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Your air fryer makes consistently perfect hard-boiled eggs in batches with no pot, no boiling water and no frustrating peeling required.

Hard-boiled eggs should be one of the simplest things you make in a kitchen. In practice, the stovetop method turns a five-ingredient breakfast into a multi-step production involving boiling water, careful timing, an ice bath and — inevitably — a shell that takes half the white with it on the way off. The good news is that there’s a better way to cook up those eggs, and it’s been sitting on your counter this whole time. The air fryer makes hard-boiled eggs that are just as good, consistently easier to peel and completely hands-off from start to finish.
The rapid air cooks them with perfect consistency, freeing you up to do literally anything else while they’re in the air fryer basket, which makes changing methods a no-brainer. You get eggs that are easy to peel and cooked exactly how you want them, without any of the babysitting. It’s time to retire the pot and let the machine take over.
If you’ve ever owned a countertop egg cooker as a singular appliance, then listen up: Your air fryer is already proving its worth by reheating leftovers, roasting and baking with abandon and turning out stellar grilled cheese sandwiches. Let it carry this egg-boiling burden for you, too.
Why you should make hard-boiled eggs in the air fryer
Avoid cooking a full basket of eggs until you’ve perfected the timing and temperature.
Pamela Vachon/CNETA better question is, why shouldn’t you make hard-boiled (or soft-boiled, or any cooked-in-shell) eggs in the air fryer? It’s not like boiling water is adding any flavor, as it would with salted pasta water. Like most tasks you might put the air fryer to, cooking eggs this way yields more consistent results with fewer variables, in less time and with less cleanup involved. I basically gave it a quick wipe out with a paper towel once I was finished with the egg cooking experiment.
The case is basically closed, but if you need more reasons, your eggs have a decreased risk of cracking during cooking, which can be caused by being jostled around during a rolling boil. Even the smallest air fryers can manage at least a half-dozen eggs or more. Plus, it’s another tick on the list of reasons to leave the air fryer out on the counter, letting it handle as many kitchen tasks as possible for you.
Read more: This Is How Long Eggs Last in the Fridge and How to Tell When They’ve Spoiled
Best practices for making boiled eggs in the air fryer
High heat in the air fryer produces uneven cooking and makes them harder to peel.
Pamela Vachon/CNETFrom yolks between runny to jammy to hard-cooked, the air fryer can handle it. No waiting for water to boil, no forgetting to set a timer at the key moment. There’s a lot of internet voodoo about dos and don’ts when it comes to boiled eggs in the air fryer, but in my experience, you can disregard most of it. You don’t need to bring eggs to room temperature first. You don’t need a layer of foil as a nest for your eggs. You don’t really even need to preheat the air fryer. (Who started the rumor that air fryers need to preheat anyway? They’re not ovens.)
Here’s what you should do for the best air fryer boiled eggs
- Test with a single egg first to determine the best temperature and timing for your air fryer model. (While I wholeheartedly stand by this method, I wouldn’t go in with a dozen all at once without having tried it out first.)
- Use a low temperature setting, between 270 and 300 degrees Fahrenheit
- Arrange eggs in a single layer
- Set the air fryer timer according to the kind of yolk you seek:
- Plunge cooked eggs in cold water, removing from the air fryer to stop residual heat from taking the yolk any further and to ensure easy peeling
Submerge eggs in cold water after cooking.
Pamel Vachon/CNETCooking times for air fryer boiled eggs
- Runny yolk: 7-8 minutes
- Soft yolk: 9-10 minutes
- Jammy yolk: 12-13 minutes
- Hard-cooked yolk: 15-17 minutes
Nine minutes in the air fryer produces a perfectly soft-boiled egg.
Pamela Vachon/CNETMistakes to avoid for air-fryer boiled eggs
Don’t fall into the trap of thinking that cranking the heat on the air fryer will allow you to shave a significant number of minutes off the cooking time. While air fryer-boiled eggs take a little less time, as they don’t require waiting for water to boil, they aren’t designed to complete the task quickly. In my experience, a higher temperature in the convection environment of the air fryer caused the eggs to cook unevenly. (Consider that boiling water is only 212 degrees Fahrenheit.)
I read a handful of comments on air fryer boiled eggs that suggested they were harder to peel. I didn’t find that to be the case at all when using a lower temperature setting. However, I did find that to be true for the one egg I cooked at about 400 degrees. It also produced an “eggier” smell while the egg was cooking.
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Pamela is a freelance food and travel writer based in Astoria, Queens. While she writes about most things edible and potable (and accessories dedicated to those topics,) her real areas of expertise are cheese, chocolate, cooking and wine. She’s a culinary school grad, certified sommelier, former bartender and fine dining captain with 10 years in the industry. When not sitting at the keys, she leads in-home cheese classes, wine tastings and cocktail demonstrations. See full bio
