You’ll usually deep fry fish fillets for about 3–6 minutes total in 350–375°F (175–190°C) oil, depending mostly on thickness and type of fish, until golden and flaky inside.

Quick Scoop

For most home deep-fry setups:

  • Thin fillets (under 1 cm / ¼–½ inch): about 2–3 minutes total, often 1–2 minutes per side if you’re turning them.
  • Medium fillets (about ½–1 inch / 1–2.5 cm): about 3–5 minutes total.
  • Thick fillets (1–1.5 inches / 2.5–4 cm): about 5–7 minutes total.

A simple way to think about it:

  • Most white fish (cod, haddock, tilapia, pollock) at standard fillet thickness will be done in 3–5 minutes in 350°F oil.
  • Delicate or very thin fish (sole, flounder) can be ready in 2–3 minutes.
  • Richer, thicker fish (salmon, trout, mackerel) can push closer to 4–6 minutes.

How to know it’s done (more important than the clock)

Even with time guidelines, always check:

  • Coating is deep golden brown and crisp.
  • Fillet feels firm but not hard when gently pressed with tongs.
  • Inside is opaque and flakes easily with a fork; no translucent parts.

If you cut into the thickest part and it’s still slightly translucent, drop it back in for another 30–60 seconds.

Tiny story-style example

You’ve got ½‑inch cod fillets, breaded and ready. Oil is holding at 350°F. You slide in three pieces without crowding the basket. By minute 3 they’re lightly golden and bubbling less; at minute 4 they’re a rich golden brown. You lift one, let excess oil drip, and cut into the thickest part: it flakes cleanly and is fully opaque. That batch took about 4 minutes , which fits right in the usual 3–5 minute window.

Simple timing guide (HTML table as requested)

html

<table>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Fish fillet thickness</th>
      <th>Typical total deep fry time at 350–375°F</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>Very thin (&lt; 1 cm / &lt; 1/2 in)</td>
      <td>2–3 minutes</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Medium (1/2–1 in / 1–2.5 cm)</td>
      <td>3–5 minutes</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Thick (1–1.5 in / 2.5–4 cm)</td>
      <td>5–7 minutes</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.