Save Time and Air Fry Your Pumpkin Pie

It's a good solution if you're running short on space in the oven too.

Save Time and Air Fry Your Pumpkin Pie

We may earn a commission from links on this page.

Pumpkin pie with a slice removed and on a spatula.

Credit: Anna_Pustynnikova


The air fryer is an indispensable part of my cooking arsenal these days. It makes quick work of anything I'd otherwise be oven roasting—like peppers, or salmon—and unless you have a huge toaster oven model, you can probably put it away if you need the counter space back.

This year for the holidays, I'm leaving the oven available for other things and air frying my pumpkin pie.

You can absolutely bake pies in the air fryer

A great pumpkin pie is cooked gently (so the mixture doesn’t split) and has a well-baked pie crust. Managing this, whether in a conventional oven or in an air fryer, can be easy if you keep a couple things in mind.

First, pumpkin pie filling is a custard filling, also sometimes called an egg-rich filling. All this means is that eggs make up an important part of the ingredient list and they’re responsible for binding the other ingredients—but they need to be cooked gently. According to America’s Test Kitchen, “When custards such as crème anglaise are heated, they turn thick and creamy as milk and egg proteins unfurl and bond with each other. However, if they are overheated, too many bonds form and the proteins clump.” If you’ve ever had a gritty or watery pumpkin pie, this might be why. We'll avoid that with a lower fan speed. (More on that later.)

Then there's the moisture factor. Aside from the eggs, pumpkin pie includes its namesake purée, sugar, spices, and a liquid like evaporated milk, all of which make for a rather wet mixture—and wet mixtures can easily lead to soggy crusts. To prevent that from happening, pumpkin pie crusts, whether air-fried or not, should get a blind bake before you add the filling. 

Blind baking is the whole reason you can make this pie in the air fryer at all. Air fryers heat from the top, which is why you can't us them to bake double-crusted pies. Luckily, your pumpkin pie's crust will be cooked through before the filling even joins the party.


If you’re in the market for an air fryer, read about my top picks from 2024:

Cuisinart Air Fryer Toaster Oven with Grill

Instant Vortex 6-quart Air Fryer Oven

Ninja Doublestack XL Air Fryer


How to air fry a pumpkin pie

Despite its reputation for aggressive convection heating, you can both blind bake and gently bake a pie in the air fryer. To tackle both of these things, use a lower temperature, and the “bake” setting instead of “air fry.”

The difference between those settings is the fan speed. Air frying triggers a much higher fan speed, while the "bake' setting is much slower. You can probably even hear the difference when you change the setting. The pie will still bake quicker than it would in a regular oven, but it shouldn't overcook on the top.

Parchment paper lined pie crust with baking beans inside.

I like to crumple the parchment paper before lining the pastry so large folds don't cut into the pastry. Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

1. Blind bake the crust

Set up your blind baking as you would normally. With the pie pastry fitted into a pie plate, line the pastry with parchment paper and fill it with pie weights. (I use dry beans, but you could use ceramic beads, sugar, or rice.) Place the crust in an air fryer heated to 350°F on the “bake” setting. This is easy to do in the swinging door model, but not impossible for basket-style air fryers: I have a basket model that just fits a 9-inch aluminum pie plate, so there’s no room for my hands.

To lower the pie into the basket without burning yourself or dumping your pie in sideways, make a foil strap by tearing off a piece of foil about 16 inches long. It needs to be wide enough to sit under the widest part of the pie and long enough to come up on both sides with enough extra that you can grab the ends. Fold the foil three or four times lengthwise to make a strap about two or three inches thick, like in the picture below. Grab the strap’s ends, lift and lower the pie into the basket. The strap will stay so you can take the pie out later. Bend the ends down so they’re in the confines of the basket. 

A pumpkin pie in an air fryer basket.

Use the aluminum foil strap to lift and lower the pie into the basket if needed. Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

Bake the crust with the weights in it for about 10 minutes, or until the edges are taking on color. Lift the weights out by gathering the parchment paper edges. The crust should look dry on the bottom. Use a fork and prick the bottom crust five or six times. Close the oven and bake it for another two minutes so the bottom can cook through. It shouldn’t, but if the crust puffs at all in the bottom, just use an oven mitt to press it down and flatten it.

2. Reduce the temperature and bake the pie

Reduce the temperature to 325°F and leave it on the “bake” setting.

Fill the blind baked crust with your raw pumpkin pie filling. If you’re using the basket model, leave the crust in the basket of the air fryer. It’s easier to fill while it’s already seated. If you have the swinging door variety, take the whole tray out of the oven. Fill the shell while it’s on the tray, and return the whole thing to the oven. Bake the pie for five minutes at 325°F, and then reduce the temperature to 300°F and continue to cook the pie for another 10 to 20 minutes. All the while, keep it on that “bake” function.

The pie is done when the edges of the filling are just beginning to take on color, and the center is set with the slightest hint of a jiggle. Cool the pie on a wire rack. Enjoy it warm, room temp, or chill it in the fridge if you prefer it cold. 

When baking your pumpkin pie, keep in mind that the timing will vary depending on your air fryer. That’s why the last time frame is rather wide. Air fryers models differ in their speed, pie recipes have more this and less that, and consider if your pie is deep-dish or not. Check on your pie after it's finished the initial five minutes at 325°F, then change to 300°F for 10 minutes. Depending on how set the filling is at this point, you may need to continue baking it for more time.

Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

Food Editor

Allie has been Lifehacker’s Food Writer since 2021. She earned her bachelor’s degree at Ithaca College in drama and studied at the Institute of Culinary Education to earn her diploma in Pastry and Baking Arts. Allie worked professionally as a private chef for over a decade, honing her craft in New York at places like Balthazar, Bien Cuit, The Chocolate Room, Billy’s Bakery, and Whole Foods. She spent evenings as a chef instructor, and also earned a master’s degree at Hunter College for teaching English. Allie’s YouTube channel, Thainybites, features recipes and baking tricks. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Read Allie's full bio