Walk down the cooking oil aisle and you'll see twenty options that all promise to be the best, the healthiest, the most authentic. The truth is messier and more interesting: the right oil depends entirely on what you're cooking, the temperature you're cooking at, and what flavors you want in the final dish. The wrong oil for the job will burn, taste off, or — at worst — create harmful compounds you don't want in your food.
This is the complete guide. Below: every common cooking oil compared, when each one shines, when each one fails, and the three or four oils that should actually live in your pantry. By the end you'll know exactly which oil to grab for searing a steak, dressing a salad, deep-frying chicken, or making a finishing drizzle on roasted vegetables.
The two numbers that matter most
Before any specific oil discussion, two things determine whether an oil is right for a recipe:
Smoke point. The temperature at which an oil starts to smoke and break down. Past the smoke point, the oil's flavor turns acrid, its nutritional benefits degrade, and it can release harmful compounds. Cooking above an oil's smoke point is the most common mistake home cooks make.
Flavor neutrality vs. character. Some oils (canola, refined avocado, vegetable) are essentially flavorless. Others (extra virgin olive, sesame, walnut) carry strong, distinctive flavors. Match the oil's flavor character to whether you want it to disappear or become part of the dish.
Smoke points: the master chart
| Oil | Smoke Point | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Refined avocado oil | 520°F | High-heat searing, frying, roasting |
| Refined safflower oil | 510°F | High-heat frying |
| Refined sunflower oil | 450°F | Frying, sautéing, baking |
| Refined peanut oil | 450°F | Deep frying, stir-frying |
| Refined canola oil | 400°F | Sautéing, baking, frying |
| Refined vegetable oil | 400-450°F | Sautéing, baking, frying |
| Light olive oil (refined) | 465°F | Sautéing, frying, neutral baking |
| Refined coconut oil | 450°F | Sautéing, baking |
| Ghee (clarified butter) | 485°F | Sautéing, finishing |
| Extra virgin olive oil | 375-410°F | Sautéing, finishing, salad dressings |
| Sesame oil (toasted) | 350°F | Finishing only — not for cooking |
| Butter | 302°F | Low-heat sautéing, baking |
| Unrefined coconut oil | 350°F | Low-heat baking, finishing |
| Walnut oil | 320°F | Finishing, salads only |
| Flaxseed oil | 225°F | Cold use only — never heat |
The single rule that follows from this chart: match the smoke point to the cooking method. Searing a steak (450-500°F pan) demands an oil with a smoke point above 450°F. Sautéing onions (300-350°F pan) works fine with extra virgin olive oil. Salad dressing doesn't need a smoke point at all.
The oils worth buying
Extra virgin olive oil — the everyday hero
Extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) is the most versatile cooking oil for everyday use, and it's the single most important oil to buy good quality. Cheap "olive oil" labeled in vague ways (often "light" or "pure") may be cut with cheaper oils or be from olives past their prime. Real EVOO from a single source, in dark glass, with a harvest date is worth the premium.
Best for: Sautéing onions, garlic, vegetables; finishing pasta, soups, and grilled meats; salad dressings; bread dipping; making mayonnaise and aioli; baking quick breads and certain cookies.
Avoid for: Deep frying (its smoke point is too low for sustained high-heat use), neutral-flavored baking where you don't want olive flavor.
Buy this kind: Cold-pressed, unfiltered, from a single country (preferably a single estate). California Olive Ranch, Cobram Estate, and Bertolli Organic are widely-respected supermarket brands. For a step up, look for Italian or Spanish DOP-certified oils with a harvest date within the past year.
Single-origin California olives, cold-pressed, available at most supermarkets. Affordable enough for daily cooking, high-quality enough to use as a finishing oil.
Check current price →Avocado oil — the high-heat champion
Refined avocado oil has the highest smoke point of any common cooking oil (520°F), making it the gold standard for high-heat applications: searing, deep frying, stir-frying, and high-temperature roasting. It's essentially flavorless when refined, which means it doesn't interfere with other ingredients.
Best for: Searing meats, deep-frying, stir-frying, high-heat roasting, baking when you want a neutral-tasting oil.
Avoid for: Salad dressings (the flavor is too neutral to add interest — though some unrefined versions have a buttery character that works), recipes specifically calling for olive oil's flavor.
Buyer beware: Avocado oil quality varies enormously, and some commercial avocado oils have been found to be adulterated with cheaper oils. Look for brands certified by independent testing or third-party labs. Chosen Foods and Primal Kitchen are widely tested and reliable.
Independently tested for purity, with a smoke point of 500°F+. The standard recommendation when avocado oil specifically matters in a recipe.
Check current price →Refined coconut oil — for specific flavors
Refined coconut oil is solid at room temperature, has a 450°F smoke point, and a barely-detectable coconut flavor. Useful in specific applications.
Best for: Baking (where you want a solid fat that creams like butter), Thai and South Asian cooking (where coconut belongs), vegan baking, popcorn (it produces movie-theater-style results).
Avoid for: Italian cooking, salad dressings (it solidifies in cold dishes), recipes where coconut flavor would be unwelcome.
Refined vs. unrefined: Refined has higher smoke point and minimal coconut flavor. Unrefined (also called "virgin") has lower smoke point and pronounced coconut flavor. For cooking, refined; for baking where you want coconut character, unrefined.
Toasted sesame oil — finishing only
Toasted sesame oil is one of the most flavorful oils on Earth — a small drizzle transforms a dish. But it has a low smoke point (350°F) and a fragile flavor that breaks down when heated. Treat it as a finishing oil, not a cooking oil.
Best for: Finishing stir-fries (added at the end, off heat), salad dressings, marinades, dipping sauces, drizzling on rice or noodles.
Avoid for: Heating directly, deep frying, sautéing.
Ghee — the unsung hero
Ghee is clarified butter — butter with the milk solids removed. It has all of butter's flavor (and then some, since the milk solids that remain are toasted), a high smoke point (485°F), and stays shelf-stable.
Best for: Sautéing, finishing roasted vegetables, replacing butter in any recipe where browning would benefit, Indian cooking (where it's native), eggs.
Why it's underrated: Most home cooks don't realize ghee outperforms butter in any application where you'd want butter's flavor but need the high smoke point. Sautéing vegetables in ghee gives a deeper flavor than sautéing in any other oil.
Oils to be cautious about
Vegetable oil (generic). "Vegetable oil" can be soybean, canola, corn, sunflower, or a blend. The exact composition varies by brand and even batch. Functionally fine for high-heat cooking, but if you want to know what you're cooking with, choose a single named oil instead.
Canola oil. Refined canola has a clean flavor, neutral profile, and decent smoke point. It works fine for everyday cooking but has come under scrutiny over its omega-6 content and the heavy refining process. Many cooks have replaced it with avocado oil for high-heat applications.
Soybean oil. The most common "vegetable oil" in industrial food production. Cheap, neutral, high in omega-6 fatty acids. Fine in moderation; controversial in the volumes most processed foods contain.
Hydrogenated and partially hydrogenated oils. These contain trans fats and have been largely banned for industrial use in the U.S. since 2018, but some processed products still slip through. Avoid completely.
Flaxseed and walnut oils. Rich in omega-3s but extraordinarily fragile. Never heat them. Use only as cold finishing oils, and refrigerate after opening.
The four oils that should be in your kitchen
Most home cooks need only four oils total to cover essentially every cooking situation:
- Extra virgin olive oil — your default for sautéing, salads, finishing, and bread.
- Refined avocado oil — for any high-heat application: searing, frying, high-temperature roasting.
- Toasted sesame oil — finishing only, especially for Asian dishes.
- Ghee or refined coconut oil — depending on your cooking style. Ghee for everything, coconut for baking and Asian cuisine specifically.
That's it. Skip the dozen other bottles. The above four cover every use case from omelets to deep-frying to making a vinaigrette.
Storage and longevity
Oils oxidize and go rancid over time, and rancid oil tastes bad and is genuinely harmful. To extend shelf life:
- Buy smaller bottles. A liter of EVOO that takes a year to use will be worse at month 11 than a 500ml bottle that takes six months.
- Store in a cool, dark place. Heat and light accelerate oxidation. Don't store olive oil next to the stove.
- Use dark glass when possible. Clear bottles let in light; tinted glass protects the oil.
- Smell before using. Rancid oil smells like crayons or paint. If your oil smells off, it is — toss it.
- Refrigerate fragile oils. Walnut, flaxseed, and high-quality unfiltered EVOO last considerably longer in the fridge.
The bottom line
Most cooking oil confusion comes from over-thinking. The vast majority of home cooking uses two oils: extra virgin olive oil for everyday sautéing and finishing, and refined avocado oil for high-heat cooking. Add toasted sesame oil for Asian-influenced dishes and ghee or coconut oil based on what you cook most, and you're covered.
Match the oil's smoke point to the cooking method. Don't over-pay for "premium" oils unless you'll taste the difference (you will for finishing oils; you won't for high-heat cooking oils). Don't under-pay for oils where adulteration is common — particularly avocado oil and high-end EVOO. Store everything cool and dark, and use smaller bottles you'll actually finish.