Practical energy guide

Air fryer vs oven running cost

Compare the energy for the same cooking task, including preheating and repeat batches. A smaller air fryer may use less per batch, but it is not automatically cheaper for every quantity or recipe.

Make the task equivalent

Specify the food, quantity, target result and total powered time. Comparing a single air-fryer batch with an oven cooking several portions is misleading. Include any preheat and extra batches.

Keep units attached to every number. Watts describe power, while kWh describe energy. The calculators apply the unit rate in pence per kWh and show pounds or pence without hiding the conversion.

Calculate both options

For each appliance, divide watts by 1,000 and multiply by hours, or use a measured kWh cycle. Apply the same tariff. The comparison tool normalises both entries to annual kWh when frequency is included.

Thermostat cycling

Both appliances may cycle heating elements. Rated power multiplied by elapsed time can overstate energy, especially after reaching temperature. Measured energy for a representative cook is preferable when available.

Real use can vary by model, settings, condition and household routine. Test more than one reasonable scenario when a single assumption drives the answer. That range is more useful than reporting an over-precise total.

Worked scenario

An illustrative 1.5 kW air fryer for 30 minutes is 0.75 kWh before cycling. A 2.4 kW oven for one hour is 2.4 kWh before cycling. This arithmetic is not a universal product claim; time, duty and batch count can reverse the gap.

Beyond electricity

Capacity, food quality, cleaning, accessibility and appliance ownership matter. Do not buy a second appliance solely from a theoretical single-use saving. Use payback to test whether any purchase cost could be recovered in the expected ownership period.

Applying this guide to your household

Start with the best source available: the product’s electrical input, an energy-label kWh value, the manual, or a safe representative measurement. Match the unit and period in the calculator. Enter your own tariff rather than a quoted national average, and keep the standing charge separate.

Check the live calculation breakdown after submitting. It repeats your inputs and shows how energy becomes cost. Save clearly labelled results to the basket, where you can change the tariff and compare each item’s share of the saved total. The basket does not send the data to this website.

If a comparison involves purchasing equipment, separate energy arithmetic from the financial decision. Purchase, delivery, installation, disposal, maintenance and ownership period can change payback. Repairability, suitability and safety are also relevant even though they are not converted into money here.

Checking whether the result is reasonable

Sense-check the order of magnitude before acting. A very high wattage used for only a few minutes may consume less energy than a modest load left running all day. Compare the calculated annual kWh with the period and frequency entered, and make sure pence were not entered as pounds or vice versa.

Run a low, central and high scenario when duration or cycling is uncertain. Record why each assumption was chosen. If a monitored figure is available, measure a complete representative programme or several ordinary days rather than selecting an unusually light session. Seasonal equipment needs observations from conditions similar to those being estimated.

Finally, distinguish the appliance estimate from the household bill. The bill can include every electrical load, standing charge, tariff changes, corrections and account adjustments. A difference does not automatically mean the formula is wrong; first compare the same time period, tariff basis and set of loads.

Limitations and assumptions

Results are estimates based on the information entered. Actual energy use can vary by appliance model, settings, temperature, cycling, condition and household behaviour. The calculation cannot predict future tariffs, repairs or behavioural changes. It estimates electricity only and does not include gas, water, detergent or the daily electricity standing charge unless a page explicitly says otherwise.

Examples explain the maths and are not claims about every appliance. This information is general, not electrical, installation, medical or financial advice. Follow manufacturer instructions and obtain appropriately qualified help where a safety-critical decision requires it.

Common questions

Frequently asked questions

Is an air fryer always cheaper?

No. Batch count, time, cycling and capacity matter.

Should preheating be included?

Yes, if it is part of your normal task.

Can purchase cost outweigh savings?

Yes; use the payback tool.

Put it into practice

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