Instant Pot Rice Cook Times
If you need a quick reference for cooking rice, here is the timing I use for cooking the most common varieties of rice
How to Cook Brown Rice in the Instant Pot
You can cook rice 2 different ways in the Instant Pot. The most straight-forward way is to pour the rice and water directly into the bottom of the stainless steel pot and cook it on its own. This is the method I use when making a large batch of rice for the week ahead, as part of my meal prep routine. It’s nice to have some cooked rice on hand for a quick weeknight stir-fry!
“Pot-in-Pot” Instant Pot Rice
The other way you can cook rice is using the pot-in-pot cooking method. In this case, the rice cooks in a separate oven-safe bowl, rather than directly in the bottom of the pot.
You’ll add the rinsed rice and water to an oven-safe bowl that is 7-inches in diameter (for a 6 quart Instant Pot) then place the bowl on the trivet and cook as directed. The rice will turn out perfectly fluffy, and it will already be in a serving bowl for your meal!
Pressure Cooking Rice with Other Foods
The benefit of cooking any variety of rice using the pot-in-pot method is that you can cook another dish on the bottom of the pot at the same time. For example, my Instant Pot Chipotle Burrito Bowls have dry black beans cook from scratch on the bottom of the pot, while a bowl of brown rice cooks on top of that in a separate bowl. You can do the same thing with chicken and white rice, with the chicken cooking on the bottom of the Instant Pot while a bowl of white rice cooks on top. The thing to keep in mind when cooking two dishes at once is that both dishes need to cook in roughly the same amount of time. I’ve listed plenty of pot-in-pot cooking times for you to refer to! You can even cook chicken and cauliflower “rice” together, like in my Instant Pot Chicken Burrito Bowls.
White Rice (long or short grain): 4 minutes at high pressure Brown Rice (long or short grain): 22 minutes at high pressure Wild Rice: 25-30 minutes at high pressure
With all of these varieties of rice, the water ratio remains the same.
How Much Water Do You Add to Rice?
Since there is no evaporation in the Instant Pot, you use a 1:1 ratio of water to rice. This is different than stove top cooking, which typically calls for a 2:1 ratio. This ratio assumes that your rice has been rinsed first.
Do You Need to Rinse Rice?
I do recommend rinsing your rice in a fine mesh strainer first, to help remove the starch that can give rice a gummy texture. If you skip this step (I do when I’m in a rush), add an extra 1/4 cup of water when you cook the rice, to account for the moisture difference.
How much rice can you cook in the Instant Pot?
The most rice I’ve ever cooked at one time is 3 cups of dry rice with 3 cups of water. I think you could probably go up to 5 cups of dry rice, as long as you don’t fill the pot more than halfway full for safety. (So a larger 8-quart pot will be able to hold more than a 6-quart pot.) Rice creates foamy, starchy water as it cooks, so you wouldn’t want it to rise too high during the cooking cycle and damage your pot.
When doubling or tripling a recipe in the Instant Pot, the cooking time doesn’t change. However, the overall time will be longer when you cook a larger quantity, because it will take longer for the pot to come to pressure when compared to a smaller quantity of rice.
Additional Recipe Notes:
If you want to cook another variety of rice, such as white jasmine or wild rice, please refer to the cooking times mentioned in this post above the recipe. I do not recommend swapping brown rice for white rice, or vice versa, in a pot-in-pot recipe due to the drastically different cooking times. You can check out my Instant Pot recipes here on the site, or The Fresh & Healthy Instant Pot Cookbook for more tested & perfected recipes to cook two dishes at once in your Instant Pot.
More Instant Pot Recipes
If you’d like more guidance on using your electric pressure cooker, try one of the tutorials below.
Instant Pot Sweet Potatoes Instant Pot Black Beans Instant Pot Chickpeas Instant Pot Shredded Chicken Instant Pot Mashed Potatoes Instant Pot Quinoa Instant Pot Chickpea Curry Instant Pot Quinoa Burrito Bowls
If you try this recipe, please leave a comment below letting me know how it works for you. And if you make any modifications, I’d love to hear about those, too! We can all benefit from your experience. – Reader Feedback: Have you tried cooking rice in your Instant Pot yet? Let me know if you have any other tips or tricks in the comments below! We can all benefit from your experience.