Round steak has a reputation for being tough, chewy, and a little boring. It doesn’t have to be. With an air fryer, a lean eye of round steak comes out with a deeply browned, caramelized crust and a juicy pink center—no grill, no smoke, no babysitting a hot pan. This is honestly the most foolproof way I’ve found to cook this budget cut, and it’s on the table in under 20 minutes.

Below you’ll find the exact temperatures, times, and techniques to get it right every single time, plus a doneness chart you can actually trust and answers to the questions that trip most people up.
Why This Recipe Works
Eye of round is a lean cut from the rear leg of the cow, with very little marbling. That’s exactly why so many people overcook it into shoe leather. The air fryer solves the problem in three ways:
- Fast, intense, all-around heat sears the outside quickly so the inside doesn’t have time to dry out.
- It’s hands-off and repeatable. A thermometer plus a set temperature takes all the guesswork out of a cut that punishes mistakes.
- Cleanup is minimal—no greasy stovetop splatter and no firing up a whole grill for two steaks.
The trade-off with a lean cut is that doneness matters more than it does with a fatty ribeye. Cook eye of round past medium and it gets tough fast. The sweet spot is rare to medium-rare, sliced thin against the grain. I’ll walk you through exactly how to hit it.

Ingredients
You only need a few things, and the steak is the only one you’ll likely have to shop for.

- Eye of round steaks, cut about 1 to 1½ inches thick (roughly 8 oz each). Buying a whole eye of round roast and cutting your own steaks is cheaper and lets you control the thickness.
- Neutral oil (avocado, canola, or vegetable). Oil promotes browning and helps seasoning stick.
- Steak seasoning (your favorite blend, or skip it for salt and pepper only)
- Kosher salt
- Freshly ground black pepper
Why oil, not butter, for the steak itself? Butter has a low smoke point and tends to scorch at the high heat you want for searing. Use a neutral oil to cook, then add a pat of butter or compound butter after cooking for richness without the burnt taste.
Optional Upgrades
- A simple marinade or tenderizer. Because eye of round is lean and a little tough, 4 to 6 hours in a marinade with an acid (such as a splash of soy sauce, Worcestershire, and a little vinegar or citrus) makes a real difference in tenderness and flavor. This is the single biggest improvement most people overlook.
- Garlic powder, onion powder, smoked paprika, or a pinch of brown sugar in your seasoning rub. Brown sugar in particular helps build a sweeter, more caramelized crust.
- Chili flakes, chipotle, or cayenne if you like a little heat.
How to Make Air Fryer Round Steak

Step 1: Take the steaks out of the fridge 30 to 60 minutes before cooking and season them now so the salt has time to work in. A room-temperature steak cooks more evenly and browns better than a cold one straight from the fridge.
Step 2: Pat each steak dry with a paper towel—surface moisture is the enemy of a good crust. Rub a thin layer of oil over both sides, then season generously with salt, pepper, and your steak seasoning, pressing it in.

Step 3: Preheat to 400°F for 5 minutes. A hot basket gives you an immediate sear, which is the whole point with a lean cut.
Step 4: Place the steaks in the basket in a single layer with space around each one so the air can circulate. Crowding them steams the meat instead of searing it. Cook at 400°F, flipping once at the halfway mark for even browning on both sides. Use these times as a starting point, but rely on a thermometer for the final call:
| Doneness | Pull Temp (air fryer)* | Approx. Time at 400°F |
|---|---|---|
| Rare | 120–125°F | 7–8 minutes |
| Medium-rare (recommended) | 125–130°F | 8–10 minutes |
| Medium | 135–140°F | 10–12 minutes |
| Medium-well | 145–150°F | 12–14 minutes |
* Pull the steak about 5°F below your final target—it keeps cooking as it rests (this is called carryover cooking). Times assume a 1- to 1½-inch steak; thinner steaks cook faster, and every air fryer runs a little differently, so check early.
Should you flip it? Yes. Some recipes claim the circulating air makes flipping unnecessary, but a single flip at the halfway point gives you a more even crust on both sides. It takes five seconds and it’s worth it.

Step 5: Let the steak rest on a cutting board for 5 to 10 minutes before cutting. This lets the juices redistribute instead of running out onto your board.
Then—this is critical for eye of round—slice it thin and against the grain. Look at the direction the muscle fibers run and cut across them, not with them. Slicing against the grain shortens those fibers and is the difference between a tender bite and a chewy one. With a lean cut like this, technique at the cutting board matters as much as cook time.

Pro Tips for the Best Round Steak
- Buy the roast and cut your own steaks. It’s cheaper per pound and you control the thickness. A thicker steak (1½ inches) is more forgiving and less likely to overcook.
- A meat thermometer is non-negotiable here. With a lean cut and a short cook time, 60 seconds is the difference between juicy and dry. An instant-read thermometer pays for itself the first time you use it.
- Don’t skip the rest. Cutting in too early dumps the juices you worked to keep inside.
- Marinate if you have time. Even a quick 30-minute soak helps; 4–6 hours is better for tenderness.
- Finish with compound butter. A pat of garlic-herb or bacon butter melting over the hot sliced steak adds restaurant-level richness.
What to Serve With Air Fryer Round Steak
This steak plays well with just about any classic steakhouse side:
- Potatoes: air fryer mashed potatoes, a loaded baked potato, crispy air fryer fries, or roasted baby potatoes
- Green vegetables: roasted broccoli, air fryer asparagus, air fryer green beans, or air fryer cauliflower
- Salads: a crisp mixed green salad, a wedge salad, or a fresh broccoli salad
- Sauces and toppings: cowboy garlic herb butter, a peppercorn or brandy cream sauce, chimichurri, or a homemade steak sauce
- Sandwich it: thin-sliced leftovers make an outstanding steak sandwich with fried onions and aioli
How to Store and Reheat
- Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for 3 to 4 days.
- Freezer: Wrap tightly and freeze for up to 1 month. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.
- Reheat (best method): Bring to room temperature first, then warm gently. To avoid overcooking lean meat, reheat in the air fryer at a lower 300°F for just 3 to 4 minutes, or in a 250°F oven for about 10 minutes. The goal is to warm it, not cook it further.
- Make ahead: This reheats reasonably well, but eye of round is at its juicy best straight from the air fryer, so cook it fresh when you can.

Frequently Asked Questions
How long do you cook eye of round steak in an air fryer? At 400°F, plan on about 7–8 minutes for rare, 8–10 minutes for medium-rare, and 10–12 minutes for medium, for a 1- to 1½-inch steak. Always confirm with a thermometer, since thickness and air fryer models vary.
What temperature should round steak be cooked to? Pull it at 120–125°F for rare, 125–130°F for medium-rare, or 135–140°F for medium. Remember it climbs about 5°F while resting. Because eye of round is lean, medium-rare is the sweet spot for tenderness—go much past medium and it toughens up.
Do I need to flip the steak in the air fryer? Yes, flip once at the halfway point. It gives a more even, well-browned crust on both sides.
Should I preheat the air fryer? Yes. A 5-minute preheat at 400°F gives you an immediate sear, which keeps a lean cut from drying out before the outside browns.
Why is my round steak tough? Three usual culprits: it was overcooked (lean cuts get tough fast past medium), it wasn’t rested, or it was sliced with the grain instead of against it. Cook to medium-rare, rest 5–10 minutes, and slice thin across the muscle fibers.
Can I use a different cut? Yes. Top round and bottom round work with the same method, though they may need slightly different timing. For a richer, more marbled result, ribeye or sirloin also air fry beautifully.
Do I have to marinate it? No, but with this lean cut it genuinely helps. Even 30 minutes adds flavor, and a few hours improves tenderness noticeably.

More Air Fryer Steak Recipes
If this turned out well, here are a few more Fork to Spoon steak recipes worth trying:
- Air Fryer Steak: The Ultimate Guide (Every Cut, Time & Temp) — the master reference for cooking any cut in the air fryer
- Air Fryer Sirloin Steak — another lean, affordable cut that cooks up juicy and tender
- Air Fryer Ribeye Steak — a well-marbled, nearly foolproof cut finished with garlic basil butter
- Air Fryer Filet Mignon — the most tender cut of all, melt-in-your-mouth every time
- Air Fryer Steak Bites — bite-sized, garlic-buttery, and ready in minutes
- How to Reheat Steak in the Air Fryer — keep leftovers juicy instead of rubbery

Air Fryer Round Steak
Description
Ingredients
- 2 eye of round steaks, 1 to 1½ inches thick (about 8 oz each)
- 1 tablespoon neutral oil, avocado, canola, or vegetable
- 1 teaspoon steak seasoning
- ¾ teaspoon kosher salt
- ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Instructions
- Take the steaks out of the fridge 30 to 60 minutes before cooking. Pat dry with a paper towel.
- Rub a thin layer of oil over both sides, then season with salt, pepper, and steak seasoning, pressing it in.
- Preheat the air fryer to 400°F for 5 minutes.
- Place the steaks in the basket in a single layer with space around each one. Cook at 400°F, flipping once at the halfway mark.
- Cook 8–10 minutes for medium-rare (pull at 125–130°F). Use a meat thermometer for the final call, since thickness and air fryers vary.
- Rest the steaks 5 to 10 minutes, then slice thin against the grain before serving.
Equipment
- Instant-read meat thermometer
- Tongs
- Small Bowl
- Basting brush
- Cutting Board
Notes
- Pull the steak about 5°F below your target temp; it keeps cooking as it rests.
- Doneness guide: rare 120–125°F (7–8 min), medium-rare 125–130°F (8–10 min), medium 135–140°F (10–12 min), medium-well 145–150°F (12–14 min).
- Eye of round is lean, so medium-rare is the sweet spot. A 4–6 hour marinade boosts tenderness.
- Slicing thin and against the grain is essential for a tender bite.
Nutrition
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