Are air fryer accessories safe? That question came up for me after I bought a set of accessories online and realized I had no idea what half of them were made of or how they’d hold up at 400°F. Some air fryer accessories are genuinely useful and completely safe. Others introduce the same chemical risks you were trying to avoid by buying a non-toxic air fryer in the first place. Here’s how to tell them apart.
Why Air Fryer Accessory Materials Matter
An air fryer runs at temperatures between 350°F and 400°F — sometimes higher. At those temperatures, materials that seem safe at room temperature can behave very differently. Plastics that are food-safe for cold storage can warp, melt, or leach chemicals under air fryer heat. Nonstick-coated accessories carry the same PTFE and PFAS risks as nonstick baskets. And accessories that block airflow can cause uneven cooking or heat buildup that stresses both the food and the unit.
The accessory question matters even more if you’ve already switched to a ceramic or stainless steel air fryer to avoid PFAS. Putting a cheap nonstick-coated rack or a plastic liner inside a PFAS-free air fryer reintroduces exactly the chemical risk you eliminated with the basket upgrade.
Are Air Fryer Accessories Safe — Material by Material
The safest air fryer accessories are food-grade silicone, uncoated stainless steel, parchment paper, and natural wood — all rated for high-heat use without chemical off-gassing.
| Material | Safe for Air Fryer? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Food-grade silicone | ✅ Yes | Safe up to 450°F+, no chemical off-gassing |
| Uncoated stainless steel | ✅ Yes | Best material for racks and skewers |
| Parchment paper (unbleached) | ✅ Yes | Safe up to 425°F, never use without food on top |
| Natural wood skewers | ✅ Yes (with care) | Soak in water first to prevent scorching |
| Aluminum foil | ⚠️ With caution | Never block airflow vents, use sparingly |
| PTFE-coated nonstick accessories | ❌ Avoid | Same fume risk as PTFE basket coatings |
| Plastic accessories | ❌ Avoid | Most plastics warp or leach chemicals above 200°F |
| Melamine accessories | ❌ Avoid | Releases formaldehyde compounds under heat |
Silicone Accessories: What to Check Before You Buy
Food-grade silicone is the most versatile and safest material for air fryer accessories. It handles temperatures up to 450°F or higher without degrading, releasing fumes, or transferring flavor to food. Silicone liners, mats, tongs, and molds are all genuinely useful in an air fryer and pose no known health risk under normal cooking conditions.
The caveat is quality. Not all silicone products sold as “food-grade” meet the same standard. Low-quality silicone accessories from unknown manufacturers may contain fillers that off-gas at high temperatures. The pinch test is a simple field check: pinch and twist a silicone accessory firmly. If it turns white at the stress point, it likely contains fillers. If it returns to its original color without any white stress marks, it’s likely pure silicone. Stick to accessories from established kitchenware brands and check that they’re explicitly rated for temperatures above 400°F.
Stainless Steel Racks and Skewers: The Safest Solid Accessory
Uncoated stainless steel is the gold standard for solid air fryer accessories. Racks, skewers, trivets, and multi-layer inserts made from 304-grade stainless steel have no coating to degrade, no chemical risk at any air fryer temperature, and they last indefinitely. They’re also the easiest to clean — dishwasher safe, no special care required.
The one thing to avoid is stainless steel accessories with a nonstick coating applied to the surface. These are common in budget accessory sets and carry the same PTFE risks as a nonstick basket. Look for accessories labeled “uncoated” or “bare stainless” rather than “nonstick stainless.”
A food-grade silicone liner and uncoated stainless steel rack are the two most useful and safest accessories for any air fryer basket.
Parchment Paper Liners: Safe With One Important Rule
Unbleached parchment paper is safe for air fryer use up to approximately 425°F. Pre-cut round parchment liners designed for air fryer baskets are convenient and genuinely useful for preventing food from sticking without adding any chemical risk. They’re single-use but inexpensive, and they make cleanup significantly faster.
The one rule that matters: never run parchment paper in an air fryer without food on top of it. Parchment paper is lightweight enough to be lifted by the air fryer fan and come into contact with the heating element, where it can scorch or ignite. Always place food on the parchment before starting the cook cycle. Our full guide on using parchment paper in an air fryer covers safe usage in more detail.
What to Avoid: Nonstick-Coated and Plastic Accessories
The two accessory categories that introduce real chemical risk are PTFE-coated nonstick accessories and plastic accessories not rated for high heat. Both are extremely common in budget accessory sets sold online, and both undermine the point of using a non-toxic air fryer.
PTFE-coated nonstick racks, molds, and inserts carry the same fume risk as PTFE baskets — potentially worse, because they’re often thinner and heat up faster. Plastic accessories rated only for microwave or dishwasher use will warp at air fryer temperatures and can leach plasticizers into food during cooking. The EPA has flagged PFAS-related compounds as an ongoing health concern — which includes the compounds released by degrading PTFE accessory coatings.
If an accessory set doesn’t explicitly state the material and temperature rating, treat it as suspect. Safe accessories will always list the material clearly and specify a temperature rating above 400°F.
Are Air Fryer Accessories Safe — Quick Reference
| Accessory Type | Verdict |
|---|---|
| Food-grade silicone liner | ✅ Safe — best everyday liner option |
| Uncoated stainless steel rack | ✅ Safe — best solid accessory material |
| Unbleached parchment liner | ✅ Safe — always place food on top first |
| Natural wood skewers (soaked) | ✅ Safe — soak 30 min before use |
| Aluminum foil | ⚠️ Use carefully — never block vents |
| Nonstick-coated accessories | ❌ Avoid — PTFE fume risk |
| Plastic accessories | ❌ Avoid — warps and leaches chemicals |
For more on building a fully non-toxic cooking setup, our PFAS-free air fryer guide covers the basket and unit choices that pair best with safe accessories. And if you’ve already upgraded your air fryer and want to make sure everything else in your kitchen matches, our guide on how to reduce PFAS exposure in your kitchen walks through every swap worth making.