COSORI has multiple air fryer lines that overlap in price, and the Pro II vs TurboBlaze comparison is a common point of confusion since both sit in the same rough price bracket with similar branding.
Quick verdict
The TurboBlaze is the newer, larger, higher-function model — 6 quarts and 9 cooking modes with a PFAS-free ceramic coating and a wider temperature range. The Pro II is smaller at 5.8 quarts with 8 preset functions, at a typically lower price.
COSORI Pro II Air Fryer
A noticeably bigger basket than entry-level air fryers, with digital presets, at a price that still lands under $100 during most sales.
Check price on AmazonCOSORI 9-in-1 TurboBlaze Air Fryer
A larger 6-quart basket, 9 cooking modes (including Proof, useful for bread dough), a 90–450°F range wider than most competitors, and PFAS-free ceramic coating on the basket.
Check price on AmazonHead-to-head comparison
- Capacity — TurboBlaze at 6 quarts vs. Pro II at 5.8 quarts — a modest but real difference for larger batches
- Cooking modes — TurboBlaze offers 9 vs. Pro II's 8, including Proof mode for bread dough
- Temperature range — TurboBlaze's 90–450°F is wider than Pro II's range, useful for low-and-slow modes like dehydrating or proofing
- Basket coating — TurboBlaze specifically markets PFAS-free ceramic coating; check current Pro II listings for its coating spec if this matters to you
- Price — TurboBlaze typically costs more, reflecting the added capacity and modes
Who should buy which
Buy the Pro II if:
- You want COSORI's digital preset experience without paying for the newest model's extra modes
- 5.8 quarts covers your typical batch size
- Price is the deciding factor between the two
Buy the TurboBlaze if:
- You want the larger 6-quart basket for bigger batches
- Proof mode or the wider temperature range appeals to how you cook
- PFAS-free ceramic coating specifically matters to your buying decision
FAQs
Is the TurboBlaze just a bigger Pro II, or are the functions different? Both — it's larger and adds Proof mode plus a wider temperature range, not just a capacity bump.
Does the extra capacity matter for a household of 1-2 people? Not usually — the Pro II's 5.8 quarts is plenty for one or two people; the TurboBlaze's extra room matters more for families or batch cooking.
Are presets transferable between the two models? No — each model has its own preset menu reflecting its specific mode count and temperature range.
Bottom line
If you regularly cook larger batches or want Proof mode, the TurboBlaze's extra capacity and modes justify the higher price. For typical one-or-two-person cooking, the Pro II covers the same core air-frying job for less.