You don't need to pay for a calorie counter when the best ones are free. We break down the essential features to look for and name the top apps that deliver everything you need without a subscription.
You don't need to pay. Let's just get that out of the way. The idea that a $79.99 subscription is required to see the calories in a banana is just good marketing, not reality. There are plenty of great, free apps that do everything most people need.
The trick is knowing what to look for and which "free" apps are really just frustrating trials.
Before you download anything, know what separates a good free app from a bad one. It isn't about a million features. It's about having the right ones, unlocked.
Free apps tend to fall into a few different camps.
For the data nerd: Cronometer
If you actually want to know your manganese intake, this is your app. The free version tracks 82 different micronutrients—way more than anyone else. The data is super accurate and verified, which is the main draw. The only catch is that logging can feel a little slower than with other apps. But for sheer nutritional detail, nothing else comes close.
The best all-arounder: FatSecret
FatSecret is probably the most generous free app out there. You get a huge food diary, barcode scanning, recipes, and a community forum without paying a dime. It doesn’t feel like a stripped-down trial version. It just works. For most people, this is the best place to start.
The old guard: MyFitnessPal & Lose It!
MyFitnessPal has a ridiculously large food database. That's its big advantage. The problem is that the free version keeps getting more and more limited. Lose It! is still a decent option, though. Its free app has a good database and barcode scanning and works just fine for basic counting.
I remember trying to log a homemade soup once. It was a miserable Tuesday, around 4:17 PM, and I was trying to be "healthy." The app I was using had me enter every single ingredient individually. The half-teaspoon of paprika. The single bay leaf. By the time I was done, my 2011 Honda Civic could have probably calculated the nutritional info faster. I deleted the app that day. The point is, if the app creates more friction than it removes, it's the wrong app. The best tool is the one you actually use consistently.
Think about what you're trying to do. Just want to lose a few pounds, or are you dialing in your nutrition for performance?
The best app is the one that doesn't feel like a chore. Try one for a week. If you hate it, delete it and try another. They're free, so you have nothing to lose.
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Family location apps are about quieting parental anxiety, not spying. Go beyond basic phone tracking with features like automatic place alerts and teen driving reports for true peace of mind.
Family locator apps replace the "where are you?" texts with a private map, offering peace of mind through real-time location sharing. These tools are designed to improve coordination and safety, not for spying, with features like automatic alerts when family members arrive safely.
Your phone's GPS works anywhere, even without an internet connection. Use an offline map app to download maps before you go, and you'll see your live location and never get lost in a dead zone again.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
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