🍠 Air Fryer Sweet Potato Fries

The trick to crispy sweet potato fries that actually stay crunchy

🍠 Sweet Potato Fries Cooking Chart

TypeTemp °FTimeNotes
Homemade thin cut390°F12-15 minShake every 5 min
Homemade thick cut390°F18-22 minFlip halfway
Homemade wedges400°F20-25 minFlip at 12 min
Homemade cubes400°F15-18 minShake every 5 min
Frozen sweet potato fries390°F12-16 minDon’t overcrowd
Frozen sweet potato waffle fries400°F14-17 minSingle layer

✨ The Cornstarch Trick

Sweet potatoes have significantly more moisture and sugar than regular potatoes, which makes them notoriously difficult to get crispy. The natural sugars caramelize and burn before the exterior has time to dehydrate into a crunchy shell. The solution is cornstarch.

How It Works

After cutting your sweet potato fries, toss them in a bowl with 1-2 tablespoons of cornstarch per pound. The cornstarch absorbs surface moisture and creates a thin, dry coating that crisps up in the hot circulating air. This one step is the difference between soggy, floppy fries and fries with a genuinely crispy, crunchy exterior.

The Full Process

Cut the sweet potatoes into evenly sized pieces. Soak them in cold water for 30 minutes to draw out excess starch (optional but helps). Drain and pat completely dry with paper towels. Toss with cornstarch first, then add 1-2 tablespoons of oil and your seasoning. The order matters — cornstarch on dry fries, then oil, then spices.

🔪 Cutting for Crispiness

How you cut sweet potato fries matters as much as how you cook them. Size and uniformity determine whether you get evenly crispy fries or a mix of burnt edges and raw centers.

Thin Fries (¼″)

Thin fries crisp the fastest and produce the crunchiest results. They cook in 12-15 minutes and develop a high ratio of crispy exterior to soft interior. The downside is they burn quickly if you are not watching — check them starting at 10 minutes. Best for dipping and snacking.

Thick Fries (½″)

Thick-cut fries give you a better balance of crispy outside and creamy, soft inside. They take 18-22 minutes and are more forgiving since the thick center acts as a buffer against overcooking. This is the most popular cut for sweet potato fries.

Wedges

Wedges produce the most satisfying texture contrast — deeply caramelized on the flat sides with a fluffy, sweet interior. Cut the sweet potato in half lengthwise, then each half into 6-8 wedges. Lay them flat-side down in the basket for maximum browning on the cut surfaces.

Keep It Uniform

Whatever cut you choose, make all the pieces the same thickness. A mix of thin and thick pieces means some will burn while others are undercooked. Spending an extra minute on even cuts saves you from uneven results.

🍯 Seasoning Ideas

Sweet potatoes pair well with both sweet and savory seasonings. The natural sweetness means you can go in either direction and get great results.

Savory

Salt, pepper, garlic powder, and smoked paprika is the classic combination. Cumin and chili powder add a Southwestern kick. A pinch of cayenne pepper balances the sweetness with heat. Always season after tossing with cornstarch and oil so the spices stick to the oily coating.

Sweet

Cinnamon and a light dusting of brown sugar creates a dessert-like fry that is incredible with vanilla yogurt dip. Nutmeg and allspice work well in fall and winter. Add sweet seasonings during the last 3-4 minutes of cooking rather than the start to prevent the sugar from burning.

🍠 Choosing the Right Sweet Potato

Orange (Garnet, Jewel, Beauregard)

These are the most common sweet potatoes in American supermarkets — often labeled simply as “yams,” even though true yams are a different vegetable. They have moist, sweet, deep-orange flesh and crisp up well in the air fryer. The classic choice for sweet potato fries.

Japanese (Murasaki)

Purple skin and white-to-pale-yellow flesh. Drier and starchier than orange sweet potatoes, which means they actually crisp up more easily and have a chestnut-like flavor. Highly recommended if you can find them — many people prefer them for fries.

Purple (Stokes, Okinawan)

Purple skin and purple flesh. Subtly sweet, slightly drier than orange varieties, with a stunning color that makes them a great party food. The texture is firmer and they hold their shape better. Cook them like Japanese sweet potatoes.

Buying Tips

Look for firm, smooth potatoes without soft spots, bruises, or sprouting. Smaller-to-medium-sized potatoes (about 1 lb each) yield more evenly sized fries. Avoid massive sweet potatoes — they can be fibrous and tough at the center. Store at room temperature, never in the fridge (cold ruins the texture).

⚠️ Common Sweet Potato Fry Mistakes

Mistake 1: Skipping Cornstarch

Without cornstarch, sweet potato fries come out soft and floppy almost every time. The cornstarch absorbs surface moisture and provides a starchy shell that crisps in the hot air. Bumping the cornstarch from 1 tablespoon to 2 tablespoons makes a noticeable difference.

Mistake 2: Cutting Pieces of Different Sizes

Uneven sweet potato fries are unevenly cooked. Thinner pieces burn while thicker ones stay raw. Square off the potato by trimming the rounded ends and edges before cutting fries, so every piece has the same dimensions. The trimmings can be diced into cubes and cooked separately.

Mistake 3: Using Too Much Oil

Counterintuitive but true: too much oil makes sweet potato fries soggy, not crispier. The fries get coated in oil and steam rather than browning. Use 1–2 teaspoons of oil per pound of fries, no more. The cornstarch is doing the heavy lifting, not the oil.

Mistake 4: Cranking the Temperature Too High

Sweet potatoes burn faster than regular potatoes because of their sugar content. At 425°F+ the outsides char before the insides cook. Stick to 390–400°F. If your air fryer runs hot, drop to 380°F and add a couple of extra minutes.

Mistake 5: Not Shaking the Basket

Fries that sit in one position stick to the basket and brown only on one side. Shake the basket every 5 minutes for thin fries and every 7 minutes for thick fries. The shake redistributes the pieces and exposes new surfaces to the heat.

🥄 Dipping Sauce Recipes

Chipotle Mayo

Mix ½ cup mayonnaise, 1–2 chipotle peppers in adobo (finely minced), 1 teaspoon adobo sauce from the can, juice of half a lime, and 1 teaspoon honey. Adjust heat by adding more or fewer chipotle peppers. The smoky-spicy-creamy combination is the gold-standard sweet potato fry dip.

Maple Cinnamon Yogurt

Whisk ½ cup plain Greek yogurt with 1 tablespoon maple syrup, ½ teaspoon cinnamon, and a pinch of salt. A dessert-leaning dip that turns sweet potato fries into something close to apple pie. Especially good with cinnamon-sugar-dusted fries.

Honey Mustard

Mix ¼ cup Dijon mustard, 2 tablespoons honey, 1 tablespoon mayonnaise, and 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar. A balanced sweet-tangy classic that works equally well with sweet or savory fries.

Cilantro Lime Crema

Blend ½ cup sour cream, ¼ cup chopped fresh cilantro, juice of 1 lime, 1 minced garlic clove, ¼ teaspoon cumin, and salt to taste. Fresh, bright, and slightly tangy — cuts through the rich sweetness of the fries perfectly.

Garlic Aioli

Mix ½ cup mayonnaise, 3 finely minced garlic cloves, 1 teaspoon lemon juice, 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard, and a pinch of salt. Let rest 15 minutes for the garlic flavor to develop. Simple, classic, never disappointing.

Marshmallow Fluff Dip (Dessert Style)

For sweet-style cinnamon sugar fries, mix ½ cup marshmallow fluff with ¼ cup cream cheese and a splash of vanilla. The result is a dipping sauce that turns the fries into a dessert. Kids go crazy for this.

🍽️ Serving Sweet Potato Fries

As a Side

Sweet potato fries pair especially well with burgers (the sweet/savory contrast is perfect), pulled pork sandwiches, fish tacos, grilled chicken, and Thanksgiving leftovers. They are an upgrade over plain fries for almost any sandwich.

As a Loaded Topping

Pile crispy sweet potato fries on a plate and top with pulled pork, BBQ sauce, coleslaw, and pickled jalapenos for an over-the-top loaded fry plate. Or go Mexican: top with seasoned ground beef, refried beans, queso, pico de gallo, and sour cream for sweet potato nachos.

Salad Add-In

Cubed crispy sweet potato adds great texture and natural sweetness to salads. Try a kale Caesar with sweet potato cubes, a southwestern salad with sweet potatoes and black beans, or a fall harvest salad with sweet potato, dried cranberries, pecans, and goat cheese.

Breakfast Hash

Use leftover sweet potato fries as the base for a quick breakfast hash. Reheat in the air fryer, top with a fried egg, crumbled bacon, and avocado. The crispy sweet potatoes act like fancy home fries.

📦 Storage & Reheating

Storing Leftovers

Sweet potato fries lose their crispness fastest of any potato fry — they go limp within an hour at room temperature. Store leftovers in the refrigerator in an airtight container for up to 3 days. They will not be crispy from the fridge, but they reheat well.

Reheating

The air fryer is the only acceptable way to reheat sweet potato fries. Heat at 400°F for 3–4 minutes, shaking once. They come back to most of their original crispness. The microwave makes them soft and weird. Skip it entirely.

Freezing Homemade Cut Fries

You can prep sweet potato fries ahead by cutting, blanching for 3 minutes in boiling water, drying thoroughly, and freezing in a single layer on a sheet pan. Once frozen, transfer to a freezer bag. Cook directly from frozen at 390°F for 16–20 minutes. This gives you homemade fries on demand.

Make-Ahead Prep

You can cut sweet potatoes up to 24 hours in advance. Store the cut fries submerged in cold water in the refrigerator. Drain and pat very dry before tossing with cornstarch and cooking. The water bath prevents browning and keeps them fresh.

💡 Sweet Potato Fry Tips

  • Toss in cornstarch before oil for the crispiest results
  • Cut all fries to the same thickness for even cooking
  • Don’t overcrowd — half-fill the basket maximum
  • Sweet potatoes burn faster than regular potatoes — check early
  • Let fries cool for 2 minutes after cooking — they crisp up further as they cool
  • Use only 1–2 teaspoons of oil per pound — more makes them soggy
  • Add sweet seasonings (cinnamon, brown sugar) in the last 3–4 minutes to avoid burning
  • Store cut fries in cold water for up to 24 hours of advance prep

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are my sweet potato fries soggy?

The two most common causes are too much moisture and overcrowding. Sweet potatoes are naturally high in moisture, so you need to pat them very dry and use the cornstarch coating trick to absorb surface water. Overcrowding traps steam between the fries and prevents the exterior from crisping. Fill the basket only half full and cook in batches if needed.

Do I need to soak sweet potato fries before air frying?

Soaking in cold water for 30 minutes is optional but helpful. It draws out excess surface starch, which reduces stickiness and helps the fries crisp up more evenly. If you are short on time, skip the soak and just pat them very dry. The cornstarch coating compensates for most of the benefit that soaking provides.

What is the best dipping sauce for air fryer sweet potato fries?

The most popular pairings are chipotle mayo (mayo + adobo sauce + lime), honey mustard, or maple cinnamon yogurt dip. The natural sweetness of the fries works best with sauces that add acidity, heat, or both to create contrast. Simple garlic aioli is another crowd favorite that balances the sweetness with savory richness.

Can I use frozen sweet potato fries in the air fryer?

Yes — frozen sweet potato fries actually come out crispier in the air fryer than in the oven. Cook at 390°F for 12–16 minutes, shaking every 5 minutes. No oil needed since they come pre-oiled. Do not overcrowd the basket. Most major brands (Alexia, Trader Joe’s, Ore-Ida) work great.

Are air fryer sweet potato fries healthy?

Compared to deep-fried sweet potato fries, dramatically yes — air fryer fries use 1–2 teaspoons of oil per pound instead of the cup or more required for deep frying. Sweet potatoes themselves are nutrient-dense (high in vitamin A, fiber, and antioxidants). The cornstarch adds a small amount of carbs but very little net change to the nutritional profile.

Can I make sweet potato fries without cornstarch?

Yes, but they will be noticeably less crispy. If you avoid cornstarch (gluten-free or paleo diets), substitute arrowroot powder, potato starch, or tapioca starch in the same amount — all work nearly as well. Some people use rice flour, but the result is slightly less crispy and has a faint nuttiness.

Do I need to peel sweet potatoes for fries?

Personal preference. The skin is edible and contains additional nutrients and fiber. It also crisps up nicely in the air fryer, giving you a textural contrast with the soft interior. For a more refined look or if you prefer the texture, peel them. Either way, scrub the potatoes well under cold water before cutting.

🔥 Sweet Potato Fries: Oven vs Air Fryer

Sweet potato fries crisp up far better in the air fryer than in the oven, where they often steam and turn soft.

MethodTemperatureTimeResult
Conventional oven425°F25–30 minOften soft and uneven
Air fryer380°F15–18 minCrisp outside, tender inside

Faster and much crispier. Working from an oven recipe? Use our oven to air fryer converter to convert any temperature and time automatically, or the air fryer to oven converter to go the other way.