Zomato intentionally hides your lifetime spending total, but you can uncover the real damage yourself. This guide reveals how to calculate it, from the soul-crushing manual method to easier browser extensions.
There isn't one.
Let's just get that out of the way. Zomato has no reason to show you that terrifying, cumulative number. There's no "View Your Life Choices" button. So if you're looking for a built-in feature, you can stop right now.
But you still want to know. You have that nagging feeling after you approve another payment—the one that says you might be personally funding a small restaurant's entire yearly profit.
So, how do you find out the real damage?
You can, of course, do it yourself. Open the Zomato app, find your order history, and just start scrolling. And scrolling. And scrolling. You’ll need a calculator and a very strong will.
I actually did this once. I was sitting in my car—a beat-up 2011 Honda Civic—waiting for a friend who is always, without fail, late. The dashboard clock read 4:17 PM. I had nothing better to do. So I opened Zomato, pulled up a spreadsheet, and started punching in numbers. It took forty-five minutes to get through three years of orders. The final number was… well, let's not talk about it. But it was enough to make me question my entire life's trajectory.
This works. But it’s awful and you will hate doing it.
If you ever use Zomato on your computer, a browser extension is your best bet. A few tools like 'Zomato Spending Calculator' or 'Snackalytics' can plug into your account and do all the math for you.
You install it, log into Zomato's website, and click a button. The extension scrapes your order history and spits out the total. Some will even break it down by year or show you which restaurant has gotten most of your money. It’s the fastest way to get a real number. The catch? You have to trust a third-party tool with your data. The good ones do all the calculations locally in your browser, so they aren't storing or sharing your info, but it’s still a leap of faith.
Seeing the total is one thing. Actually changing your habits is another.
The shock of that big number wears off. Then the old habits creep back in. Looking at past spending is only useful if it makes you change the future. This isn't really about data, it's about behavior.
So instead of just auditing the past, you could try to build better habits. Maybe that's using a tracker for "Meal Prep Sundays" or a "No Takeout Tuesday" rule. Building a streak for cooking at home will probably have a bigger impact than just staring at a scary number.
If all else fails.
Log into your online banking or credit card app. Search for "Zomato." Add up the results. It’s a blunt instrument. It misses things like refunds or tips, but it gives you a rough number in a minute.
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