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Air Fryer Salmon: Time & Temperature Chart

Air Fryer Salmon: Time & Temperature Chart
Foto: Mohamed Olwy / Pexels

Salmon is one of the best proteins for an air fryer. The circulating hot air cooks it quickly and gives the outside a light, roasted finish while the inside stays moist. The single most important variable is thickness, not weight. A 6-ounce fillet cut from the thick center of the fish takes longer than a 6-ounce piece from the thin tail end, so use the chart below as a starting point and confirm doneness with an instant-read thermometer.

Salmon also has a narrow window between perfectly cooked and dry. Because it keeps cooking from residual heat after you pull it, it pays to check early. The USDA recommends a safe minimum internal temperature of 145°F for fish, measured at the thickest part. Many cooks pull salmon a touch earlier and let it rest, but if you are cooking for anyone who is pregnant, very young, older, or immunocompromised, cook fully to 145°F.

How to use this chart

Find the row that best matches your cut and thickness. Preheat the air fryer for about 3 minutes, lightly oil the salmon and the basket so it does not stick, and arrange fillets in a single layer without crowding. Times assume one to three fillets; a full, crowded basket may need an extra minute or two. Every air fryer runs a little differently, so treat these numbers as guides and check the internal temperature before serving.

Air fryer salmon cooking times by cut and thickness (temperatures in °F). Times vary by model and amount; always confirm with a thermometer.
Cut / thicknessTemp (°F)Time (min)Target internal temp
6 oz fillet, ~1 inch thick (skin-on or skinless)4008-10145°F
Thin fillet or tail end, ~1/2 inch4006-7145°F
Thick center-cut fillet, ~1 1/2 inch39010-12145°F
Salmon steak, ~1 inch4009-11145°F
Salmon bites / 1-inch cubes4007-9145°F
Frozen 6 oz fillet (from frozen, not thawed)39012-16145°F

Tips for better air fryer salmon

  • Check early: start testing 2 minutes before the low end of the time range so you do not overshoot 145°F.
  • Cook skin-on fillets skin-side down. The skin protects the flesh and crisps against the basket.
  • Pat the salmon dry and brush with a little oil before seasoning so the surface browns instead of steaming.
  • Do not crowd the basket. Leave space around each fillet so the hot air can circulate.
  • Let cooked salmon rest 2 to 3 minutes. The temperature climbs a few degrees and the flesh sets.
  • For frozen salmon, blot away surface ice partway through and add seasoning once it starts to thaw.

Frequently asked questions

What temperature should I air fry salmon at?

400°F works for most fillets and gives a lightly roasted exterior. For very thick, center-cut pieces, drop to 390°F so the outside does not overcook before the center reaches 145°F.

How do I know when salmon is done?

Cooked salmon turns from translucent to opaque and flakes easily when nudged with a fork. The surest test is an instant-read thermometer in the thickest part, reading 145°F per USDA guidance.

Do I need to thaw frozen salmon first?

No. You can cook it straight from frozen at 390°F, adding roughly 4 to 6 minutes over the fresh time. Blot off surface moisture partway through, then season once it begins to thaw.

Skin-on or skinless in the air fryer?

Both work. Skin-on fillets are more forgiving because the skin shields the flesh and can crisp up; cook them skin-side down. Skinless fillets cook a touch faster, so check them a minute early.

Why is my air fryer salmon dry?

Almost always overcooking. Salmon has a small window and keeps cooking after you pull it, so check 2 minutes early, aim for 145°F, and let it rest before serving.

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