Does the Ninja Foodi Air Fry Oven live up to the hype?
This toaster oven and air fryer combo wants to do it all.
Recommendations are independently chosen by Reviewed's editors. Purchases made through the links below may earn us and our publishing partners a commission. Prices were accurate at the time this article was published but may change over time.
With continually updated technology and new air fryer brands hitting shelves all the time, air fryers continue to be one of the hottest kitchen gadgets on the market. No wonder there’s been a rash of new products that combine air fry technology with the traditional kitchen appliances people already have in their homes.
The Ninja Foodi Digital Air Fry Oven is one such product. Building off the success of the Ninja Foodi multicooker, it combines an air fryer and toaster oven into one convenient package.
But is it worth the investment? We tested this Ninja air fryer oven to see if it could actually combine two pieces of equipment in one—without sacrificing on the performance of either.
How does the Ninja Foodi Digital Air Fry Oven look and feel?
As soon as you take it out of the box, you get a sense that this is a high-quality product. Constructed of brushed stainless steel, it’s beautifully finished with rounded corners and has a digital control pad. It’s also wider and shorter than a typical toaster oven.
When cooled and not in use, the Foodi Air Fry Oven can be flipped up on one side to store at the back of the counter. Rather than a towel bar handle in the front, it has a small one off to the side that you use to open the door. While it’s unusual and takes a bit of time to get used to, this handle functions perfectly fine and helps make the oven more space efficient.
The Foodi Digital Air Fry Oven comes with an air fry basket, a wire rack, a nonstick sheet pan, and a crumb tray. All of the accessories also seem sturdy and well made. They’re larger than the ones you typically find in a toaster oven, as the oven is so wide.
What can the Ninja Foodi Digital Air Fry Oven do?
This toaster can air fry, dehydrate, toast, bake, air broil, and keep food warm.
As the name implies, this Ninja countertop oven air fries. And just like a typical toaster oven, it also toasts and bakes. It also air roasts, air broils, dehydrates, and keeps food warm. Because it’s so short, however, it can’t hold a whole chicken like many toaster ovens in its price category.
The manufacturer encourages using the large sheet pan to make sheet pan dinners and includes a formula and some recipes for them.
If you’re looking for other multi-functional appliances that can slow cook, pressure cook, grill, and more, Ninja also offers the impressive Ninja Foodi Pressure Cooker Steam Fryer and the Ninja Foodi Grill, both of which we've tested.
What we like
- It’s beautifully designed.
- The digital controls are easy to read and intuitive to navigate.
- It’s quiet.
- It’s an excellent toaster, and does a good job of baking a sheet pan dinner.
- To check on food, there’s an oven light.
- For storage, it easily can stand on its side.
- It cooks fast.
What we don’t like
- It’s expensive.
- It can’t roast a whole chicken.
- There could be more cooking guidelines for specific foods in the cookbook.
This multipurpose appliance is easy to use and can toast, bake, and air fry wonderfully.
$200 at AmazonHow does it perform?
The air fry setting left fries unevenly cooked.
Air frying
To be blunt, it’s not the best air fryer on the market, but it’s also far from the worst. The Digital Air Fry Oven air fries unevenly, and food prepared from scratch seemed baked, not fried. On the website the manufacturer claims it can air fry 4 pounds of food at once. While we could pile up that amount of fries in the air fry basket, the loaded basket couldn’t fit in the oven at the rack position recommended for air frying.
Toasting
The Ninja toasts very evenly, but there's no setting that allows for extremely light toast.
The Ninja Air Fry Oven can accommodate nine slices of packaged bread without squishing them. And it can toast them fairly evenly, too. When used to toast two slices, it gives impressive results, browning exceptionally evenly.
It does, however, toast to a golden-brown shade on both the light and medium settings. So it could be a disappointment if you like your toast only lightly browned. It has a special bagel toasting setting and it browns bagel halves very uniformly.
Air roasting
Our sheet pan dinners came out beautifully cooked.
Ninja recommends using the oven to air roast sheet pan dinners with a protein, vegetables, and spices. After following the oven booklet’s recipe for Spicy Chicken, Sweet Potatoes & Broccoli, I was impressed with the result. All of the ingredients (about 3 pounds in total) came out lightly browned and tender in just 22 minutes. It made for a tasty sheet pan dinner for four.
Baking
Biscuits browned evenly in this toaster.
You’re not going to be able to fit an entire loaf or Bundt pan in this Ninja, but you can use it to bake a cake or muffins in a shallow pan, or small items like cookies right on the sheet pan. Biscuits baked up just as well as from a full-size oven.
Air broiling
Chicken breasts came out juicy and browned on both sides in just 20 minutes. However, even when cooked well-done, steaks looked gray on the outside and in no way resembled broiled or grilled meat. So, while this oven is fast, it can’t consistently deliver the kind of searing you expect from broiling.
Dehydrating
The dehydrate setting works fine, but you can't fit enough to make it worthwhile.
Although its wide air fry basket holds more food than the ones in a typical air fryer (or the racks in a toaster oven), the Ninja is still only able to dry a small amount of food. After running the dehydrator for 10 hours, I was rewarded with a small bowl of banana chips. At least the machine kept quiet as it worked.
Keep Warm
The Ninja kept a small macaroni and cheese casserole at a safe serving temperature for a full two hours. As you would expect, however, the food was dried out by then. If you’re not going to serve food within a half hour, you're probably better off just cooling and reheating it.
Is the Ninja Foodi Digital Air Fry Oven easy to use and clean?
The Ninja has an easy-to-use digital interface, although it does smudge.
The digital control panel on the Ninja oven is well laid out and easy to read. Its interface centers around a knob that you turn to select the time and temperature (or number of slices and doneness) for each function, and it’s fairly intuitive to program.
We love the fact that the oven preheats automatically and the preheat time is just one minute, so it doesn’t add appreciably to the cooking time. During cooking, the product is quieter than most air fryers. And you can turn on an interior light to check on your food’s progress.
The sheet pan and the air fry basket can be cleaned in the dishwasher. In the standing position, the back opens, giving you access to the inside for easy cleaning.
The Ninja air fryer oven comes with a very thorough owner’s guide, as well as a booklet that contains recipes and cooking charts for air frying. There's also a leaflet with instructions on how to build a sheet pan meal. It would be helpful if there were also charts to use as guidelines for baking, air roasting, and air-broiling.
Warranty
Ninja offers a one-year limited warranty on the Foodi Digital Air Fry Oven and a 60-day money back guarantee.
What owners say
On Amazon, the Ninja Foodi Digital Air Fry Oven has earned itself 4.6 stars from more than 20,000 customers who praise its convenience, ease of cleaning, and fast cook times. They say it looks great on the counter, and stows pretty efficiently when not in use. Some detractors complain that the interior is not tall enough for their cooking needs.
Is the Ninja Foodi Digital Air Fry Oven worth it?
Although it's not an amazing air fryer, this is a great toaster oven.
Yes. If you're looking for an air fryer and a toaster oven.
This product is definitely worth your consideration if you're in the market for an air fryer toaster oven. It’s an excellent toaster and a fair air fryer. The only real drawbacks are that it has a large footprint on your countertop and can’t roast a whole chicken. If you have the counter space and are in the habit of buying rotisserie chickens at the supermarket, we say go for it.
We do recognize that it’s not an inexpensive appliance, but it costs less than the Breville and Cuisinart ovens that are its main competitors. If you decide to spring for it, definitely try out the sheet pan meals.