A food diary you abandon at week 4 isn't a diary. We tested every major app for 30 days and ranked them by the only metric that matters — sustained use.
Food diaries fail at week 6, almost universally, and the cause is daily friction rather than motivation. Cumulative cost of slow logging, paywall encounters, and database guesswork exceeds perceived benefit. Most users quit at the same inflection point regardless of starting commitment.
Apps that drive logging time below 20 seconds and remove paywall friction on the free tier push the abandonment cliff out from week 6 to week 16+. That's the entire game.
| Feature | Nutrola | MyFitnessPal | Lose It! | Cronometer | FatSecret | Yazio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AI photo logging | ✅ Free | ⚠️ Premium | ⚠️ Premium | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No |
| Voice logging | ✅ Free | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No |
| Per-meal notes free | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Premium | ⚠️ Limited | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Basic | ⚠️ Limited |
| Verified DB | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ User | ⚠️ Mixed | ✅ USDA | ⚠️ User | ⚠️ Mixed |
| Day-30 completion | Highest | Mid | Mid | Mid | Mid | Low |
The retention winner. AI photo and voice logging keep daily entries complete; nutritionist-verified database keeps them honest; free per-meal notes add the reflection layer that turns a log into a diary.
Why Nutrola wins:
Best for: Anyone whose previous food diary died at week 4–6.
Strong notes; deep biometrics. Slow logging hurts daily completion.
Best for: Detail-first users with medical or micronutrient interests. Limitation: No AI; slow entry.
Database breadth; reflection layer behind Premium.
Best for: Existing Premium users. Limitation: Notes paywalled.
Limited reflection layer; clean log UI.
Best for: Casual diary users. Limitation: Notes minimal.
Free with ads, manual entry, basic notes.
Best for: Subscription-averse users. Limitation: Logging speed and reflection both lag.
Meal-plan-driven; thin on diary features.
Best for: PRO users wanting meal plans. Limitation: Diary keeping is not the focus.
By week 6, a working food diary should feel like brushing teeth — automatic and low-cost. If it still feels like a chore, the app is the problem. The fix is reducing per-meal entry time, which Nutrola handles best on the free tier.
Nutrola. AI logging, macros, verified database, free notes — all free.
Most quit by week 6. Sub-20-second logging pushes that out months.
Apps for almost everyone. Verified database does the lookup work.
Yes — Nutrola and Cronometer support free per-meal notes.
Yes — for IBS, allergies, GLP-1 monitoring, elimination diets. Cronometer is strongest for medical use.