8 Best Calorie Trackers for Android in 2026

Android users deserve calorie trackers built for their platform. We ranked the 8 best Android calorie tracking apps in 2026, covering Wear OS, widgets, Health Connect, and Material Design.

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

Android users have historically been treated as second-class citizens by nutrition apps. Many of the most popular calorie trackers were built for iOS first, with the Android version lagging behind in features, design, and platform integration. Widgets arrive months late. Wear OS support is an afterthought. Health Connect integration is incomplete or missing entirely. Material Design guidelines are ignored in favor of a straight iOS port.

In 2026, that gap has narrowed — but not equally across all apps. Some calorie trackers now deliver excellent Android-native experiences with proper Wear OS companions, home screen widgets, Health Connect sync, and Material You theming. Others still feel like they belong on a different operating system.

We spent four weeks testing the top calorie tracking apps specifically on Android devices (Pixel 9, Samsung Galaxy S25, and Samsung Galaxy Watch 7), evaluating platform integration, Wear OS functionality, widget quality, and the overall experience of using each app within the Android ecosystem.

How We Ranked These Apps

Every app was evaluated on Android-specific criteria:

  • Material Design compliance — Does the app look and feel native to Android?
  • Health Connect integration — Bidirectional sync of nutrition, activity, and body measurement data
  • Wear OS companion app — Functionality, speed, and independence of the watch app
  • Home screen widgets — Calorie and macro widgets for at-a-glance tracking
  • Notification and quick-action support — Logging from notifications, quick settings, or shortcuts
  • Offline functionality — Logging capability without internet connection
  • Database accuracy and size — Verified entries and comprehensive coverage
  • AI logging features — Photo recognition, voice input, barcode scanning

Quick Comparison Table

App Price Health Connect Wear OS App Widgets Material Design AI Logging Database
Nutrola €2.50/mo Yes Full companion Yes Yes Photo, voice, barcode 1.8M+ verified
Samsung Health Free Yes Native on Galaxy Watch Yes Samsung One UI Basic photo Large
MyFitnessPal Free / $79.99/yr Yes Basic Yes Partial Barcode 14M+ (user-submitted)
Lose It! Free / $39.99/yr Limited No Yes Partial Photo AI 40M+ (user-submitted)
Cronometer Free / $49.99/yr Yes No No No Barcode 1M+ verified
Yazio Free / $44.99/yr Yes Basic Yes Partial Photo, barcode Large
FatSecret Free / $38.99/yr Limited No Yes Partial Barcode Large
Lifesum Free / $49.99/yr Yes Basic Yes Partial Barcode, photo Large

1. Nutrola — Best Overall Calorie Tracker for Android

Nutrola delivers the best Android-native calorie tracking experience on the market. The app follows Material Design guidelines, supports dynamic theming with Material You on Pixel and compatible Samsung devices, and integrates deeply with the Android ecosystem in ways that most competitors do not.

Health Connect integration is bidirectional — nutrition data logged in Nutrola syncs to Health Connect, and activity data from other fitness apps flows back. This means your step count, workouts, and calorie burn from any Health Connect-compatible app automatically factor into your daily picture without manual entry.

The Wear OS companion app is a full-featured tool, not a stripped-down afterthought. You can log meals by voice directly from your wrist, scan barcodes using the watch camera where supported, and view your calorie and macro progress from a watch face complication. For men and women logging meals at the gym or on the go, wrist-based logging removes the friction of pulling out your phone.

Home screen widgets display daily calorie progress, macro breakdowns, and remaining targets. The app supports Android shortcuts for one-tap logging and integrates with Google Assistant for voice-based food logging.

The food database contains 1.8 million verified entries — no user-submitted duplicates or inaccurate calorie counts. AI logging handles photos (point your camera at a plate), voice descriptions ("two scrambled eggs with toast and avocado"), and barcode scanning for packaged foods. All of this at €2.50 per month with zero ads on any tier, available in 9 languages.

Pros:

  • Material Design with Material You dynamic theming
  • Full Health Connect bidirectional integration
  • Full-featured Wear OS companion app with voice logging
  • Home screen widgets for calories and macros
  • AI photo, voice, and barcode logging
  • 1.8M+ verified food database
  • 100+ nutrients tracked
  • €2.50/month with zero ads
  • Recipe import feature
  • 9 languages supported

Cons:

  • Newer app with smaller community than legacy platforms
  • Wear OS barcode scanning requires compatible watch hardware
  • No built-in exercise database (uses Health Connect for activity data)

2. Samsung Health — Best Pre-Installed Option for Galaxy Users

Samsung Health comes pre-installed on every Galaxy phone and integrates natively with Galaxy Watch. For Samsung users, the zero-setup convenience is genuine — you can start logging calories immediately without downloading anything. Health Connect support is built in, and the app syncs seamlessly with Samsung's ecosystem of wearables and smart home devices.

Food logging covers basic calories and macros with a large database. A photo-based food recognition feature was added recently, though it handles simple meals better than complex dishes. Samsung Health also tracks steps, heart rate, sleep, body composition (via compatible Galaxy devices), and workouts in a single app.

The limitation is nutritional depth. Micronutrient tracking is minimal, the food database mixes verified and user-submitted entries, and detailed macro customization requires more effort than dedicated nutrition apps.

Pros:

  • Pre-installed on Galaxy devices
  • Native Galaxy Watch integration
  • Full Health Connect support
  • All-in-one health and fitness tracking
  • Free with no premium tier needed for basics
  • Body composition tracking with Galaxy Ring/Watch

Cons:

  • Limited micronutrient tracking
  • Food database accuracy varies
  • Basic photo AI compared to dedicated trackers
  • Nutrition features feel secondary to fitness tracking
  • Samsung One UI design (not pure Material Design)
  • Less useful on non-Samsung Android devices

3. MyFitnessPal — Best for Database Size on Android

MyFitnessPal's 14 million entry food database remains its strongest asset. On Android, the app has improved significantly in recent years — Health Connect integration is now functional, a basic Wear OS app exists for quick logging, and home screen widgets show daily calorie progress.

Barcode scanning is fast and covers virtually every packaged food in major markets. The exercise database is extensive, and the app integrates with most fitness trackers and smart scales.

The Android experience still lags behind iOS in polish. Some features arrive on iOS first, the Wear OS app is limited to viewing data rather than full logging, and the interface does not fully embrace Material Design. At $79.99/year for premium, it is one of the most expensive options, and the free tier includes ads that disrupt the logging flow.

Pros:

  • Largest food database (14M+ entries)
  • Barcode scanning
  • Health Connect integration
  • Basic Wear OS app
  • Home screen widgets
  • Massive community

Cons:

  • $79.99/year for premium
  • User-submitted database accuracy issues
  • Android app lags behind iOS in features
  • Wear OS app is very limited
  • Free tier includes intrusive ads
  • Limited micronutrient tracking
  • Interface does not follow Material Design

4. Yazio — Best for Meal Plans on Android

Yazio combines calorie tracking with built-in meal plans and recipes, and the Android app is well-designed with a clean interface that partially adopts Material Design principles. Health Connect integration works for syncing activity data, and the Wear OS app provides basic calorie viewing.

Photo-based food logging was added recently and handles simple meals reasonably well. Barcode scanning is reliable. The intermittent fasting tracker is a popular feature for users combining calorie tracking with time-restricted eating.

Widgets display daily progress, and the overall Android experience is smoother than several competitors. The main limitation is nutrient depth — premium tracks around 20 micronutrients, which is less than half of what Nutrola or Cronometer offer.

Pros:

  • Built-in meal plans and recipes
  • Clean, partially Material Design interface
  • Health Connect integration
  • Basic Wear OS app
  • Photo logging and barcode scanning
  • Intermittent fasting tracker
  • Home screen widgets
  • $44.99/year for premium

Cons:

  • ~20 micronutrients on premium
  • Photo AI limited to simple meals
  • Wear OS app only shows data (cannot log)
  • Meal plans may not suit all dietary needs
  • Some features locked behind premium paywall
  • User-submitted database entries

5. Lose It! — Best Free Tier for Android

Lose It! provides one of the most usable free tiers on Android. Basic calorie tracking, the Snap It photo AI feature, and barcode scanning are all available without paying. The interface is colorful and approachable, making it a solid starting point for people new to calorie tracking.

The Android version receives regular updates, and widgets show daily calorie progress on the home screen. The main Android-specific gaps are Health Connect integration (limited compared to competitors) and the complete absence of a Wear OS companion app.

Photo AI handles common foods and branded items fairly well but struggles with mixed dishes, homemade meals, and cuisines outside the Western mainstream.

Pros:

  • Strong free tier with photo AI
  • Snap It photo recognition
  • Barcode scanning
  • Home screen widgets
  • Clean interface
  • Community challenges for motivation
  • $39.99/year for premium (affordable)

Cons:

  • No Wear OS app
  • Limited Health Connect integration
  • User-submitted database accuracy varies
  • Photo AI struggles with complex meals
  • Limited micronutrient tracking
  • Android version occasionally lags behind iOS updates

6. Lifesum — Best for Visual Design on Android

Lifesum stands out for its visual design and life plan approach to nutrition. The app looks polished on Android with a colorful, engaging interface. Health Connect integration syncs activity and weight data, and a basic Wear OS companion provides calorie viewing.

The app offers various diet plans — keto, Mediterranean, high-protein, Scandinavian — and adjusts food ratings within those plans. Barcode scanning and a recently added photo feature handle logging. Widgets show daily macro progress.

The premium pricing at $49.99/year is reasonable, but the free tier is quite restrictive. Micronutrient tracking is limited, and the food database accuracy is inconsistent.

Pros:

  • Visually polished interface
  • Multiple diet plan templates
  • Health Connect integration
  • Basic Wear OS app
  • Barcode scanning and photo logging
  • Home screen widgets
  • Life plan approach to nutrition

Cons:

  • $49.99/year for premium
  • Very restrictive free tier
  • Limited micronutrient tracking
  • Food database accuracy varies
  • Wear OS app is basic (viewing only)
  • Diet plan approach may not suit everyone

7. FatSecret — Best Completely Free Option

FatSecret offers a fully free calorie and macro tracker with no feature-gating behind a paywall. Barcode scanning, food diary, recipe calculator, and community forums are all available at no cost. The premium tier ($38.99/year) adds meal plans and detailed reporting but is not required for core functionality.

On Android, the app supports home screen widgets for calorie tracking, but Health Connect integration is limited and there is no Wear OS companion app. The interface is functional but dated — it does not follow Material Design guidelines and visually lags behind most competitors.

The food database is large and covers most common foods, though accuracy varies as it includes user-submitted entries.

Pros:

  • Core features completely free
  • Barcode scanning
  • Recipe calculator
  • Community forums
  • Home screen widgets
  • Affordable premium at $38.99/year

Cons:

  • No Wear OS app
  • Limited Health Connect integration
  • Dated interface (not Material Design)
  • Food database accuracy varies
  • Limited micronutrient tracking
  • Photo AI not available
  • No voice logging

8. Cronometer — Best for Micronutrient Data on Android

Cronometer tracks approximately 80 micronutrients using verified databases (NCCDB, USDA), making it the most nutrient-dense tracker after Nutrola. The data is reliable and the reports are detailed, appealing to users who want comprehensive nutritional insight beyond basic macros.

On Android specifically, Cronometer falls short. There is no Wear OS companion app, no home screen widgets, and the interface ignores Material Design entirely — it looks and feels like a web app wrapped in a native shell. Health Connect integration exists but is not as seamless as competitors that have embraced the platform more fully.

For users who prioritize data depth over Android platform integration, Cronometer delivers. For those who want their nutrition app to feel like it belongs on their Android phone, it disappoints.

Pros:

  • ~80 micronutrients tracked
  • Verified food database (NCCDB, USDA)
  • Custom macro and micronutrient targets
  • Detailed nutrient reports
  • Barcode scanning
  • $49.99/year for Gold

Cons:

  • No Wear OS app
  • No home screen widgets
  • Interface ignores Material Design
  • Feels like a web app rather than native Android
  • Smaller food database
  • No AI photo or voice logging
  • Health Connect integration is basic

Android-Specific Features That Matter

Health Connect Integration

Health Connect is Android's unified health data platform, launched by Google to let health and fitness apps share data with user permission. A calorie tracker with full Health Connect support can read your step count and workout calories from Google Fit, Samsung Health, or Fitbit, and write your nutrition data back so other apps can access it. Bidirectional sync creates a complete health picture without manual data entry across multiple apps.

Wear OS Companion Apps

Wear OS watches have matured significantly, and a good companion app turns your watch into a food logging device. Voice-based meal logging from the wrist is the fastest way to track food throughout the day. Watch face complications show calorie progress at a glance. Apps that lack Wear OS support are missing one of Android's strongest platform advantages.

Home Screen Widgets

Android widgets let you see your calorie and macro progress without opening the app. A well-designed widget shows remaining calories, protein progress, and macro breakdown right on your home screen. The best widgets are resizable and update in real time as you log meals.

Material You Theming

Material You, introduced with Android 12, generates a dynamic color palette from your wallpaper and applies it across compatible apps. Apps that support Material You feel visually integrated into your device rather than looking like a generic cross-platform port.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best free calorie tracker for Android?

FatSecret offers the most complete free experience with no feature restrictions on core tracking. Lose It! provides a strong free tier with photo AI logging included. For comprehensive tracking at minimal cost, Nutrola at €2.50/month is less expensive than a single coffee and delivers 100+ nutrients, AI logging, and a verified database with zero ads.

Does MyFitnessPal work with Wear OS?

MyFitnessPal has a basic Wear OS app that lets you view daily calorie progress and recent meals. However, you cannot log food directly from the watch. For full Wear OS logging including voice input, Nutrola offers the most capable wearable experience.

Which calorie tracker has the best Health Connect integration?

Nutrola and Samsung Health offer the most complete Health Connect integration with bidirectional data sync. MyFitnessPal and Yazio also support Health Connect, though with more limited data categories. Lose It!, FatSecret, and Cronometer have partial or limited Health Connect support.

Can I track calories from my Android watch?

Yes, but only with apps that have a Wear OS companion. Nutrola offers full voice-based logging from Wear OS. Samsung Health provides native logging on Galaxy Watch. MyFitnessPal, Yazio, and Lifesum offer basic viewing on Wear OS. Lose It!, FatSecret, and Cronometer do not have Wear OS apps.

Which calorie tracker has the best Android widgets?

Nutrola, Samsung Health, and Yazio offer the most functional and visually polished home screen widgets. MyFitnessPal and Lose It! also provide widgets, though with less customization. Cronometer lacks widgets entirely.

Is there a calorie tracker that works offline on Android?

Most calorie trackers require an internet connection for database searches and barcode scanning. However, recently logged foods and favorites are typically cached for offline access. Nutrola and Cronometer both cache your most-used foods for offline logging, with full sync when you reconnect.


The Bottom Line

The best calorie tracker for Android in 2026 is one built for the platform, not ported from iOS as an afterthought. Nutrola leads this list with Material Design compliance, full Health Connect integration, a capable Wear OS companion with voice logging, home screen widgets, and 100+ nutrient tracking from a verified 1.8M+ database — all at €2.50/month with zero ads. Samsung Health is the best zero-effort option for Galaxy users, and FatSecret is the strongest completely free choice. Whatever you choose, prioritize Health Connect integration and Wear OS support — they transform calorie tracking from a chore into a seamless part of your Android experience.

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8 Best Calorie Trackers for Android in 2026 (Tested and Ranked)