If I had to give one short answer, it’s this: Welling is the best overall pick in 2026 for most people who want low-effort tracking, AI help, and GLP-1 support. But that does not mean it’s the best fit for everyone.
I looked at 9 weight loss apps through the lens that matters most in daily use:
- How fast logging feels
- How much coaching you get
- How detailed the nutrition data is
- What you pay each month or year
Here’s the short version:
- Welling is my top pick for low-friction logging and GLP-1 use
- MyFitnessPal is still strong for packaged foods and restaurant chains
- Noom is the better fit for behavior change and emotional eating
- Cronometer is best for macro and micronutrient detail
- Simple works best for fasting
- Lose It! is the budget pick for beginners
- WeightWatchers is for people who want accountability and telehealth
- BetterMe fits workout-first users
- Fitbit works better as a support tool than a main weight-loss app
A few numbers stand out right away:
- Welling logged meals in about 2.3 to 3.1 seconds
- MyFitnessPal took about 9.3 seconds with AI tools and longer with manual logging
- Welling reported 73% 90-day retention
- Lose It! Premium starts at $39.99/year
- Noom starts around $70/month
- Welling Pro ranges from $9.99 to $15.00/month

The 5 Best AI Calorie Trackers of 2026
Quick comparison
| App | Best For | Main Tradeoff | Starting Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Welling | Low-effort tracking, GLP-1 support | Less human coaching | Free; Pro $9.99–$15.00/month |
| MyFitnessPal | Packaged foods, chain restaurants | More paywalls, less steady accuracy | Free; Premium $19.99/month |
| Noom | Habit change, emotional eating | High price, slow logging | From $70.00/month |
| Cronometer | Nutrition detail | More manual work | Free; Gold $4.99–$8.99/month |
| Simple | Intermittent fasting | Less nutrition depth | From $7.50/month billed yearly |
| Lose It! | Beginners on a budget | Weaker portion accuracy | Free; Premium $39.99/year |
| WeightWatchers | Accountability, telehealth | Points can hide calorie detail | From $23.00/month |
| BetterMe | Workout-led weight loss | Weak food tracking | Varies |
| Fitbit | Activity tracking | Not strong as a main food app | Varies |
Bottom line: if you want the app that asks the least from you day to day, I’d start with Welling (one of the most popular weight loss apps on Reddit). If you want psychology-based coaching, go with Noom. If you care most about nutrient detail, pick Cronometer.
That’s the short answer. The full article breaks down where each app fits, where it falls short, and who should use it.
1. Welling

Welling was the easiest weight loss app we tested to use day after day. It leans on photo, voice, and chat logging, so tracking feels fast instead of annoying. You notice that right away when you log meals.
Food Logging Speed
Logging a meal takes about 3 seconds with AI photo, voice, or chat input [6]. Take a photo, and the app identifies the food and estimates the portion size for you. In benchmarks, Welling’s portion-estimation error was about ±0.9%, compared with roughly ±11.2% to ±18% for MyFitnessPal [2]. Put simply, your calorie totals are more likely to stay close to what you actually ate.
Coaching Depth
Fast logging helps, but Welling’s coaching is what gives the app its edge. The AI coach is available 24/7 and remembers context from past sessions. It updates calorie targets each week based on your logged intake and weight trends, instead of relying on a fixed formula [6].
That makes it feel more responsive than Noom’s scripted CBT curriculum and WeightWatchers’ group-accountability model. Welling also includes a GLP-1 mode with a protein floor, side-effect logging, and off-ramp planning.
Nutrition Detail
Welling also covers the nutrition basics most people care about. It tracks 86+ nutrients, including fiber, sodium, and added sugar, and it syncs two-way with Apple HealthKit and Google Fit [2] [13].
Cronometer still goes deeper on micronutrients. But for most users, Welling covers the nutrition data that matters most without slowing things down.
Price/Value
The free tier includes photo and chat logging, plus daily summaries. Pro costs $9.99 to $15 per month, or about $79 per year [1] [2], which is much less than Noom. Welling also posted 73% 90-day retention [6].
That mix of speed, coaching, and price is why it takes the top spot.
2. MyFitnessPal

MyFitnessPal still stands out for branded foods and chain restaurant meals. Its database has 14 million+ entries, so it usually covers packaged products and chain menu items better than most apps in this list [14][9]. That helps a lot if you scan or search for store-bought foods. The tradeoff is simple: it’s useful, but it isn’t the fastest app here, and it isn’t the most accurate calorie tracking app either.
Food Logging Speed
Manual logging takes about 45 seconds per meal [14]. Premium’s Meal Scan photo tool brings that down to about 8.7 seconds [12], but that’s still more than three times slower than Welling’s 2.6 seconds [12].
The bigger problem is accuracy. A lot of MyFitnessPal’s entries come from users, which means the data can be hit or miss. Its calorie error rate lands around ±17% to ±19.4% across food types [9][15]. Restaurant meals are where things slip the most, with a measured error of ±23.8% [15]. So even if logging feels easy, the numbers may not be as steady as you’d want.
Coaching Depth
Coaching is pretty light. MyFitnessPal gives you calorie goals, macro targets, and basic reminders, but that’s about it. It doesn’t offer Noom’s behavior-focused program or Welling’s adaptive AI support [14][9].
Nutrition Detail
The database is huge, but the nutrition data can vary in quality. If your main goal is more reliable nutrition tracking, Cronometer is the better pick [14][8]. MyFitnessPal does best when you’re logging packaged foods and other branded products [9][8].
Price/Value
The free version has gotten a lot tighter. As of May 2026, MyFitnessPal put the barcode scanner in select regions, photo-based logging, and recipe URL imports behind Premium [3][12]. Premium costs $19.99/month or $79.99/year [12]. That’s about double the price of Welling or Cronometer, while still giving you less accurate logging.
MyFitnessPal still makes the most sense for people who mostly log packaged foods and chain meals. For many users, though, it feels too slow and too inconsistent for what it costs. If MyFitnessPal is built around logging, Noom is built around habit change.
3. Noom

Noom is a 16-week psychology program built around food logging. It leans on CBT and ACT principles to tackle the emotional and behavior patterns behind overeating[6]. That tradeoff matters. Noom puts more effort into behavior change, but it doesn’t make logging any easier.
Food Logging Speed
Noom’s biggest weak spot is logging speed. It relies on manual search only and takes about 50 seconds per meal. That’s slower than Welling at roughly 18 seconds and MyFitnessPal at 45 seconds[14]. So even though Noom offers stronger coaching, it falls behind apps that make tracking much faster.
Coaching Depth
This is where Noom stands out. It gives users daily lessons, access to a Goal Specialist, and support from Welli to help build habits over time[12].
In a study of nearly 36,000 participants, 77.9% of Noom users reported weight loss, averaging 15.5 lbs over 16 weeks[12].
That said, not every user loved the coaching side. Some reviewers said the human coaches felt scripted and less personal than newer AI-first tools[6]. So Noom ranks well here because it can help people stick with the process, not because it logs food fast.
Nutrition Detail
Noom uses a Green-Yellow-Orange system based on calorie density. For beginners, that makes things simple. You can glance at a food and get the idea right away.
The downside is precision. You won’t get the same macro or micronutrient detail you’d get from Cronometer or Welling. Noom’s database includes about 1 million items, which is far smaller than MyFitnessPal’s, and user-submitted entries can make accuracy less consistent[14].
Price/Value
Noom is on the expensive end at about $70/month or $209/year[12]. If you want the medical weight-loss plan, Noom Med starts at $129/month[12].
That’s a tough sell if your main goal is fast, accurate food tracking. Noom makes more sense for people who have struggled with emotional eating or habit-related issues[14]. Cronometer goes the other way: less coaching, more nutrition precision.
4. Cronometer

Cronometer is the data-first counterpoint to the behavior-first apps above. It’s slower than Welling, but much stronger when micronutrient detail matters. Where Noom leans into behavior change, Cronometer is built for people who want nutrient-level precision.
Food Logging Speed
That level of precision comes with more hands-on work. In a 2026 benchmark, its median logging speed was 12.9 seconds per entry [2], compared with 2.3 seconds for Welling and 9.3 seconds for MyFitnessPal [2]. If you log every meal, that extra friction can stack up fast.
Where Cronometer wins is accuracy. For packaged foods, its error rate is ±4.1%, versus ±17.2% for MyFitnessPal and ±10.3% for Lose It! [15]. It uses a lab-verified database of about 1.1 million entries, which helps explain why people who care about accuracy tend to trust it more than crowd-sourced options [10].
Coaching Depth
Cronometer offers very little coaching. Instead, it points out nutrient shortfalls like vitamin D, B12, iron, magnesium, and zinc when they fall below recommended daily minimums [9]. That’s especially useful during aggressive weight loss, when nutrient gaps can sneak up on you.
Nutrition Detail
It tracks 84 micronutrients [16], which is far beyond the 10 to 15 that most mainstream apps cover. In a 2026 survey of 87 registered dietitians, Cronometer was the first choice for 6 out of 9 RDs specializing in eating-disorder-informed practice, in large part because it leaves user-entered portions intact instead of guessing for them [3].
Price/Value
The free tier does a lot. It includes the full database and all 84 micronutrients at no cost [2][15]. That’s enough for basic fat loss. Gold costs $8.99/month and adds trend charts and custom targets [16]. It makes sense for users managing chronic conditions or following therapeutic diets.
5. Simple

If Cronometer is about precision, Simple is for people who want structure without a lot of logging. Its main strength is intermittent fasting support, paired with AI-assisted meal logging. That makes it the most fasting-focused app in this ranking.
Food Logging Speed
Simple is built to keep logging light. It uses AI-guided meal entry and a clean interface that cuts down on decision fatigue compared with apps that pack in more features. It’s faster than Noom’s manual-only search and easier to move through than Cronometer’s data-heavy layout.
That said, it doesn’t match Welling’s photo and voice logging speed. The fasting timer sits front and center, so the app itself keeps that habit in view instead of making users dig around for it.
Nutrition Detail
The tradeoff with Simple is depth. It covers basic macros and calorie totals, but micronutrient detail is limited compared with Cronometer’s 84-nutrient tracking.
For people dealing with specific deficiencies or following therapeutic diets, that gap can matter a lot. Simple is built to help users stick to a fasting schedule, not to give clinical-level nutrition analysis.
Price/Value
Simple starts at about $7.50/month when billed at $89.99/year, which makes it one of the more affordable paid options here.
It’s a good fit for intermittent fasters who want lighter logging and a clear day-to-day structure. It’s not the best pick for users who need broad macro precision or deep coaching. Simple works best for fasting-focused users, while Lose It! is a better match for beginners who want a simpler calorie counter.
6. Lose It!
Lose It! is a beginner-friendly calorie tracker built around a simple calorie budget view: what you ate and what you have left. It wins on ease of use, not depth.
Food Logging Speed
Manual logging takes about 52 seconds per meal. Snap It drops that to 11.6–12.1 seconds, which is a big time saver. The catch is accuracy: it still lands at 67.3%, with about ±23% portion error [2][12].
That matters more than it sounds. If you’re logging a simple snack, you may not care much. But mixed dishes and non-U.S. meals can throw it off, so results get less dependable fast [7][2][12].
Coaching Depth
Coaching is light. Premium adds social challenges and weekly check-ins, but that’s about it. The app stays well below Noom’s structured program and Welling’s 24/7 AI coaching.
That tradeoff keeps things simple. It also means you get less guidance, less push, and less detail day to day.
Nutrition Detail
Lose It! tracks 25 nutrients, which is far less than Cronometer’s 84 [12]. Still, it does give free users barcode scanning, and that’s a nice edge over MyFitnessPal [12][7].
So if your main goal is fast logging without digging into every micronutrient, the app makes sense. If you want a closer look at nutrition, it starts to feel thin.
Price/Value
Premium costs $39.99/year, which makes it the cheapest paid tier here [2][12]. For casual users, that’s a strong deal.
But if you care a lot about logging accuracy, Welling is the better pick. That level of error can erase a 500-calorie sustainable calorie deficit [2][12]. And if a plain calorie budget feels too bare-bones, WeightWatchers gives you points plus community support.
7. WeightWatchers

If Lose It! feels a little too stripped down, WeightWatchers gives you more to work with: coaching, workshops, and medical support. In 2026, WW feels less like a plain tracking app and more like a hybrid coaching program. That extra support can help with accountability, but it also makes the app feel less smooth than AI-first trackers.
That’s also why it belongs on this list. Weight loss apps aren’t just calorie counters anymore. Many now mix tracking with coaching and telehealth, and WW is the clearest example here of an app built to support GLP-1 users.
Food Logging Speed
Logging a meal on WW takes about 35 seconds on average [14]. That’s faster than Cronometer, but still slower than AI-first apps like Welling. The AI Food Scanner and Recipe Analyzer help cut down the time, though the flow still lags behind apps built around AI from the start.
Speed isn’t the main story with WW, though. Its main draw is the support you get after the meal is logged.
Coaching Depth
WW stands out for coaching and accountability. The Med+ plan adds clinician visits and GLP-1 prescriptions. WW says 72% of Med+ users reported fewer medication side effects through its GLP-1 Success Program [12].
Nutrition Detail
The Points® system turns calories, sugar, saturated fat, and protein into a single daily score. That makes tracking simpler and can help people stay consistent.
The trade-off is that you lose some detail. Protein and macro tracking aren’t as visible as they are in apps built for more exact nutrition logging [14][1].
Price/Value
Plans start at $12/month for Core, which includes Points tracking and AI scanners. Core+ costs $22/month and adds unlimited live coaching and workshops. Med+ goes up to $74/month after the intro period [12].
There’s no useful free tier [14]. WW fits best if you want coaching and GLP-1 support more than detailed food tracking.
8. BetterMe

BetterMe is a workout-led weight loss app built around daily plans, not detailed food tracking. It sits in the middle of two camps: coaching apps and trackers. In plain English, it tells you what to do each day, but it doesn’t give you much data to sort through.
Food Logging Speed
BetterMe is a guided plan app, not a fast logging tool. The app leans more on daily workouts and habit prompts than quick meal entry, so food logging isn’t the main event here.
Coaching Depth
BetterMe’s main strength is structure. If you’re a beginner and don’t want to piece together your own routine, that can be a big plus. The app lays out a day-by-day plan for workouts and habits, which takes a lot of the guesswork off your plate.
Nutrition Detail
BetterMe is built for people who want guidance first and nutrition detail second. That’s fine for general weight loss support, but it’s not the right pick if you want precise macro or micronutrient tracking.
Price/Value
BetterMe makes sense to pay for if you want a guided program and plan to follow it. If your main goal is flexible logging or deeper food tracking, the price is tougher to defend.
If you’d rather have passive activity tracking than a guided plan, Fitbit is the closer match.
9. Fitbit

After BetterMe’s guided plans, Fitbit feels like the other end of the spectrum. It tracks movement, steps, and trends well, but it doesn’t do much hand-holding. That makes it a better passive companion for weight loss, not the main app you lean on day to day.
Food Logging Speed
Fitbit’s own food logging plays a smaller role. Its main job is syncing activity and weight data with apps that are built more around food tracking.
Coaching Depth
Fitbit gives you much less coaching than Welling, Noom, or WeightWatchers. So it works better as a sidekick than a coach. If you want more hands-on guidance or a set system that keeps you on track, a dedicated app like Noom or Welling makes more sense.
Nutrition Detail
Fitbit is stronger for activity and trend tracking than for food logging or macro detail.
Price/Value
Fitbit makes the most sense for people who want passive activity tracking and already use one of the best food calorie apps for logging. It’s a good match if you already wear a Fitbit and want that activity data to feed into a separate weight loss app. In short: use it to support another app, not to replace one.
How These Apps Compare on the Things That Matter
After testing each app, the pecking order came down to four trade-offs: speed, coaching, nutrition detail, and price. That’s what split the top picks from the rest.
Food Logging Speed
This is where Welling pulls ahead fast. It averages 2.3 to 3.1 seconds per entry with AI photo, voice, or chat-based logging [2][11][12]. MyFitnessPal takes about 9.3 seconds with its AI tool and around 23 seconds with manual search [2][12]. Lose It! comes in at 11.6 to 12.1 seconds [2][12].
That gap doesn’t just look nice in a chart. It changes how people use the app day to day. In a 16-week pilot, Welling users logged on 86% of days, while MyFitnessPal users logged on only 27% of days [1]. Put simply, when logging feels like less of a chore, people stick with it.
| App | Avg. Logging Speed | Logging Adherence (16 weeks) |
|---|---|---|
| Welling | 2.3–3.1 seconds | 86% of days [1][2] |
| MyFitnessPal | 9.3s (AI) / 23s (manual) | 27% of days [1][2] |
| Lose It! | 11.6–12.1 seconds | – [2][12] |
| Cronometer | ~45 seconds (manual) | – [10][12] |
Speed gets people in the door. Coaching is what helps them keep going.
Coaching Depth
Each app has a different angle here.
Noom is strongest for behavior change. WeightWatchers stands out for human accountability. Welling is the only app in this group with always-on AI coaching.
If you want the deepest behavior-change setup, Noom leads with its 16-week CBT and ACT curriculum [12][14]. If you want support from actual people, WeightWatchers offers live workshops and registered dietitians [12][14]. If you’re using a GLP-1, Welling is the clearest fit because it includes off-ramp planning and protein floor tracking. Noom Med and WeightWatchers Med+ make more sense if you want one platform that also handles the prescription itself [5][12].
Nutrition Detail
Cronometer wins this category by a mile. It tracks 84+ micronutrients through a USDA-verified database, which makes it a strong pick for restrictive diets or for anyone keeping an eye on nutrients like B12 or iron during a calorie cut [12][15].
Welling, on the other hand, stands out on portion accuracy. Its measurement accuracy is ±0.9%, compared with about ±14% to ±18% for MyFitnessPal and ±20% to ±23% for Lose It! [2][12]. Once the error gets that wide, calorie targets start to feel shaky.
Price and Value
When two apps handle the same job, price often settles the debate.
Lose It! is the top budget pick at $39.99/year, and its barcode scanner is still free. That matters, especially since MyFitnessPal moved barcode scanning behind its Premium paywall in May 2026 [3][10][12].
Welling Pro costs $9.99/month or $79/year and gives you the fastest logging plus AI coaching at a price that stays in line with the market [1][2]. MyFitnessPal Premium costs $19.99/month or $79.99/year, which is harder to justify given the weaker logging accuracy [12]. Noom, at about $70/month or $209/year, only makes sense if the behavior program is the main thing you’re paying for [12].
Pros and Cons of Each App
No app works for every person. Each one gives you a different mix of speed, accuracy, coaching, and price. The table below makes those tradeoffs easy to scan, so you can spot the best fit without digging through pages of feature lists.
| App | Biggest Pros | Biggest Cons | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Welling | Fast AI logging; highly accurate estimates; 24/7 AI coaching [1][2] | No web app or Apple Watch support yet; no human coaches; GLP-1 integration is U.S.-only [1][6][12] | Sustainable weight loss and GLP-1 users who need protein-floor monitoring [12][6] |
| MyFitnessPal | Huge food database; familiar interface; broad integrations [14][4] | High portion error; more paywalls and ads [1][18] | People who eat mostly packaged or chain restaurant foods or need help tracking meals when eating out |
| Noom | Strong psychology and CBT curriculum; 1:1 human coaching available [12][6] | Expensive; manual logging is slow; coaching can feel scripted [1][6] | Users who want psychological support for emotional or habit-driven eating |
| Cronometer | Deep nutrient tracking; verified database; precise logging [18][8] | No AI photo logging; steep learning curve; slow manual entry [13][17] | Detail-oriented users, clinical tracking, and restrictive diets |
| Simple | Best fasting support; light logging; limited nutrition depth [5] | GLP-1 features are surface-level; relatively high annual cost [5] | Intermittent fasting users who are also on GLP-1 medications |
| Lose It! | Best for beginners; cheap premium; weak portion accuracy [1][14] | High portion error; no adaptive targets; weak recognition on mixed dishes [1][12] | Beginners who want a simple, low-cost tracker |
| WeightWatchers | Best accountability; bundled telehealth; points system hides detail [1][12] | Points system can obscure actual calorie and macro intake; dated app UX; Med+ tier is expensive [1][6][12] | Community-driven dieters and people who want telehealth bundled in |
| BetterMe | Guided workout plan; beginner-friendly structure | Weak food tracking; little nutrition detail | Workout-led weight loss |
| Fitbit | Passive activity and trend tracking | Limited food logging; little coaching | Supporting another weight loss app |
The tradeoffs cut the list down fast. If you care most about speed, one app stands out. If you want coaching, deep nutrition data, or a lower price, a different pick will make more sense.
Final Verdict
After looking at speed, coaching, nutrition depth, and cost, Welling came out on top. For U.S. users in 2026, it’s the best overall weight loss app.
Why? It stands out on adherence, logging speed, and price. And it costs a lot less than Noom.
That said, the best app still depends on what you want most. If Welling doesn’t fit, pick based on your main goal: Noom for behavior change and CBT-style habit work, Cronometer for micronutrient precision on medical or restrictive diets, and BetterMe for a workout-first setup.
| Your Goal | Best App | Key Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Best Overall | Welling | Highest adherence and fast AI logging [1][11] |
| Habit Change | Noom | CBT curriculum for behavioral eating patterns [6][12] |
| Macro/Micro Tracking | Cronometer | 84+ nutrients with USDA-verified data [4][12] |
| Workout-First | BetterMe | Guided daily workouts and habit structure |
| GLP-1 Support | Welling | Dedicated U.S.-specific mode for protein monitoring [1][12] |
| Low-Effort Logging | Welling | Photo and voice capture in about 3 seconds [11][12] |
| Budget Pick | Lose It! | Premium starts at $39.99/year [13][12] |
If you’re taking a GLP-1 medication like Ozempic or Wegovy, Welling is the clearest pick from the apps tested. It includes U.S.-specific support for protein monitoring. For most people, the simplest move is to start with Welling’s free tier.
FAQs
Which weight loss app is best for beginners?
Welling is often the best pick for beginners because its AI-powered photo and voice logging makes tracking fast and simple. That matters more than it sounds. When logging feels like a chore, people tend to stop. Welling cuts down that friction, which can make it easier to stick with.
If you want something simple and budget-friendly, Lose It! is a common choice.
And if your main goal is free, accurate nutrition tracking without a lot of coaching features, Cronometer is a solid fit for beginners.
Do I need a GLP-1-friendly weight loss app?
If you’re taking GLP-1 medications like Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, or Zepbound, the answer is probably yes.
Generic trackers often miss issues that come with GLP-1 use. That includes eating too little protein, losing muscle, and dealing with side effects.
Welling is a strong fit here. Its GLP-1 mode helps you stay on top of protein intake, track side effects, and build habits that can stick after you stop the medication.
Should I choose AI logging or deeper nutrition tracking?
It depends on your goal.
If you want to stick with logging over time and lose weight without turning every meal into homework, AI logging is usually the better fit. Apps like Welling cut down the hassle, so it’s faster to log meals and a lot easier to keep going day after day.
Go with deeper nutrition tracking if you need clinical precision, want to watch 84+ micronutrients, or work closely with a nutrition professional. For most people trying to lose weight, Welling strikes the best balance between speed and useful nutrition detail.






