EOFY Sale 2025: Save $251 on Philips 5000 Series XXL Air Fryer
That's where Philips comes to the rescue with its 16-in-1 5000 Series XXL Connected Air Fryer saving you time, space and money.
This kitchen whiz has been described by customers as 'a game-changer in my kitchen', 'incredibly functional' and one reviewer gushed that it 'cooks so effortlessly'.
The air fryer can pretty much do it all, with settings including air fry, bake, roast, grill, stew, saute, defrost, reheat and keep warm.
What's even better – it's now selling for 56 per cent off at Amazon as part of the EOFY sales. You can buy one now and have dinner on the table in no time for $198 and save a massive $251.
Shop now at Amazon
This Philips appliance isn't like any ordinary air fryer. Instead, it uses RapidAir+ technology with its patented 'starfish' shaped base to move heat around the fryer evenly and quickly to ensure everything is cooked well and with a crispy coating all over.
It is designed to cook food with up to 90 per cent less fat than traditional cooking methods. It's also built to use up to 60 per cent less energy and be up to 40 per cent faster than cooking in a regular kitchen oven.
And it can do plenty more than just air fry. You can choose to cook with 16 preset functions: air fry, roast, bake, grill, toast, stew, saute, stir-fry, confit, one-pot cook, ferment, defrost, dehydrate, reheat, cook from frozen and keep warm.
Once you've selected how you want to cook, you can make up to six portions to feed everyone in the family using its large 7.2L capacity.
Not sure what to cook? It's got you covered with access to the Philips NutriU app which has over 600 recipes to try.
And if you just want to sit back and relax rather than cook, it pairs with your home Wi-Fi and the HomeID app to control and monitor the cooking process all from your phone.
After you've finished eating, clean-up is easy. The air fryer basket has a non-stick coating, is PFOA-free and is dishwasher safe.
In addition to all these features, it has earned rave reviews across the board.
' This air fryer has been absolutely fantastic,' one five-star reviewer calls it. 'Everything comes out wonderfully. I love having the cooking app on my phone, so easy to use and really helpful in working out correct temperature and timing. How did I live without this appliance?'
Another Amazon shopper echoed the sentiment, raving, 'It's a game-changer in my kitchen.'
They added, 'I've thrown in everything from fries to chicken wings, and it's like having a personal chef that always nails it. Cleaning up is a breeze too – no crazy mess to deal with. Plus, it looks sleek on my countertop, so that's a bonus. Seriously, if you're into easy, tasty cooking, this Philips air fryer is the bomb.'
A third spoke highly of the app connectivity, revealing, 'This air fryer is so incredibly functional. I love the app, because it just 'works' – which can't be said for so many other appliances out there.
'I love how I can easily pick even a custom setting from my phone – and then send it to my air fryer to immediately start cooking at the desired time and temperature.'
The versatility of the air fryer got a big tick from another happy customer.
'So versatile, I hardly use the oven now,' they wrote in their five-star review, while another added, 'This thing cooks so effortlessly and cleaning is a breeze.'
So whether you're after a fast, easy and healthy meal, want to clear the clutter from the kitchen bench with an all-rounder appliance or need to feed all the fussy eaters in your family, the Philips 5000 Series XXL Air Fryer will get the job done – and all for an amazing price.
Don't miss out on this $251 discount and buy yours on Amazon now for just $198.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
WHAT ARE THE EOFY SALES?
The EOFY sale is a sales event held by shopping brands and retailers across Australia ahead of the end of the financial year on June 30.
Many older and overstock items are heavily discounted to help boost profit margins before the start of the new financial year on July 1.
This means Aussies can snap up huge bargains and buy some tax deductible items.
Most of the discounts on offer will finish at midnight on June 30, but some end a little earlier in the day, so make sure you add the items to your cart and check out as soon as possible to guarantee you're getting them for the best price.
WHAT KITCHEN APPLIANCES ARE DISCOUNTED IN THE EOFY SALES?
You'll be able to find heaps of kitchen appliances for a fraction of the price during the EOFY sales.
Some of the biggest brands have slashed their prices on coffee machines, mixers, blenders, air fryers, multi cookers, toasters – you name it and you can probably find it on sale.
To see all the biggest and best deals, .
WHEN DO THE EOFY SALES END?
The majority of EOFY deals will end at midnight on Monday, June 30 2025. However, some brands opt to end the discount period earlier in the day. It is recommended to buy the products on sale as soon as possible to prevent missing out on the cheaper price.
Looking for more bargains? Sign up to our to find out all the latest on upcoming sales events, new product releases and first-hand reviews.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Australia to miss out on lifesaving vehicle escape tech
Australia will miss out on life-saving technology designed to prevent drivers from drowning. Zeekr, a new electric vehicle brand, has developed a safety device that allows occupants to escape from a submerged vehicle. But the technology will only be offered in left-hand-drive markets, such as China, for now. . Zeekr's decision to deny Australian drivers new safety tech comes as a rising number of motorists fall victim to floodwater. Dr Francois Flocard, director of industry research at UNSW's Water Research Laboratory, said 'the number of fatalities in vehicles has increased in the last 15 years'. 'The feature you mentioned is interesting and definitely can help people', Dr Francois said. 'By the time water crosses the window, it's already very dangerous and almost too late.' Zeekr's tech a world first. It works with a lever tucked away near the driver's knees. A quick tug of a cable activates a window-breaking hammer within the driver's door that strikes the bottom of the window glass. Once triggered, the hammer can displace up to 3,000 newtons of force to shatter the window. This is approximately 33 times the impact strength of a typical safety hammer, equivalent to the force of five adults simultaneously smashing into the window. More than 100,000 vehicles across Australia are equipped with electric door handles which may fail to operate when submerged in water. Earlier this year, it was revealed that not all vehicles have a manual door release mechanism as a backup in the event of a power failure. Power-operated doors use a car's 12-volt battery – not the high-voltage battery used to power electric cars – to enable occupants to exit the vehicle with the press of a button. If the car's 12V battery dies or gets disconnected after an impact, occupants must use a manual door release function to exit the vehicle quickly. Vehicle safety body ANCAP recently added vehicle submergence to its safety assessment criteria, a move aimed at helping first responders access trapped occupants and ensuring safe egress during flooding events. Carla Hoorweg, ANCAP's chief executive, said, 'in recent years, we've seen a number of significant flooding events across Australia'. 'The number of new vehicle models fitted with electric door opening is also increasing,' she said. 'Combined, these aspects highlight the strong need for this emergency access capability to help prevent unnecessary loss of lives.' When a car is submerged, water pressure makes it nearly impossible to open the doors. Additionally, electric door and window switches may also fail. ANCAP awards points in the Adult Occupant Protection assessment for vehicles equipped with effective submergence countermeasures. Manufacturers may offer alternative methods to open windows if standard measures are not demonstrated. Emergency glass hammers are an alternative means of egress that car manufacturers can opt to implement during ANCAP testing. Professor Giesbrecht, a world-renowned expert in vehicle submersions based in Canada, said the biggest danger isn't water – it's time. 'You get people who are awake and functional who drown because they don't know how to escape,' he said. Many people make the mistake of believing their car will protect them or that waiting for help is the safest option. But in a flood event, even emergency services can't respond in time. So Zeekr's groundbreaking solution offers a potential lifeline in these situations. Unfortunately, the brand can't justify a compelling business case to introduce this safety technology in Australia. And it is a decision that highlights a concerning trend in the current automotive market. Car makers are engaged in an intense EV price war in Australia due to excessive production levels. Unfortunately, this means every dollar counts, and manufacturers can't always justify including features that push up prices for consumers.

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Artificial intelligence set to change the workforce, impacting graduate jobs, new research reveals
Solicitor Kelly Waring isn't shy about how beneficial artificial intelligence (AI) is to her litigation work spanning clients across New South Wales and south-east Queensland. "Evolve or die," she said. The 36-year-old principal director of Lismore-based firm Parker Kissane introduced an AI program to the team's workplace 12 months ago, which allowed complex case summaries to be fast-tracked, as well as managing accountancy and clerical tasks. Tasks that young lawyers traditionally cut their teeth on are predicted to be significantly disrupted by digital automation, and female graduates will suffer the most as a result, new research has found. "Women make up the majority of legal graduates today, but they're concentrated in areas that are most vulnerable to automation, AI," said lead author Meraiah Foley from the University of Sydney Business School. Contracts, conveyancing, due diligence and discovery are some of the roles being transformed or hollowed out by digitalisation, according to the research. Dr Foley, whose research specialises in gender inequality at work, said there's also an increasing expectation that younger workers will be able to justify their "value add" from day one. "This puts a really significant burden of adaptation on younger workers. They have to go above and beyond to prove themselves," she said. It adds to recent research from the United States, which points to a rising unemployment rate among university graduates, due in part to artificial intelligence displacing traditional grad roles. The Oxford Economics study found an "unusually high" 5.8 per cent unemployment rate among graduates, particularly in technical fields, where AI has made faster gains. Dr Foley said that so far, nothing like that has been seen at the University of Sydney, where she works. "That could be reflecting some sort of lag, rather than whole scale immunity to these types of transitions and changes." On the recruitment frontline, Clinton Marks, a director at Robert Half, said right now AI was reshaping tasks, not replacing entire jobs. "Graduate hiring in the past: it was almost a 'rite of passage' to do the most mundane tasks, reconciling a spreadsheet, writing up reports," he said. "Generative AI is taking over some of those tasks." Murray Cassar, general manager for education at the Tax Institute, described AI as a "superpower" for graduates, with AI becoming a "wingman" to cut down on tasks like analysing large data sets. Mr Cassar has witnessed a drop in major firms recruiting graduates this year, but believed it was related to market conditions, rather than AI replacing these jobs. He said conversely, mid-tier firms had boosted the number of graduate roles offered. Director of the UNSW centre for the future of the legal profession, Michael Legg, agreed it was too early to tell whether the Australian graduate market was experiencing a similar contraction, but regardless, technology would have an impact. "You need digital literacy, new technology skills… but also interpersonal skills and what I call the concept of 'practical wisdom'." Fourth year Griffith University law student, Stella Hayes, 22, works at Parker Kissane and has seen first-hand how deeply AI is embedded in the job. "It's an awesome tool you can use for administrative tasks like preliminary research and creating briefs," she said. "I think we can definitely use it to our advantage to get things done a lot faster so that we have more time to learn the advocacy and the interpersonal skills to deal with clients." Her boss, Kelly Waring predicts a transformative change in how law firms operate, particularly the role of support staff. "Their skill set is simply going to change to a minimum of, 'How do I prompt and review AI?', and 'How do I check and cross reference AI with reality or advice from a senior lawyer?'." Professor Legg predicts as technology improves consumers will turn to it for straight-forward legal tasks. "Obtaining basic legal information will be possible, you won't necessarily need a lawyer for that," he said. "But there's still an issue as to whether that sort of technology, which could improve access to justice, may also make mistakes." Ms Waring isn't concerned about a reduction in potential legal work if people decide to turn to AI tools for do-it-yourself legal tasks. "As a litigator, the cheeky part of me wants to say that's going to generate a lot of work for me," she said. "[Failed] will kits from the post office already make me a lot of income. "Answering questions in AI just does not take into consideration, some random, specific circumstance in your life that completely changes [your legal position], but you just don't have the mind to disclose it to the Bot." Solicitor Kelly Waring also believes AI could revolutionise the legal system by absorbing all the "paper shuffling" and exchange of documents in courts, which still use outdated methods including posting documents and transferring data via USBs. Ultimately, she envisions court processes "happening in an AI format," similar to what is already occurring in the conveyancing space. For law-student Stella, she said she and her classmates — who've signed up to five-year degrees and six-figure HECS debts — aren't feeling threatened by AI taking their job. "It's such a new thing and I don't think people have really grappled with the technology and where it can go. "I mean if you were a personal trainer, ChatGPT could take your job and create meal plans and work-out routines. "But for me, I don't think my job is at threat…. Well, not yet."

ABC News
10 hours ago
- ABC News
AI productivity gains could mask social consequences lasting generations, says AI expert
The co-director of the Human Technology Institute and professor of responsible technology at UTS, Edward Santow, says AI offers plenty of opportunity but the risks of adoption are real and need to be talked about.