Best Calorie Tracker After Quitting Yazio in 2026

You quit Yazio and need a tracker that actually delivers. Here's the post-quit guide for 2026: what your next app must have, the top 5 alternatives ranked, a practical first-week plan on Nutrola, and exactly what changes after the switch.

Medically reviewed by Dr. Emily Torres, Registered Dietitian Nutritionist (RDN)

You quit Yazio. Your next tracker should do what Yazio didn't — real AI photo, verified DB, zero ads, full macros on free. Nutrola delivers all four at €2.50/mo.

Quitting a calorie tracker is usually not a sudden decision. It builds quietly over weeks: the same database gaps, the same manual corrections, the same paywall in front of the macro view, the same sluggishness after every update. Eventually the friction outweighs the habit, and you close the app for the last time. The harder question comes next — what tool do you use tomorrow morning when you want to log breakfast and actually see the truth about what you ate?

This guide is written for the post-quit moment. It covers what your next tracker absolutely must do, ranks the five realistic alternatives for 2026, walks through a first week on Nutrola so you are not starting from a blank screen, and lists the specific, concrete things Nutrola gives you that Yazio did not. The goal is to make the switch cost you a weekend of setup, not a month of lost consistency.


What Your Next Tracker Must Have (That Yazio Didn't)

Real AI photo logging, not a gimmick

Yazio offered a nominal photo feature, but in practice most users fell back to manual search after the second or third misidentified meal. A real AI photo tracker in 2026 needs to identify multi-component plates, estimate portion sizes from context, and complete the classification in under three seconds. If you have to correct the AI more often than you would have just typed the food name, the feature is ornamental. Nutrola's AI photo runs in under three seconds and is trained specifically on plated meals, composite dishes, and restaurant portions — not just single ingredients against a white background.

A verified database, not a crowdsourced swamp

The single biggest hidden tax of Yazio and most of its peers is database noise. Crowdsourced entries pile up over years, and a search for "chicken breast" returns a dozen variants with wildly different calorie counts. You end up either trusting the top result and eating numbers that may be wrong, or sifting entries like an amateur nutritionist. Nutrola's 1.8 million-plus database is verified — reviewed by nutrition professionals rather than uploaded by users — so the first result is usually the right result.

Zero ads, on every tier

Ads in a calorie tracker are not just annoying; they slow down the single action you perform twenty times a week. Yazio and its peers tolerate banner ads, interstitials, and premium-upsell screens in paths you cannot avoid. A serious tracker in 2026 should not have advertising on any tier, free or paid. Nutrola has zero ads on the free tier and zero ads on the €2.50/month tier. The interface does one job: log food.

Full macros on free, not gated behind premium

Protein, carbohydrates, and fat are the point of tracking for most people — not only the total calorie number. A tracker that hides macros behind a paywall has already decided that the free tier is a trailer, not a tool. Nutrola's free tier includes full macro tracking. If you want deeper nutrient data, 100+ micronutrients are available, but the free tier is not crippled at the basics.

Speed that respects your time

Three taps to log a food, not seven. Sub-three-second AI photo recognition, not "please wait." Barcode scans that return a result instantly, not after a spinning loader. Yazio users consistently report growing friction over the product's lifetime — features added, but the core logging loop slower than it was in 2022. Your next tracker needs to treat the log-a-meal action as a sub-ten-second task across every input method.


Ranked: Best 5 Trackers After Yazio

1. Nutrola — The Complete Post-Yazio Upgrade

Nutrola is the most natural step up from Yazio because it fixes the exact friction points Yazio never solved: database quality, AI photo accuracy, macros on free, and the absence of ads. The free tier covers full macro tracking, AI photo logging, voice logging, barcode scanning, and access to the 1.8 million-plus verified database. The paid tier at €2.50/month adds 100+ nutrient tracking, recipe import, advanced analytics, and multi-device sync.

What you get for free: Full macros, AI photo logging under three seconds, voice logging in natural language, barcode scanner with verified results, 1.8 million-plus verified database, 14 languages, zero ads.

What €2.50/month adds: 100+ nutrient tracking, recipe import from any URL, advanced reports, multi-device sync, priority support.

Why it wins post-Yazio: Every friction point that pushes users away from Yazio is addressed on day one. There is no learning curve for "why doesn't this app have X" — the things you expected Yazio to have are standard here.

2. MyFitnessPal — The Default Fallback

MyFitnessPal is often the first reflex after quitting Yazio because it is culturally dominant and has the largest database. That familiarity is its strength and its weakness. The database is vast but crowdsourced, which means many of the search friction problems you left Yazio to escape are present in a different shape. Ads on the free tier are heavy, and macros are now a premium feature.

What you get for free: Very large crowdsourced database, barcode scanner, basic calorie logging, community forums.

What you do not get for free: Macro goals (premium), nutrient reports (premium), ad-free experience, advanced insights.

Why you might pick it: If database breadth is your only concern and you are fine re-paywalling macros, MFP is functional. It is not an upgrade on the friction side.

3. Cronometer — The Data-Heavy Option

Cronometer is the right answer if you left Yazio because the numbers felt wrong and you want verified nutrition data. It pulls from USDA and NCCDB databases and tracks 80+ nutrients on free. The interface is clinical and feels more like a spreadsheet than a consumer app, which is either a feature or a dealbreaker depending on your temperament.

What you get for free: Verified database, 80+ nutrient tracking, macro tracking.

What you do not get for free: AI photo logging, barcode scanner (premium on free mobile), recipe import (limited), meaningful multi-device experience.

Why you might pick it: If your reason for quitting Yazio was accuracy rather than speed, Cronometer's data-first approach is sound. It is not a workflow upgrade.

4. Lose It — The Cleaner Interface

Lose It is often chosen by users who left Yazio because of clutter and ads. The interface is cleaner than most competitors and the barcode scanner works well, but the free tier is calorie-only. Macros, meal plans, and serious features are premium, and the database is crowdsourced rather than verified.

What you get for free: Daily calorie budget, barcode scanner, weight tracking, clean interface.

What you do not get for free: Macros, AI logging, verified database, comprehensive HealthKit sync.

Why you might pick it: If you want a lighter, simpler app and you are genuinely okay tracking only calories without macro data, Lose It is the cleanest option.

5. FatSecret — The Free Feature Stack

FatSecret is the free-tier volume leader. Macros, barcode scanning, recipe calculator, and unlimited logging are all actually free. The interface is visibly dated and there is no AI photo logging in any meaningful sense, but if you quit Yazio because you refused to pay for macros, FatSecret gives them away.

What you get for free: Unlimited logging, full macros, barcode scanner, recipe calculator.

What you do not get: AI photo, verified database, modern interface, serious multi-device sync.

Why you might pick it: Purely a cost-driven switch. If €0 is a hard requirement and you can live with a dated interface, FatSecret covers the basics.


Your First Week on Nutrola

The first seven days after switching trackers determine whether the switch sticks. Most post-Yazio users who give up within a month do so because they never built a daily logging rhythm in the new app. This plan is structured around three anchor days — Day 1, Day 3, Day 7 — to move from signup to habit.

Day 1 — Signup and three meals logged

On day one, the only goal is three meals logged, all three methods tried. Install Nutrola, complete the onboarding (goal, activity level, preferred units), and log breakfast using AI photo: point the camera, take the photo, confirm. Log lunch using barcode scanning on whatever packaged item you ate. Log dinner using voice: say what you ate in a natural sentence and let Nutrola parse it.

At the end of day one, you have exercised every input method at least once. You know which feels fastest for your actual meal patterns, and you have a day's worth of data in the verified database rather than the Yazio export sitting on your desktop. Do not migrate anything yet. Do not build custom foods yet. Just three meals, three methods.

Day 3 — Favorites, goals, macro targets

By day three, you have probably re-eaten two or three of the same foods. This is when you save them as favorites for one-tap logging tomorrow. Open your profile and confirm your macro targets — Nutrola computes them from your goal, but you can override. If you are coming from Yazio with custom macro splits, replicate those here.

Open the nutrition dashboard for the past three days. Notice the 100+ nutrient view if you are on the paid tier. This is the moment most users realize they were undercounting protein by 15-25 grams a day on Yazio because of database inconsistencies — the verified database tends to surface slightly higher, more accurate values on animal proteins and dairy.

Day 7 — Recipes, reports, rhythm

By day seven, logging should be automatic for at least two meals. This is when recipe import earns its keep. Paste the URL of three recipes you actually make — weeknight chicken, weekend pasta, your go-to breakfast — and let Nutrola compute per-serving macros once. Every future time you eat those meals, the log is one tap.

Open the weekly report. Look at macro adherence, calorie variance day over day, and the micronutrient view. This is the data Yazio gestured at but never presented cleanly. If you were paying for Yazio premium, the €2.50/month Nutrola tier will feel like a downgrade in price and an upgrade in data.


12 Things Nutrola Gives You That Yazio Didn't

  1. AI photo logging in under three seconds, trained on plated meals, not just single ingredients.
  2. 1.8 million-plus verified database entries, reviewed by nutrition professionals rather than uploaded by strangers.
  3. Full macros on the free tier, not gated behind a premium upsell.
  4. Zero ads on every tier — free, paid, forever.
  5. Voice logging in natural language, parsing entire sentences rather than one-item inputs.
  6. 100+ nutrient tracking on paid, including vitamins, minerals, fiber, and sodium.
  7. Recipe import from any URL, converted to per-serving macros automatically.
  8. 14 language localization, not just top-tier European languages.
  9. €2.50/month pricing, roughly one-third to one-quarter of most premium trackers.
  10. Transparent subscription, with a free tier that does not expire into a paywall trap.
  11. Multi-device sync across iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, and Android, with consistent data.
  12. Active product development focused on the logging loop, not feature bloat.

5 Apps Compared Across 6 Criteria

App AI Photo Verified DB Macros on Free Ads Entry Price Language Coverage
Nutrola Yes, sub-3s Yes, 1.8M+ Yes None €2.50/mo 14 languages
MyFitnessPal Limited No, crowdsourced No (premium) Heavy ~$20/mo Broad
Cronometer No Yes Yes Light ~$9/mo Moderate
Lose It Limited No, crowdsourced No (premium) Moderate ~$40/yr Moderate
FatSecret No No, crowdsourced Yes Moderate Free tier Broad

The pattern across the category is consistent: you trade one of (AI, verified DB, free macros, zero ads) for another. Nutrola is unusual in offering all four at the lowest price point, which is why it is the most direct upgrade path from Yazio.


Which One Is Right for You?

Best if you want the full post-Yazio upgrade

Nutrola. AI photo, verified database, full macros on free, zero ads, and €2.50/month if you move to paid. Every structural complaint about Yazio is addressed, and the price is lower than Yazio premium.

Best if you want the largest possible database and do not mind ads

MyFitnessPal. The database is unmatched in breadth, though not in accuracy. Macros are premium, ads are heavy, and the free tier is noticeably degraded compared to previous years — but if every obscure food you eat needs to be findable, MFP is the broadest net.

Best if you want clinical-grade nutrient data

Cronometer. Verified data, 80+ nutrients on free, and no theatrics. The interface is dense and the AI features are minimal, but the numbers are trustworthy. Pair with Nutrola if you want a clean logging interface plus Cronometer-level depth.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I export my data from Yazio and import it into Nutrola?

Yazio allows export of basic log data. Nutrola supports data import to help with transitions — contact support if you want to bring in historical entries. For most users, we recommend starting fresh rather than migrating months of imperfect Yazio entries into a verified database.

Is Nutrola actually free, or is it a trial that expires?

Nutrola has a genuine free tier that does not expire. Full macros, AI photo logging, voice logging, barcode scanning, and access to the verified database are included on free. The paid tier at €2.50/month adds 100+ nutrient tracking, recipe import, and advanced analytics — but you are not forced into it.

How does Nutrola's AI photo compare to Yazio's?

Nutrola's AI photo logging identifies foods in under three seconds and is trained on plated meals, composite dishes, and restaurant portions. Yazio's photo feature historically required more manual correction, particularly on multi-component plates. In typical daily use, Nutrola's photo feature reduces correction frequency significantly.

Does Nutrola support the same languages as Yazio?

Nutrola supports 14 languages with full localization, covering the major European and international markets that Yazio serves. If you logged in a specific language on Yazio, Nutrola almost certainly supports it.

Will my macro targets carry over from Yazio?

Nutrola computes macro targets from your goal, weight, activity level, and preferences during onboarding. If you used custom targets on Yazio, you can override Nutrola's defaults and input the same protein, carb, and fat targets manually in under a minute.

Is €2.50/month really the full price, or are there add-ons?

€2.50/month is the full price for the paid tier. There are no add-ons, no feature-by-feature purchases, and no enterprise tiers that lock basic functionality. In-app purchases for Nutrola Daily Essentials (the supplements line) are separate and optional.

How long until the switch feels normal?

Most users report that by day seven, Nutrola feels like the default and Yazio feels like the old app. The first-week plan in this guide is designed to accelerate that shift — three meals logged on day one, favorites and macros on day three, recipes and reports by day seven.


Final Verdict

Quitting Yazio is the easy part. The harder part is picking a replacement that actually solves the friction you left, rather than trading Yazio's problems for a different app's problems. Of the five realistic options in 2026, Nutrola is the only one that simultaneously delivers AI photo logging in under three seconds, a 1.8 million-plus verified database, full macros on the free tier, and zero ads — at €2.50/month if you upgrade. MyFitnessPal trades database breadth for heavier ads and gated macros. Cronometer trades interface polish for clinical accuracy. Lose It trades features for simplicity. FatSecret trades modernity for a free feature stack.

Use the first-week plan, log three meals on day one with three different methods, and by day seven you will know whether the switch is permanent. For most post-Yazio users in 2026, it is.

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