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Best Air Fryer Deals in Nigeria 2026

Air fryer prices across Konga, Jumia, ShopInverse, Pointek, and Slot. Plus which size to buy and the brands actually worth your money.

5 min read

Air fryers took over Nigerian kitchens after the 2023 fuel subsidy removal sent gas prices climbing. Today they run ₦35,000 to ₦180,000 for something that can handle a family meal, and most of the picks worth owning sit between ₦55,000 and ₦95,000. Here is where to shop and what to buy.

Where to buy in Nigeria

  • Konga has the deepest air fryer selection in Nigeria, authorized dealers for Philips, Tefal, and Hisense included. Prices shift weekly as promotions cycle through.
  • Jumia matches Konga on selection and undercuts it on Black Friday and Jumia Anniversary deals. Read the seller details and stick with verified sellers or Jumia Express so warranty holds.
  • ShopInverse tends to run the sharpest appliance pricing in Lagos. The catalog is smaller, but they fight for the brands they stock.
  • Pointek is the safe pick above ₦100K. The in-store pickup in Ikeja lets you inspect before paying.
  • Slot carries a handful of air fryers alongside the phones and laptops, mostly Philips and Tefal at steady prices.

What size to buy

Capacity is measured in litres, and the right number tracks how many people you cook for:

  • 3-4L: feeds one or two. Cheapest way in at ₦35-55K, but too small for a normal Nigerian family meal.
  • 5-6L: the sweet spot for most homes. Handles a whole chicken, a tray of fish, or a party-size batch of chips. ₦55-90K, and what most people should buy.
  • 7-9L: large families, batch cooking, entertaining. ₦95-150K. Worth it if you regularly feed five or more.
  • Dual-zone: two separate baskets, two foods at once. Look at Ninja and the Tefal Dual Easy Fry. ₦130-220K. A convenience upgrade, not a cooking-quality one.

Brands worth your money

Philips remains the gold standard. The Avance Collection units have the best build and the most consistent results, stocked at Konga, Jumia, Pointek, and Slot. Pay the premium if you plan to use it hard.

Tefal is the value pick. The Easy Fry and Easy Fry XXL deliver 80% of the Philips experience for 60% of the price, and every Nigerian retailer carries them.

Hisense sells locally-distributed units at sharp prices, particularly the larger sizes. Warranty claims go through Hisense Nigeria service centers without drama.

Ninja is the dual-zone and large-capacity choice. You mostly source it cross-border or through premium retailers like Pointek. It costs more than the rest, but the dual-zone Foodi range has no real local rival.

Brands to avoid

The generic ₦25-35K brands, Saachi, Master Chef, and the anonymous China imports, are a false economy. Poor temperature control, plastic basket coatings that flake into your food within months, and warranty support that exists on paper only. Spend an extra ₦20-30K on a Tefal or a Hisense instead.

The cross-border math

Amazon UK lists Tefal and Ninja units at GBP prices that work out 25-35% cheaper delivered to Lagos than the same SKU locally. Worth chasing on the larger Ninja Foodi units, where you save ₦40-70K. Under ₦60K, shipping and customs eat the saving, so it rarely adds up.

How we keep this current

Havlo refreshes air fryer pricing across every Nigerian retailer several times a week. Search by brand or model on the home page, or browse the Appliances category, for current prices.