A good air fryer burger recipe should give you juicy patties, clear timing, and a reliable way to know when the burgers are done. This guide to air fryer hamburgers starts with fresh ground beef patties, then covers thicker burgers, frozen patties, cheeseburgers, toasted buns, smoke prevention, toppings, storage, and a full recipe card with US and metric details.
The best default is simple: cook fresh ¼-lb / 113 g hamburger patties at 375°F / 190°C for 8–10 minutes, flipping halfway, until the center reaches 160°F / 71°C. From there, adjust by thickness, starting temperature, and air fryer model instead of relying on one fixed minute for every burger.
For a bunless version, the same patties can become lettuce-wrap burgers, burger bowls, or low-carb cheeseburger plates. For more ideas in that direction, see these keto hamburger recipes.
What’s in this guide
Cook the Burgers
Fixes, Serving, and FAQs
How Long to Cook Hamburgers in the Air Fryer
Best default: Use 1 lb / 454 g ground beef for 4 patties. Shape each patty about 4 oz / 113 g and ½ inch / 1.25 cm thick. Air fry at 375°F / 190°C for 8–10 minutes, flipping halfway, until the center reaches 160°F / 71°C. Add cheese only at the end.

Start checking early the first time
If you are making these for the first time, start checking at 8 minutes rather than waiting for the full range to pass. That way, you learn how your air fryer handles your patties without overcooking the first batch.
Put simply, the 8–10 minute range works best for patties that are about 4 oz / 113 g each and about ½ inch / 1.25 cm thick. Thinner patties may finish closer to 6–8 minutes, while thicker patties may need 10–12 minutes. Because air fryer baskets, patty thickness, and beef fat percentage all vary, the time range is only the starting point.
Use temperature, not color, to check doneness
For that reason, the thermometer matters more than the clock. Ground beef can look brown before it is safe, or stay slightly pink after it reaches temperature, so do not judge doneness by color alone.
For the most accurate reading, insert the thermometer through the side of the patty so the tip reaches the center instead of stopping near the surface. That way, you are checking the part of the burger that takes the longest to cook.
Food safety note: Ground beef burgers should reach 160°F / 71°C in the center. FoodSafety.gov lists 160°F as the safe minimum internal temperature for ground meat, so a thermometer is the clearest way to avoid guessing. See the safe minimum internal temperature chart.
Why this air fryer method works
In practice, the air fryer is good at burgers because it cooks fast, drains extra fat, and keeps the process cleaner than a skillet. The tradeoff is that patties can dry out if they are too lean, too thin, or cooked too long. That is why thickness, beef choice, spacing, and internal temperature matter more than chasing one exact minute.
Air Fryer Burger Time and Temperature Chart
Best default temperature
For most fresh patties, 375°F / 190°C is the best first setting. It is hot enough to cook the burgers quickly and help the outside brown. However, it is not so aggressive that the edges dry out before the center is done.
If this is your first time making burgers in the air fryer, use the quarter-pounder row as your starting point. After that, adjust by thickness instead of changing everything at once.
Fresh burger time chart
Because patty size changes the answer, start with the row that matches your burger instead of forcing every patty into the same time. Once you know how your air fryer handles one batch, adjust the next batch by 1–2 minutes rather than changing the temperature immediately.

| Fresh burger type | Air fryer temp | Approx. time | Flip? | Internal temp |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh quarter-pounder / ¼-lb / 113 g patties, about ½ inch / 1.25 cm thick | 375°F / 190°C | 8–10 minutes | Yes, halfway | 160°F / 71°C |
| Fresh thicker patties, about ¾ inch / 2 cm thick | 375°F / 190°C | 10–12 minutes | Yes | 160°F / 71°C |
| Fresh ½-lb / 225 g thick patties | 360–370°F / 182–188°C | 14–18 minutes | Yes | 160°F / 71°C |
| Thin fresh patties | 375°F / 190°C | 6–8 minutes | Yes | 160°F / 71°C |
| Mini burgers or sliders | 375°F / 190°C | 5–7 minutes | Yes | 160°F / 71°C |
Frozen Burger, 400°F, and Cheeseburger Timing
However, frozen burgers need a wider range because the center has to thaw before it can safely finish cooking. Before adding cheese to any burger, check the center first. Otherwise, the cheese may melt while the patty still needs more time.

| Burger type | Air fryer temp | Approx. time | Flip? | Internal temp |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frozen ¼-lb / 113 g patties | 360–375°F / 182–190°C | 10–14 minutes | Yes | 160°F / 71°C |
| Frozen ⅓-lb / 150 g patties | 360–375°F / 182–190°C | 12–16 minutes | Yes | 160°F / 71°C |
| Thin fresh patties at 400°F / 200°C | 400°F / 200°C | 6–8 minutes | Yes | 160°F / 71°C |
| Frozen burgers at 400°F / 200°C | 400°F / 200°C | 11–15 minutes | Yes | 160°F / 71°C; check early because the outside may brown first |
| Cheeseburgers | Same as burger | Add cheese last 30–60 seconds | — | 160°F / 71°C before cheese |
Should you air fry burgers at 375°F or 400°F?
For most homemade patties, 375°F is the better first choice because it gives the center time to cook before the edges dry out. However, 400°F can work for thinner patties or for people who like a firmer browned outside. In that case, start checking early and use a thermometer, because the outside can look done before the center reaches 160°F.

In short, 375°F is the better beginner setting, while 400°F is an alternate for thinner patties or cooks who already know their air fryer runs evenly. That said, once you know how your air fryer behaves, you can fine-tune the temperature without guessing.
How to adjust the time
If your air fryer runs hot, start checking a minute early. On the other hand, if your patties are thick, cold, or crowded, they may need longer. In either case, do not press the burgers while they cook; pressing squeezes out the juices you are trying to keep.
If you are not sure which row fits your burger, choose the lower end of the time range first. Then check the center and add 1–2 minutes only if the patty has not reached 160°F / 71°C.
Hamburger Patties in the Air Fryer
For your first batch, keep the patties simple: 1 lb / 454 g ground beef divided into 4 loose patties, about 4 oz / 113 g each. Shape each patty about 4–4½ inches / 10–11.5 cm wide and about ½ inch / 1.25 cm thick. That size cooks evenly, fits most air fryer baskets, and gives you a better chance of hitting 160°F without drying out the edges.

Because burgers shrink as they cook, shape each patty slightly wider than the bun. Then press a shallow dimple in the center so the patty stays flatter instead of puffing up into a dome.
When the patties are the same size, they finish at about the same time. Otherwise, the smaller patties can dry out while the thicker ones are still catching up.
If one patty is noticeably larger, place it where your air fryer runs hottest, or give it an extra minute after removing the smaller patties. That way, the thinner burgers do not dry out while the thickest one finishes.
This same method works for fresh beef patties, homemade burger patties, and plain hamburger patties from the butcher counter. However, the main adjustment is thickness: thin patties cook faster, while thick patties need more time to reach 160°F in the center.
For best texture, avoid mixing the beef too much. Once ground beef is overworked, the cooked patty can turn dense and springy instead of tender and juicy.
Can you cook raw ground beef patties in the air fryer?
Yes. Raw ground beef patties can go straight into the air fryer as long as they are shaped evenly, cooked in a single layer, and checked for 160°F in the center. However, loose ground beef mixtures and very wet patties can cook unevenly, so formed patties work best.
Ingredients for Air Fryer Hamburgers
You only need a few ingredients for classic burgers. Since the cooking method is simple, the beef, seasoning, patty shape, and cheese timing matter more than a long ingredient list. In other words, better patties matter more than more ingredients.
Since the ingredient list is short, each choice matters. The beef controls juiciness, the salt controls flavor, and the patty shape controls how evenly the burger cooks.

Ground beef
Use 1 lb / 454 g ground beef for 4 regular burgers. For the juiciest result, choose 80/20 ground beef. For a slightly leaner patty with less smoke, 85/15 is a good middle ground.
Seasoning
A simple mix of salt, black pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder is enough. If the beef is good and the patties are shaped well, the seasoning should support the burger rather than cover it up. Since kosher salt brands vary, start with a little less if you are using fine table salt. Worcestershire sauce or steak sauce is optional, but a small amount adds savory depth without turning the burger into meatloaf.
Cheese
American cheese melts the easiest. Cheddar, pepper jack, Swiss, provolone, and mozzarella also work, but thicker slices may need the full final minute to soften. Because the air fryer fan is strong, add cheese only at the end so it does not slide off, burn, or blow around inside the basket.
Buns and toppings
Use burger buns, brioche buns, potato buns, lettuce wraps, or bowls. Classic toppings include lettuce, tomato, onion, pickles, mustard, ketchup, and a creamy burger sauce. For a homemade creamy base, use this homemade mayonnaise recipe and turn it into burger sauce with ketchup, mustard, pickle juice, and a little seasoning.
Do you need oil, parchment, or foil?
Fresh 80/20 or 85/15 patties usually do not need oil because the beef has enough fat. However, if you are using very lean fresh patties or dry-surfaced frozen patties, a light oil spray can help browning.
If you use parchment, choose perforated parchment made for air fryers and never block airflow under the patties. Likewise, use foil only if your air fryer manual allows it. Otherwise, trapped grease and blocked airflow can slow cooking, create smoke, and make the burgers cook unevenly.
In short, airflow matters more than lining the basket. If a liner blocks the holes or traps grease under the patties, skip it.
Best Ground Beef for Air Fryer Burgers
If juiciness matters most, start with 80/20. If your air fryer smokes easily or you prefer a slightly lighter burger, 85/15 is the safer everyday choice. Very lean beef can work, but it needs more care because it dries out faster.

| Ground beef | Best for | What to know |
|---|---|---|
| 80/20 | Juiciest classic burgers | Rich, flavorful, and forgiving, but it can drip more fat and create more smoke in some air fryers. |
| 85/15 | Balanced everyday burgers | Still juicy, usually less smoky, and a good choice for indoor air fryer cooking. |
| 90/10 or leaner | Leaner burgers | Can dry out faster. Add moisture and check the temperature early. |
As a result, 80/20 or 85/15 is the most reliable choice for a first batch. Shape the patties gently, keep them even in thickness, and add a center dimple so they do not puff into domes as they cook.
If you are using very lean beef, add a little moisture with Worcestershire sauce, grated onion, mustard, or a small amount of oil. Then start checking early, because lean patties can move from done to dry quickly.
For a thinner burger with a harder griddled crust instead of a thicker air fryer patty, try this classic smash burger method.
How to Make Air Fryer Hamburgers
This method is for fresh ground beef patties. Once the patties are shaped, the rest is mostly about spacing, flipping, and checking the center. After that, assembly is quick because the burgers only need a short rest.

1. Preheat the air fryer
Preheat the air fryer to 375°F / 190°C for about 3 minutes. Although some models heat quickly, preheating helps the patties start cooking evenly.
If you skip preheating, add 1–2 minutes and start checking at the low end of the range. Once you know your air fryer, the timing becomes easier to repeat.
2. Shape the patties gently
Divide 1 lb / 454 g ground beef into 4 loose portions, about 4 oz / 113 g each. Then shape each portion into a patty about 4–4½ inches / 10–11.5 cm wide and ½ inch / 1.25 cm thick. Because the patties shrink as they cook, starting a little wider helps them fit the bun better later.
3. Make a center dimple
Press a shallow dimple into the center of each patty with your thumb or the back of a spoon. This small step helps the burgers stay flatter instead of puffing up in the middle.
4. Season both sides
Season the outside of the patties with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder. If using Worcestershire sauce, mix it in lightly before shaping, or brush a tiny amount over the patties before seasoning.
5. Air fry in a single layer
Place the patties in the basket in a single layer. Then leave space between them so hot air can move around each burger. Do not stack patties, and do not crowd the basket.
If all 4 patties do not fit with space between them, cook in batches. Otherwise, the burgers may steam instead of brown. Later batches may cook slightly faster because the air fryer is already fully hot.
6. Flip halfway
Air fry for 8–10 minutes total, flipping halfway through. Even if your model usually cooks without flipping, turning the patties makes the result more reliable across different basket styles.
7. Check the center
Check the thickest part of each patty. The burgers are done when the center reaches 160°F / 71°C. For the cleanest reading, insert the thermometer from the side so the tip lands in the center of the patty.

If one patty is thicker than the others, it may need an extra minute or two. In that case, remove the finished patties and let the thicker one continue cooking until it reaches temperature.
8. Rest and assemble
Let the patties rest for about 2 minutes before assembling. Meanwhile, toast the buns, slice the toppings, or stir together a quick sauce.
Can you toast burger buns in the air fryer?
Yes. After the patties come out, place the buns cut-side up in the basket and air fry at 350–375°F / 175–190°C for 1–2 minutes. Watch closely because buns go from toasted to dry quickly.
How to Make Air Fryer Cheeseburgers
To make cheeseburgers, cook the patties first, then add cheese at the very end. The easiest method is to place a slice of cheese on each cooked patty during the final 30–60 seconds of cooking.

Instead of running the fan longer just to melt cheese, you can also use the heat that is already trapped in the basket. Turn the air fryer off, place cheese on the hot patties, close the basket, and let the residual heat melt the cheese for about 1 minute.
If your cheese slides, folds, or blows off, do not fight the fan. Instead, melt the cheese with leftover heat after cooking. That way, the cheese softens over the patty instead of ending up on the basket.
Do not add cheese halfway through cooking. It can melt off the burger, stick to the basket, burn at the edges, or blow around inside the air fryer.
Frozen Burgers in the Air Fryer
Frozen patties are perfect for nights when nothing was thawed. They can go straight from freezer to basket; however, they need a little more patience because the center has to thaw before it can safely finish cooking.
That is why frozen burgers usually need a lower-to-moderate temperature and a wider time range than fresh patties. In practice, smaller ¼-lb / 113 g patties finish sooner, while thicker ⅓-lb / 150 g patties need the longer end of the range.

How to air fry frozen burger patties
- Preheat the air fryer to 360–375°F / 182–190°C.
- Place frozen patties in a single layer.
- Air fry for 10–16 minutes, depending on patty size and thickness.
- Flip halfway through.
- Season after the surface warms slightly if seasoning will not stick at the beginning.
- Cook until the center reaches 160°F / 71°C.
- Add cheese during the final 30–60 seconds if making cheeseburgers.
For exact ranges by patty size, use the frozen burger timing chart above. Before adding cheese to frozen burgers, check the center first. Otherwise, the cheese may look melted while the patty still needs more time inside.
What about Bubba-style frozen burgers?
Bubba-style frozen burgers can go straight from freezer to air fryer. However, they are often thick and fatty, so they may need the longer end of the timing range. Start at 360–375°F, flip halfway, and check for 160°F in the center.
If you cook frozen burgers at 400°F / 200°C, start checking early. The outside can brown before the center is fully done, especially with thicker frozen patties. In that case, a thermometer prevents the most common mistake: serving a burger that looks done outside but is not finished inside.
Ninja Foodi, Air Fryer Oven and Basket Air Fryer Notes
The basic method is the same in most basket-style air fryers: cook fresh ¼-lb / 113 g patties at 375°F / 190°C, flip halfway, and check for 160°F / 71°C in the center. However, stronger models, smaller baskets, dual-zone air fryers, and air fryer ovens can change the timing by a minute or two.
Likewise, air fryer ovens may need slightly longer because the cooking space is larger than a compact basket. That means the best approach is to use the chart first, then adjust the next batch based on your specific model.

| Air fryer type | What to adjust | Best starting point |
|---|---|---|
| Ninja air fryer or Ninja Foodi air crisp | These can cook efficiently, so check early. | 375°F / 190°C, 8 minutes, then check the center. |
| Ninja Foodi Grill | Air crisp and grill mode behave differently. | Use air crisp for this method; follow grill-plate timing if using grill mode. |
| Cosori, Instant Vortex, Gourmia, PowerXL, and similar basket air fryers | Basket size and airflow vary. | Use the chart first, then adjust by 1–2 minutes after your first batch. |
| Air fryer oven or toaster oven air fryer | The larger cavity may cook slightly slower. | Use the middle rack, flip halfway, and check the center early. |
How to Keep Air Fryer Burgers Juicy
These burgers stay juicy when the beef has enough fat, the patties are handled gently, and the cooking time does not run too long. As a result, a few small details make the difference between a tender burger and a dry one.
- Use 80/20 or 85/15 beef. A little fat keeps the burger tender.
- Do not overmix. Handle the meat gently and stop once the patties hold together.
- Make even patties. Uneven patties cook unevenly.
- Add a center dimple. This helps prevent puffing.
- Do not press the burgers. Pressing forces juices out.
- Flip once. It improves even cooking without overhandling.
- Check temperature early. Start checking at the low end of the timing range.
- Rest briefly. Two minutes is enough for most burgers.
In other words, juicy burgers come from control, not extra steps. Once the patties are shaped well and cooked to temperature, the air fryer does most of the work.

When using lean beef, add a little moisture with Worcestershire sauce, grated onion, mustard, or a small amount of oil. Also, check the temperature earlier because lean patties move from done to dry quickly.
The goal is a patty with browned edges, melted cheese, and a tender center — not a dry puck that only tastes like seasoning. So, once the burger reaches temperature, stop cooking and let it rest.
Troubleshooting Air Fryer Hamburgers
If the burgers turn out dry, smoky, uneven, or messy, do not change everything at once. In most cases, one small adjustment fixes the next batch: use slightly fattier beef, make the patties thinner, clean the basket, or add cheese later.
What not to do when air frying burgers
Before changing the recipe, check the most common mistakes first. These are the small things that usually cause dry burgers, uneven cooking, smoking, or messy cheese.

- Do not stack patties in the basket.
- Avoid pressing the burgers while they cook.
- Add cheese only at the end, not halfway through cooking.
- Never block the basket holes with solid parchment or foil.
- Do not judge doneness by color alone.
- Avoid using the same timing for thin fresh patties and thick frozen patties.
Air fryer burger troubleshooting chart
Once you know what went wrong, use the chart below to fix the next batch. Instead of changing the beef, temperature, timing, and basket setup all at once, adjust one thing first.
| Problem | Likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Dry burgers | Lean beef or overcooking | Use 80/20 or 85/15 beef, and check the temperature earlier. |
| Smoking air fryer | Fat dripping onto a hot base, old grease, or very fatty beef | Clean the basket, avoid overcrowding, and try 85/15 beef if smoke is frequent. |
| Burger puffed up | No center dimple | Press a shallow dimple in each patty before cooking. |
| Undercooked center | Patty too thick or too cold | Cook longer at 375°F and check for 160°F in the center. |
| Cheese blew off | Cheese added too early or fan too strong | Add cheese during the final 30–60 seconds, or melt it with residual heat after cooking. |
| Uneven cooking | Basket overcrowded | Cook in a single layer and leave space between patties. |

How to fix the next batch
If you are not sure what went wrong, start with the simplest fix first. Next time, change only one thing at a time. If the burgers were dry, check earlier or use fattier beef; if they smoked, clean the basket or use a slightly leaner blend.
If smoke happens, do not panic. Usually, it means fat is hitting a very hot surface or old grease is still in the basket. Before cooking the next batch, clean the basket, avoid overcrowding, and use the lower end of the temperature range if your air fryer runs hot.
The next batch becomes easier to control because you are matching the fix to the actual problem instead of guessing.
If this happens often with air fryer recipes, it is worth checking these common air fryer mistakes. Overcrowding, blocked airflow, old grease, and wrong timing can affect burgers, fries, wings, and almost everything else you cook in the basket.
Jump to recipe card → | Back to table of contents ↑
Best Sauces and Toppings for Air Fryer Hamburgers
A good burger only needs a few toppings, but the sauce can change the whole direction of the meal. For that reason, keep the patty simple and use the sauce to make it classic, spicy, Indian-style, or bowl-friendly.

Classic burger sauce is the easiest place to start: mix mayonnaise, ketchup, mustard, finely chopped pickles or pickle juice, garlic powder, onion powder, and a little black pepper. If you want a fresh base, use this homemade mayonnaise; if you need an egg-free spread, use eggless mayonnaise.
When you want heat, brush the cooked patty lightly with mango habanero sauce or serve it on the side for fries. Meanwhile, mango mustard sauce gives the burger a tangy, fruity change from plain mustard.
An Indian-style burger works especially well with green chutney, onion, tomato, mayo, and a pinch of chaat masala. Because the chutney is bright and herb-heavy, it cuts through the richness of the patty.
Air Fryer Burger Variations
Once the basic method is set, you can change the toppings and sauces without changing the cooking technique. That way, one reliable patty method can turn into several different dinners.

- Classic cheeseburger: American cheese, pickles, onion, lettuce, tomato, and burger sauce.
- Spicy mango habanero burger: Cheddar, onions, pickles, and mango habanero sauce.
- Mango mustard burger: Lettuce, pickles, onion, and mango mustard sauce.
- Green chutney burger: Green chutney, mayo, onion, tomato, and chaat masala.
- Low-carb burger bowl: Lettuce, pickles, cheese, onions, tomato, and sauce without the bun.
- Pesto cheeseburger: Pesto mayo, tomato, mozzarella or provolone, and roasted peppers.
For a lower-carb plate, keep the same patty method and build the meal around lettuce, pickles, cheese, onions, tomato, and sauce instead of a bun.
What to Serve With Air Fryer Hamburgers
For an easy burger-night plate, pick one sauce, one crispy side, and something fresh to cut through the richness. That way, the meal feels complete without turning dinner into a project.
For the classic burger-and-fries plate, serve the patties with homemade fries, wedges, or potato snacks. If a make-ahead side is easier, potato salad is one of the best choices. For a party-style spread, add one or two ideas from these potato appetizers.
If the air fryer is already out, keep the sides easy. Air fryer mozzarella sticks make the meal feel like a game-day plate, while air fryer croquettes are a good option when you want something crispy that is not fries.
For something fresh, add a cabbage slaw, cucumber salad, onion-tomato salad, or raw papaya salad. A crisp fresh side helps balance the richness of the burgers and cheese.
Storage and Reheating
Make-ahead tip: You can shape the raw patties up to 24 hours ahead and refrigerate them in a covered container with parchment between layers. Keep them cold until cooking, then air fry straight from the fridge and check the center for 160°F / 71°C.

Cooked hamburger patties store better than fully assembled burgers. If you know you will have leftovers, store the patties, buns, cheese, sauces, and toppings separately. Otherwise, the bun can turn soggy while the lettuce and tomato lose their texture.
Once the patties are cooked, refrigerate leftovers within 2 hours. If the room is very hot, refrigerate them within 1 hour. After that, reheat only the patties and assemble the burgers fresh so the buns and toppings stay in better shape.
- Refrigerate: Cool cooked patties, then store in an airtight container for 3–4 days.
- Freeze: Wrap cooked patties individually and freeze for up to 2 months.
- Reheat in the air fryer: Reheat patties at 350°F / 175°C until warmed through.
- Add cheese after reheating: Cheese melts better when added at the end instead of reheated from cold.
- Avoid reheating assembled burgers: The bun can dry out while lettuce, tomato, and sauce turn soggy.
For more air fryer recipes with ground beef, this burger method is the easiest starting point because the patties cook quickly, portion neatly, and can be served on buns, in bowls, or over salad.
Air Fryer Burgers Recipe Card
Air Fryer Burgers
These air fryer burgers are built for a quick, juicy first batch: fresh ground beef, simple seasoning, 375°F heat, one flip, and cheese added only at the end.
Ingredients
- 1 lb / 454 g ground beef, preferably 80/20 or 85/15
- ¾ tsp kosher salt, or to taste
- ½ tsp black pepper
- ½ tsp garlic powder
- ½ tsp onion powder
- 1 tsp / 5 ml Worcestershire sauce or steak sauce, optional
- 4 cheese slices, about 3 oz / 85 g total, optional
- 4 burger buns
- Lettuce, tomato, onion, pickles, sauce, or toppings of choice
Instructions
- First, preheat the air fryer to 375°F / 190°C.
- Next, divide the beef into 4 loose portions, about 4 oz / 113 g each.
- Then shape each portion into a patty about 4–4½ inches / 10–11.5 cm wide and ½ inch / 1.25 cm thick.
- After that, press a shallow dimple into the center of each patty so the burgers stay flatter as they cook.
- Once the patties are shaped, season both sides with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder. If using Worcestershire sauce, mix it in gently before shaping or brush a tiny amount over the patties before seasoning.
- Then place the patties in the air fryer basket in a single layer, leaving space between them.
- As the burgers cook, flip them halfway through the 8–10 minute cooking time.
- Once the time is close, check the center of each patty. For the most accurate reading, insert the thermometer through the side of the patty so the tip reaches the center. The burgers are done when they reach 160°F / 71°C.
- If making cheeseburgers, add cheese during the final 30–60 seconds, or place cheese on the hot cooked patties and close the warm basket briefly until melted.
- Finally, rest the patties for 2 minutes, then assemble with buns, sauce, and toppings.
Notes
- Best beef: Use 80/20 for the juiciest burgers or 85/15 for a slightly leaner burger with less smoke.
- Salt: Kosher salt brands vary. If using fine table salt, start with less and adjust to taste next time.
- Preheating: If you skip preheating, add 1–2 minutes and start checking early.
- Batch cooking: If the patties do not fit in a single layer with space between them, cook in batches. Later batches may cook slightly faster.
- Oil: Fresh 80/20 or 85/15 patties usually do not need oil. Use a light spray only for very lean or dry-surfaced patties.
- Frozen patties: Cook frozen ¼-lb / 113 g patties at 360–375°F for 10–14 minutes and frozen ⅓-lb / 150 g patties for 12–16 minutes, flipping halfway.
- Bubba-style burgers: Start at 360–375°F and use the longer end of the timing range for thick frozen patties.
- Cheese: Add cheese at the end only. Adding it too early can make it slide off or blow around.
- Doneness: Ground beef burgers should reach 160°F / 71°C in the center.
- Parchment or foil: Use only if your air fryer manual allows it, and never block airflow or trap grease under the patties.
- Storage: Refrigerate cooked patties within 2 hours, or within 1 hour if the room is very hot. Store patties separately from buns and toppings for the best leftovers.
If you are cooking a different patty size, use the recipe card as the base and the timing chart above as the adjustment guide. That way, the method stays simple while the timing changes to match the burger.
One rule matters most: timing can change, but doneness should be checked with a thermometer. Use the chart for timing, then use the center temperature to decide when the burgers are done.

FAQs About Air Fryer Burgers and Hamburgers
Can you cook hamburgers in an air fryer?
Yes. When cooked in a single layer, hamburgers cook well in an air fryer because the hot circulating air reaches the top, bottom, and sides of each patty. For the best result, leave space between the patties and flip halfway.
What temperature do you cook hamburgers in the air fryer?
For most fresh hamburger patties, use 375°F / 190°C. This temperature gives the center enough time to cook while still helping the outside brown.
How long do hamburgers take in the air fryer?
In most cases, fresh ¼-lb / 113 g hamburger patties take 8–10 minutes at 375°F / 190°C. However, thinner patties may finish in 6–8 minutes, while thicker patties may need 10–12 minutes.
How long do you cook ½-pound burgers in the air fryer?
Fresh ½-lb / 225 g burgers usually need about 14–18 minutes at 360–370°F / 182–188°C, depending on thickness and air fryer strength. Flip halfway and check that the center reaches 160°F / 71°C.
Do you flip burgers in the air fryer?
Yes. Although some air fryers cook fairly evenly without flipping, flipping halfway gives more reliable results across different basket styles and patty thicknesses.
What internal temperature should air fryer hamburgers reach?
Ground beef burgers should reach 160°F / 71°C in the center. Since color can be misleading, use a food thermometer rather than judging by appearance alone. For the best reading, insert the thermometer from the side so the tip reaches the center of the patty.
How long do frozen burgers take in the air fryer?
Usually, frozen burger patties take 10–16 minutes. A ¼-lb / 113 g frozen patty often takes 10–14 minutes, while a thicker ⅓-lb / 150 g frozen patty may take 12–16 minutes.
Can I cook frozen burgers at 400°F in the air fryer?
Yes, but check early. At 400°F, the outside can brown before the center is fully done, especially with thick frozen patties. For more control, use 360–375°F and cook until the center reaches 160°F.
When should you add cheese to air fryer burgers?
Once the burger is almost done, add cheese during the final 30–60 seconds. If the fan blows the cheese around, turn the air fryer off and let the residual heat melt the cheese instead.
Why did my air fryer burger smoke?
Usually, smoke comes from fat dripping onto a hot base, old grease in the basket, overcrowding, or very fatty beef. To prevent it next time, clean the basket before cooking, avoid crowding, and use 85/15 beef if smoke is a recurring problem.
Can I make these burgers in a Ninja, Cosori, Instant Vortex, Gourmia, or PowerXL air fryer?
Yes. The method is the same: cook fresh ¼-lb patties at 375°F, flip halfway, and check for 160°F in the center. However, smaller or stronger air fryers may finish a minute or two faster, while crowded baskets or thicker patties may need longer. For Ninja Foodi Grill-style models, use the air-fry function unless you are intentionally using the grill plate.
Can you cook burgers in an air fryer oven?
Yes. Use the air fry setting, place the patties on a rack or tray with space between them, flip halfway, and start with the same time and temperature chart. Air fryer ovens may need 1–2 extra minutes because the cooking space is larger.
Can I cook more than four burgers at once?
Only if they fit in a single layer with space between them. Otherwise, cook in batches. Crowding the basket slows cooking, blocks airflow, and can make the burgers steam instead of brown.
Do I need to spray the air fryer basket for burgers?
Usually, no. If you are using 80/20 or 85/15 beef, the patties release enough fat as they cook. However, if your patties are very lean or your basket tends to stick, use a light spray instead of adding extra oil to the burgers.
Can I make turkey burgers this way?
Yes, but turkey burgers are leaner and need different doneness guidance. Since ground poultry should reach 165°F / 74°C, do not use the 160°F ground beef temperature for turkey burgers.
Can I use foil or parchment under air fryer burgers?
Use foil or parchment only if your air fryer manual allows it. Also, never block airflow under the patties, because blocked airflow can slow cooking, trap grease, create smoke, and make the burgers cook unevenly.
