Nutrition apps and supplements, ranked
Six brands, each used for at least three weeks and scored on the same eleven points. Prices are the real US cost: monthly or yearly for apps, the subscription rate for supplements.
- US price
- $19.99/mo
- Type
- Calorie & food tracker
- Best for
- All levels
- Try it
- Free plan
A vast food database that makes logging a packaged meal a single search. The reason it stayed open at dinner.
- US price
- $9.99/mo
- Type
- Micronutrient tracker
- Best for
- Data-minded
- Try it
- Free plan
The deepest micronutrient tracking of the six, at the lowest monthly price. Built for people who read labels.
- US price
- From $33/mo
- Type
- Subscription multivitamin
- Best for
- Everyday
- Try it
- Cancel anytime
A short, traceable formula in a capsule built to skip the morning aftertaste. Less is the whole point.
- US price
- From $70/mo
- Type
- Behavior-change coaching
- Best for
- Committed
- Try it
- Trial offer
Daily psychology lessons that outshine the tracker. Expensive and upsell-heavy, but the coaching works.
- US price
- $44.99/yr
- Type
- Meal plans & tracking
- Best for
- Beginner
- Try it
- Free plan
The most approachable tracker, with guided meal plans for people who want a path, not a spreadsheet.
- US price
- $49.99/mo
- Type
- Daily synbiotic
- Best for
- Gut-focused
- Try it
- Cancel anytime
A studied probiotic-prebiotic for gut health. Last on price at fifty a month, not on quality.
Reading the ranking
The score weighs how easily the habit stuck, how the product felt in daily use, how it handled your data, and what you get for the money. A cheaper pick does not automatically beat a costly one: MyFitnessPal leads on how it fit a normal week, not on price. Each review breaks the score down point by point on a one-to-ten scale.
See how we rankTalk to a doctor before starting a new diet or supplement routine, especially if you are pregnant or managing a health condition. This site offers editorial comparisons, not medical advice.