Can dual baskets really halve our cook time and double the crisp—we put Chefman and Instant Pot head-to-head so you can pick the winner.
Busy weeknight? We tested the Chefman TurboFry Touch Dual and the Instant Pot VersaZone 9QT to find which dual‑basket air fryer delivers the best results, easiest controls, and greatest value for everyday cooks, so you can pick the right model confidently.
Family Friendly
We found this unit to be a dependable, family-focused dual-basket air fryer that makes cooking two different items at once straightforward. It balances useful convenience features (Sync Finish, shake reminder) with easy cleanup, though it isn’t the most powerful model on the market.
Performance Powerhouse
We were impressed by the versatility and performance — the higher wattage and EvenCrisp tech produce reliably crispy results and the VersaZone flexibility is handy for different meal sizes. It’s feature-rich and intuitive, though it takes more counter space and costs more than simpler dual-basket units.
Chefman TurboFry Touch
Instant Pot VersaZone
Chefman TurboFry Touch
Instant Pot VersaZone
Chefman TurboFry Touch
Instant Pot VersaZone
Quick Side‑by‑Side: Specs, Capacity, and Design
At‑a‑glance — why these two look similar on paper
We start with the core specs so you can see which unit fits your counter, cooking habits, and family size at a glance: both advertise a 9‑quart total capacity and dual‑zone cooking, but they take different approaches to controls, power, and included accessories.
Chefman TurboFry Touch Dual (what we see)
Chefman gives you a true dual‑basket design with Sync Finish and a convenient Shake reminder — built to be straightforward and family friendly.
Instant Pot VersaZone 9QT (what we see)
Instant Pot packs more power and smarter zone flexibility — you can run one 9‑qt cavity or two 4.5‑qt zones with separate controls.
Side-by-Side Feature Comparison
In‑Kitchen Performance: Real Cooking Tests & Results
Test setup
We ran the same recipes side‑by‑side: fresh fries, frozen fries, roasted vegetables, bone‑in chicken breasts, dehydrated apple chips, and a simultaneous two‑dish cook (proteins + veg). Temperatures are the set point we used; cook times are what finished to our preferred doneness.
Chefman TurboFry Touch — what we experienced
Chefman handled family portions well. Its Shake reminder is useful for fries and veg; it nudges you halfway so items crisp more evenly. We found slightly longer cook times but forgiving results.
Instant Pot VersaZone — what we experienced
Instant Pot’s EvenCrisp and the higher wattage produced faster browning and crisper edges. The independent‑temperature zones let us run different programs without compromise.
Measured results (typical settings we used)
Dual‑zone & real‑world notes
Features, Controls, and Everyday Usability
Controls and presets
We liked how both units keep things simple but for different users. Chefman uses one‑touch digital buttons and a clear shake reminder—great for set‑and‑forget cooks. Instant Pot offers a polished touchscreen with six smart presets and guided steps, which made reading and adjusting temps faster during busy cooks.
Zone programming and connectivity
We tested independent-zone cooking and saw a real difference.
Loading, nonstick, and cleanup
Both are designed for everyday use and cleaning.
Safety, build, and ergonomics
We paid attention to comfort and durability.
How they hold up to frequent use
We’d reach for Chefman when we want straightforward family meals with minimal fuss. Instant Pot earned our trust for heavier, more varied cooking and pros who want zone control and presets. Both survive messy cooks, but Instant Pot’s higher wattage and build make it more of a true kitchen workhorse.
Value, Maintenance, and Best Use Cases
Value versus price
We weigh price against real-world performance: Chefman (~$120) gives strong family-sized value — reliable crisping, Sync Finish, and simple one-touch controls. Instant Pot (~$189) costs more but brings higher wattage, EvenCrisp, richer presets, and true zone independence. If you want the crispest, fastest results and smarter zone control, the Instant Pot justifies the premium. If you want straightforward, budget-friendly family meals, Chefman delivers.
Maintenance & likely longevity
Both have dishwasher-safe baskets and nonstick coatings, so daily cleanup is quick. Coatings wear with metal utensils and abrasive scrubbing; we recommend silicone or nylon tools and gentle cleans. Fans and heat channels will collect grease over months — we clear crumbs and wipe vents every 2–4 weeks under heavy use to preserve airflow and motor life.
Parts and support
Chefman includes liners and a 1‑year warranty; replacement parts are available but fewer third‑party accessories exist. Instant Pot benefits from broader parts availability, brand support, and common replacement dividers/trays on Amazon, which helps long-term upkeep.
Which model for whom?
Quick pros & cons (by buyer)
Final Verdict: Our Pick and Practical Recommendation
We’d choose the Chefman for crisp everyday cooking — it’s faster to start, basket crisping is consistent, and one‑touch presets make fries and wings foolproof. For multi‑use versatility the Instant Pot VersaZone wins: EvenCrisp plus multi‑function cooking and independent temperatures make it the clear overall pick if you want oven‑style baking, dehydrating, and two‑zone meals.
Start with 400°F for fries (15–18 min, shake once), 375°F for wings (20–24 min), and 325°F for baking. Preheat 2–3 minutes. Clean baskets and trays by soaking and hand‑washing with a soft sponge; wipe the interior and dry thoroughly. Use dual baskets when cooking two different foods or staggered doneness to avoid reheating. Pick the Instant Pot if you want one machine to replace others; pick Chefman for speedy, everyday crispness—ready to start now? We’re excited to see what you cook—share your favorite dual‑basket recipe with us very soon!