection limit, suggesting that oil-free cooking in an air fryer represents a real advantage for reducing this particular carcinogen. So when it comes to some harmful compounds, the air fryer does genuinely help.
The European Food Safety Authority notes that prolonged exposure to acrylamide may increase cancer risk, though direct causation in humans remains unproven. The sensible takeaway is this: the air fryer is neither a health hazard nor a cancer prevention device. It is a cooking tool, and how you use it shapes the chemistry of what ends up on your plate.
Myth 6: High Heat Always Produces the Best Results

Many home cooks have embraced the logic that higher temperatures mean crispier results, and crank the air fryer to its maximum setting out of habit. This approach consistently backfires. In general, higher temperatures and longer cooking time will result in higher levels of acrylamide regardless of the cooking method.
Air fryers operating at high temperatures between 180 and 200°C trigger the formation of acrylamide in starchy foods like potatoes or bread. This is not an argument against air frying. It is an argument for reading the temperature settings more carefully. Cooking starchy foods at around 160 to 170°C, and pulling them before they turn deeply brown, meaningfully lowers the chemical risk.
Acrylamide formation is responsible for the toasted appearance, crusty consistency, and flavor of cooked foods, and burnt or darkly crusted foods contain greater amounts of acrylamide than lighter foods. The golden brown you’re aiming for is fine. The deep, dark brown that looks like extra crunch is where the problem compounds accumulate. Dialing back the heat by just a fraction is often enough to make a real difference.
Myth 7: Air Fryers Preserve All the Nutrients in Your Food

The “healthier cooking” narrative that surrounds air fryers often includes the claim that nutrients are well-preserved compared to deep frying. That is partially true, but the picture is more nuanced, especially for certain food types. Lipid oxidation during air frying is evidenced by the formation of oxidation products such as cholesterol oxides and the degradation of bioactive lipids, like omega-3 fatty acids.
The high heat also increases the risk of advanced glycation end products (AGEs) in foods and degrades certain nutrients, though this is no different from what happens when cooking with high heat in other ways, such as a conventional oven. This is a useful piece of context. Air frying is not uniquely destructive to nutrients, but it is also not uniquely protective. The appliance itself is not magical.
The literature has demonstrated that air frying may compromise food quality in several areas, including bioactive properties, formation of advanced glycation end products, aroma compounds, acrylamide, and lipid oxidation. Treating the air fryer as a universal shortcut to nutritious meals leads to disappointment. Steaming, poaching, and lower-heat roasting still outperform it for preserving heat-sensitive nutrients in vegetables and fish.
Myth 8: “PFOA-Free” Means the Coating Is Fully Non-Toxic

The label “PFOA-free” has become something of a marketing shorthand for safety, appearing prominently on packaging as if it settles the question entirely. It doesn’t. Many products labeled PFOA-free may still contain PTFE. So if your goal is to reduce exposure to both, you’ll want to look for models that are explicitly PFOA-free and PTFE-free.
Newer PFAS chemicals introduced as PFOA replacements, including GenX and PFBS, are showing accumulation patterns in early research that concern toxicologists. This is an evolving area, and the science is still catching up to the rapid substitution of chemicals in manufacturing. Caution is warranted, especially for households that cook with an air fryer multiple times per week.
Buzzwords like “PFOA-free,” “FDA-approved,” or even “Teflon-free” don’t tell the whole story, and many popular air fryers hide toxic PFAS chemicals in baskets and trays behind vague labels. Shoppers who want genuine peace of mind should look for explicit PFAS-free and PTFE-free certification from the manufacturer, not just marketing copy on the front of the box.
Myth 9: You Don’t Need a Thermometer if You Use an Air Fryer

The convenience and speed of air fryers have bred a kind of overconfidence in home kitchens. People assume that because the appliance is set to a specific temperature, the food inside has reached a safe internal temperature. That assumption has a real downside. Each air fryer will have varying cooking times due to the size and power of the appliance, but the safe internal temperature is always the same.
Like any cooking method, air frying carries a risk of food poisoning if foods are not cooked thoroughly. Some studies suggest air fryers may be less effective than deep fryers at killing bacteria in certain meats, making proper temperature and cooking time important. This is especially true for thick cuts of chicken, stuffed items, and frozen foods that carry a higher bacterial load before cooking.
For raw, stuffed, breaded chicken breast products, the USDA specifically advises not to cook these in the air fryer, and always recommends following the manufacturer’s cooking instructions. A food thermometer takes seconds to use and removes all the guesswork. For proteins especially, relying on visual cues alone in an air fryer is not a reliable food safety strategy.
Myth 10: An Air Fryer Makes Unhealthy Food Healthy

This is perhaps the most widespread misconception of all, and it has a quiet way of undermining what could otherwise be a useful appliance. Air fryers may be better for you than deep fryers, but they’re only as healthy as the food you put inside. They won’t magically remove the saturated fat from bacon or the trans fats from a bag of processed chicken wings.
With sleek marketing that promises crispy, delicious meals using little to no oil, consumers see air fryers as a shortcut to better health. In reality, the ‘healthy’ status comes almost entirely by comparison with deep frying, which is nearly always unhealthy. That comparison is a low bar. Eating air-fried ultra-processed foods every day is not a sound nutritional strategy simply because less oil was involved.
Air frying is not a substitute for overall dietary quality. An air-fried doughnut is still a doughnut. The real health gains come when air frying is paired with whole foods, smart seasoning, and balanced eating habits. The air fryer is a genuinely useful tool for people who want a crispier texture without deep-frying. Its value depends almost entirely on what goes into it.
Conclusion: Use It Well, Not Just Often

The air fryer is not a villain, and it is not a miracle. It sits somewhere in between, as a capable appliance that works best for people who understand its real limitations. The myths covered here are not fringe concerns. They are well-documented findings from peer-reviewed research published as recently as 2025 and 2026.
Soaking starchy foods before cooking, avoiding deep browning, using a thermometer on proteins, checking coating claims carefully, and matching the appliance to the right ingredients are all practical steps that take little time but produce meaningfully better outcomes.
The most honest thing that can be said about the air fryer in 2026 is that it rewards informed users. Understanding what it can and cannot do is what separates a kitchen tool from a false sense of security.


