We tested the major calorie trackers on Android — Wear OS, Google Fit, widgets, offline mode, AI logging — across mid-range and flagship devices. Here's the ranked list for 2026.
Most "best calorie tracker" lists are written from an iOS-first perspective and treat Android as an afterthought. That's a problem because the Android ecosystem has trade-offs the typical review doesn't capture:
The apps below were evaluated specifically against these axes — not just "does it work on Android," but "is it built for Android."
Five protocols across a 30-day testing window, on a mid-range device (Pixel 7a) and a flagship (Galaxy S24 Ultra), including a Pixel Watch 2 for Wear OS evaluation:
| Feature | Nutrola | MyFitnessPal | Lifesum | MacroFactor | Yazio | Lose It! |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Native Android UI | ✅ Material Design | ⚠️ iOS-ported feel | ✅ Material Design | ⚠️ Functional only | ⚠️ Mixed | ⚠️ Mixed |
| Wear OS — full meal logging | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Partial | ✅ Yes | ❌ Sync only | ⚠️ Partial | ⚠️ Partial |
| Google Fit (two-way) | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Samsung Health | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ❌ No | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| AI photo logging (free) | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Premium | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ⚠️ Premium |
| Voice logging | ✅ Yes | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No |
| Home screen widget | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Offline logging | ✅ Full | ⚠️ Limited | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Limited | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Limited |
| Ads on free tier | ❌ No | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Some | — (paid only) | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Some |
| Daily background battery | Low | Low-Medium | Low | Low | Low | Medium |
Nutrola is the only app in this comparison that feels designed for Android rather than ported to it. Material Design adherence is the cleanest in the category — proper bottom navigation, dynamic theming on Android 13 and above, foldable-aware layouts, and gesture support that respects the platform.
The differentiation goes deeper than UI polish. Nutrola's AI photo and voice logging — usually subscription-locked in competitors — work on the free tier without daily caps. The Wear OS app supports complete meal logging from the watch, including barcode scanning through the device camera where supported. The food database caches locally for offline logging. Two-way sync writes weight, calories, and macros back to Google Fit and Samsung Health, so your data is consistent across the broader Android health ecosystem.
Why Nutrola wins on Android:
Best for: Android users who want a complete tracker that respects the platform — fast logging, deep wrist integration, no upsell pressure.
Limitation: Smaller absolute database than MyFitnessPal for highly regional branded foods.
MyFitnessPal still wins on raw database size — over 14 million entries means almost any food is findable. The Android app supports Wear OS, Google Fit, Samsung Health, and widgets, with a stable mid-range device experience. The trade-off is that the Android UI hasn't been refreshed at the same cadence as the iOS version, leaving Material Design adherence uneven, and the Premium funnel intercepts most useful features (custom macro targets, AI scanning, advanced reports).
Best for: Users prioritising database breadth and willing to accept a less native-feeling Android UX.
Limitation: Ads on the free tier; aggressive Premium upsell; Android UI lags behind iOS in polish.
Lifesum has invested more in Material Design than most competitors and the result shows: clean typography, smooth animations, and a Wear OS app that supports full meal logging. It leans toward "lifestyle" coaching (meal-plan templates, habit tracking) rather than precise macro control, which suits casual users better than data-driven athletes.
Best for: Android users who value polished UX and lifestyle-style coaching over hardcore macro tracking.
Limitation: Macro target customisation is limited on the free tier; AI logging is not available at any tier.
MacroFactor's algorithmic differentiation — adaptive TDEE based on weight-trend feedback — is appealing for serious users, but the Android UI investment is notably lighter. The Wear OS app is sync-only (no logging from the wrist), there's no Samsung Health integration, and the overall UI feels more functional than polished. No free tier means it's only worth considering if the algorithm itself is what you want.
Best for: Intermediate to advanced users who want algorithmic correction of logging drift.
Limitation: Paid-only. Light Android UX investment relative to its iOS counterpart.
Yazio is the localization specialist — exceptionally well-translated across European markets and a strong fit for non-English Android users. The app supports Wear OS, two-way Google Fit sync, and offline logging for previously-used items. The downside is the aggressive PRO funnel: meal plans, macro targets, and most insights require an upgrade.
Best for: Non-English Android users in EU markets who value localized content quality.
Limitation: Free tier is heavily restricted. Effectively a paid app with a generous trial.
Lose It!'s Android app is a competent mid-tier option with a clean budget-style UI, Wear OS support, and improving AI photo recognition (premium-gated). The Material Design experience is workable but not class-leading, and the most useful tracking features sit behind Premium.
Best for: Casual Android users who want a simple calorie-budget interface.
Limitation: AI logging is Premium-only. Macro detail requires upgrading.
Nutrola is the best Android calorie tracker overall in 2026. Its native Material Design interface, AI photo and voice logging on the free tier, and deep Google Fit and Wear OS integration make it the most complete Android-first option. MyFitnessPal remains the strongest fallback if your priority is the largest possible food database.
Most major trackers offer Wear OS apps in 2026, but the depth of wrist-side interaction varies. Nutrola and Lifesum support full meal logging from the watch, including barcode scanning where the device supports it. MyFitnessPal offers logging via favourites and recent foods. Cronometer and MacroFactor sync data but expect most input on the phone. For Wear OS-first tracking, Nutrola and Lifesum lead.
Yes — most major calorie trackers sync with Google Fit and Samsung Health in 2026. Two-way sync (where weight and food logged in the tracker also propagate to the health platform) is consistent across Nutrola, MyFitnessPal, Lifesum, Yazio, and Lose It!. Cronometer's Google Fit integration is more limited, primarily reading activity calories rather than writing back.
Offline support varies meaningfully. Nutrola caches the food database locally, allowing full logging without connectivity. Lifesum and Yazio support offline logging for previously-used items. MyFitnessPal and Cronometer require connectivity for new database queries. For users in regions with intermittent connectivity, offline-capable trackers provide the most reliable daily experience.
Most free calorie trackers on Android are ad-supported in some form. Nutrola is the notable exception — its free tier carries no ads at any tier. Cronometer's free tier is also ad-free but restricts certain advanced features. MyFitnessPal, Lose It!, FatSecret, and Yazio either show ads on the free tier or push aggressively toward premium upgrades.