
Ninja
Foodi MAX Dual Zone AF400UK (9.5L)
- ✓9.5L total — UK's top family dual-zone pick
- ✓Sync Finish cooks two dishes simultaneously
- ✓Dishwasher-safe baskets, 6 cooking functions
£179
Prices & availability may change.
The best air fryers in the UK for 2026: Ninja Foodi MAX Dual Zone AF400UK, Philips 3000 Series Dual Basket, Russell Hobbs Satisfry Medium, Tower Vortx and COSORI compared — with UK energy-cost-vs-oven calculation and Which?-aligned picks.
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Prices verified at amazon.co.uk on 1 June 2026 — see Editorial Methodology for how we choose and refresh picks in the UK market.
Affiliate disclosure: This article uses Amazon Associates programme links to amazon.co.uk. If you click through and buy at Amazon, we earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. Commission rates do not influence our picks.
Short answer: For most UK households the Ninja Foodi MAX Dual Zone AF400UK is the best overall — Which? and TechRadar both rank it top, with two 4.75 L baskets, sync-finish and a 10-year UK Ninja warranty when registered. Philips 3000 Series Dual Basket is the quieter high-street alternative. Budget UK buyers should look at the Russell Hobbs Satisfry Medium at around £59.99 on amazon.co.uk, or the Tower Vortx range — both consistently well-rated by Which? at the price.
The UK air-fryer market took off during the 2022–23 energy crisis and stayed dominant through 2026 because the maths is genuine: running a fan oven at UK 27p/kWh electricity prices costs three to five times what an air fryer does for the same dish. The picks below are the models UK testing publications (Which?, TechRadar, Good Housekeeping UK, Stuff) currently rank highest, with British-market context on size, warranty and price.
| Model | Capacity | Type | Wattage | Max temp | Price band | UK warranty | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ninja Foodi MAX Dual Zone AF400UK | 9.5 L (2×4.75 L) | Dual basket | 2,470 W | 240°C | ~£189–£229 | 10-year (registered) | UK Which? top overall |
| Ninja Air Fryer Pro AF180UK | 6.2 L | Single basket | 1,750 W | 240°C | ~£139–£169 | 10-year (registered) | Couples / sweet spot |
| Philips 3000 Series Dual Basket | 8 L (2×4 L) | Dual basket | 2,400 W | 200°C | ~£149–£189 | 2-year + extend | Quiet operation |
| Philips 5000 Series Dual Basket with Steam | 9 L (2×4.5 L) | Dual + steam | 2,000 W | 220°C | ~£249–£299 | 2-year + extend | All-rounder premium |
| Tower Vortx 11 L with Rotisserie | 11 L | Single + rotisserie | 1,700 W | 230°C | ~£89–£119 | 1-year | UK budget XXL |
| Russell Hobbs Satisfry Medium | 4 L | Single basket | 1,300 W | 200°C | ~£49–£69 | 1-year | UK budget entry |
| Tower T17127 Vortx Vizion 6 L | 6 L | Single (window) | 1,500 W | 200°C | ~£65–£95 | 1-year | Viewing window |
| COSORI TurboBlaze 6 L | 6 L | Single basket | 1,750 W | 230°C | ~£99–£139 | 2-year | Quietest single |
Prices are bands at amazon.co.uk as of 1 June 2026; they fluctuate daily and are re-verified each quarter.
Short answer: Yes, meaningfully — and this is the editorial pillar of every Which? UK air fryer review. At UK Q2 2026 electricity prices of ~27p/kWh standard rate (with off-peak Octopus Agile slots around 6p on cheap nights), a 1.5 kW air fryer running 20 minutes costs about 13p per use. A UK fan oven for the same dish — including the 10-minute preheat the marketing forgets — uses 2.5–3.5 kWh costing 65p–95p. Over a year cooking three times a week, switching from oven to air fryer for those meals saves around £80–£100 off the UK electricity bill.
That £80–£100/year is the genuine reason UK households keep buying air fryers — payback on a £49.99 Russell Hobbs Satisfry is roughly six months, on a £189 Ninja Foodi MAX about 22 months. For a UK family using the gadget daily, it’s even faster. The energy maths in the UK is the editorial story, not the speed or the gimmicks.
Short answer: Ninja Foodi MAX Dual Zone AF400UK is the UK family default — two 4.75 L baskets running independently at different temperatures, sync-finish (so chips and chicken arrive hot at the same moment), and a 10-year Ninja UK warranty when you register the unit. The Philips 3000 Series Dual Basket is the slightly quieter high-street alternative with similar capacity. For UK families with bigger appetites or batch cookers, the Tower 11 L Vortx with rotisserie at around £89–£119 is the budget answer — build quality is below Ninja or Philips but the capacity is unmatched at the price.
The dual-basket revolution is genuinely the right answer for UK families of four or more. The single-basket “stagger your meals” pattern works for couples but creates real friction at family dinnertime. Spending an extra £100 to never re-heat the chips while the chicken finishes is the easiest decision in this category.
Short answer: Tower Vortx or Russell Hobbs Satisfry Compact (~£40–£65) are the small-footprint UK picks for typical 14–16 inch counter depths. The Instant Vortex Slim at ~£99 has a narrow 10-inch profile that fits the standard UK kitchen better than most 6 L round models. Avoid 8 L+ dual-basket models like the Ninja Foodi MAX if your kitchen is genuinely small — they need ~40 cm depth plus ~10 cm clearance behind the exhaust vent for safe operation.
UK flats and terraced-house kitchens are often deeper than US apartments but narrower; the relevant dimension is usually width along the counter rather than depth from wall to edge. Measure both before ordering — Amazon returns for “doesn’t fit” are the single biggest source of UK air fryer returns and a known frustration in Which? reader feedback.
Short answer: The Russell Hobbs Satisfry Medium at around £59.99 on amazon.co.uk is the UK standout under £100 — Which? rates it well for the price with 10 preset programmes, dishwasher-safe parts and touch controls. The Tower T17127 Vortx Vizion 6 L at ~£65–£95 is the alternative if you want a viewing window. Both undercut Ninja and Philips by £40–£70 and are the right answer for UK occasional users; if you cook with it daily, the build quality of Ninja or Philips justifies the price uplift over a 5+ year lifespan.
Short answer: We re-verify amazon.co.uk prices, ASIN availability and UK testing-site updates (Which?, TechRadar, Good Housekeeping UK, Stuff) at the start of each quarter. This page shows price bands, not live prices — that complies with the Amazon Associates UK programme rules. The current UK price for you appears when you click through to Amazon.
Our editorial methodology explains how we choose picks, which UK test sources we weight (Which? carries the most weight in the UK market for this category), and what we deliberately don’t do (no in-house testing, no fabricated star ratings, no “we awarded” rosettes). Corrections welcome via the contact address on our imprint page.
This guide covers the UK market (amazon.co.uk). For Germany see the DE-Version, for the US the en-US version.

Ninja
£179
Prices & availability may change.

Philips
£169
Prices & availability may change.

Cosori
£70
Prices & availability may change.

Tower
£110
Prices & availability may change.

Russell Hobbs
£200
Prices & availability may change.
For most UK households, the Ninja Foodi MAX Dual Zone AF400UK is the best overall — Which? and TechRadar both rate it top, with two 4.75 L baskets, sync-finish and a 10-year UK Ninja warranty. The Philips 3000 Series Dual Basket Airfryer is the value alternative if you want quieter operation and a familiar high-street brand. For budget UK buyers, the Russell Hobbs Satisfry Medium at around £59.99 or the Tower Vortx range are the entry-level picks Which? consistently rates well.
Yes, meaningfully. At UK Q2 2026 electricity prices around 27p/kWh standard rate (~6p off-peak on Octopus Agile), a 1.5 kW air fryer running 20 minutes costs about 13p per use. A UK fan oven for the same dish — including the 10-minute preheat the marketing forgets — uses 2.5–3.5 kWh, costing 65p–95p. Over a year of cooking three times a week, switching from oven to air fryer for those meals saves around £80–£100. The maths is the point.
The Tower Vortx range or Russell Hobbs Satisfry Compact (~£40–£65) are the small-footprint UK picks. The Instant Vortex Slim sits at ~£99 with a narrow 10-inch design that works on the standard 14–16 inch UK counter depth. Avoid 8-litre dual-basket models like the Ninja Foodi MAX if your kitchen is small — they need ~40 cm depth plus 10 cm clearance behind the exhaust vent and won't slide back fully against the splashback.
Ninja Foodi MAX Dual Zone AF400UK is the UK family default — two 4.75 L baskets running independently at different temperatures, sync-finish for hot meals. The Philips 3000 Series Dual Basket is a slightly quieter alternative with similar capacity. For families with bigger appetites or batch cookers, the Tower 11 L Vortx with rotisserie is the budget answer, though the build quality is noticeably below Ninja and Philips.
Single basket (Ninja Air Fryer Pro, Philips 3000 Series Single, Tower Vortx) is simpler, cheaper and easier to clean — ideal for UK households of 1–3 people. Dual basket lets you run chips at 200°C and chicken at 180°C in parallel — the killer feature for UK families of four or more who don't want to stagger meals. The cost difference is roughly £100; the time saved every week typically justifies it within a couple of months.
The Russell Hobbs Satisfry Medium at ~£59.99 on amazon.co.uk is the standout — Which? rates it well for the price, 10 preset programmes, dishwasher-safe parts and touch controls. The Tower T17127 Vortx Vizion 6L is the alternative around £75–£95 if you want a viewing window. Both undercut Ninja by £40–£60 and are the right answer for occasional users; daily cooks should still stretch to a Ninja or Philips for build quality and warranty.
Yes — Which? and TechRadar continue to rank it the best UK air fryer overall through 2026. The 10-year Ninja UK warranty (when you register the unit) is unmatched by Philips, Tefal or Tower at the price. Newer Ninja Double Stack 2-Tier models (~£280–£330) offer more capacity but cost £80–£100 more and add complexity most UK households don't need.
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