Alternatives

Best Foodvisor Alternatives in 2026

Looking for a Foodvisor alternative? 5 photo-AI and database calorie trackers compared honestly — including the free, on-device option — for 2026.

By Bento Bunny Team
Bento Bunny weighing up a choice between options — picking the right Foodvisor alternative

Why People Look for a Foodvisor Alternative

Foodvisor was doing photo-based calorie tracking before it was fashionable — the French app has combined photo recognition with a searchable database since 2018, and its freemium model is more honest than most: you can photo-log on the free tier, with premium (roughly $60 a year as of mid-2026) adding nutrition coaching and meal plans. The complaints that send people shopping: recognition accuracy lags the newer AI wave, especially for mixed plates and non-European dishes; the database skews French and European; and photos are processed in the cloud. Our Foodvisor review goes deeper; here's the field of alternatives.

What to Look for in a Foodvisor Alternative

  • Recognition accuracy — the newer AI trackers are a generation ahead on mixed and home-cooked meals.
  • On-device vs cloud — Foodvisor processes photos in the cloud. Only a couple of options keep them on your phone.
  • Pricing model — Foodvisor's free tier is decent. Don't downgrade to a trial-only app without realising it.
  • Database fallback — Foodvisor's hybrid photo-plus-database approach is genuinely useful; some pure-AI apps lack it.

Foodvisor Alternatives at a Glance

App Photo AI Price (as of mid-2026)
Bento BunnyYes — on-device (iOS 26+)Free during iOS beta
Cal AIYes — cloud~$30–40/yr after trial
SnapCalorieYes — cloudSubscription after trial
Lose It!Snap It (basic)Free tier + ~$40/yr Premium
MyFitnessPalMeal Scan (top tier)Free tier (ads) + ~$80/yr Premium

1. Bento Bunny — Best Overall Alternative

Bento Bunny is the same idea as Foodvisor — photo first, database and text as fallbacks — executed on current-generation AI. Recognition handles mixed plates, home cooking, and non-Western cuisines that older models miss, and barcode scanning is included free. Two structural advantages: it's free during the iOS beta (no premium tier at all), and on iOS 26 and later the AI runs on-device using Apple's Foundation Models, so your meal photos never leave your phone — something no cloud-based tracker can offer. MyFitnessPal and Cronometer imports are one tap.

Best for: Anyone who liked Foodvisor's approach and wants newer AI, free.

2. Cal AI

The biggest name in photo-AI tracking. Polished, fast, with photo, text, and barcode input. The catches: no real free tier (around $30–40 a year after the trial as of mid-2026), cloud photo processing, and recurring accuracy criticisms for mixed dishes. See our Is Cal AI worth it? review.

Best for: People who want the most popular option and don't mind paying.

3. SnapCalorie

Built by computer-vision researchers, with credible accuracy on portion estimation. Smaller ecosystem and a subscription model after the trial; cloud-based processing.

Best for: Photo-logging purists who care about estimation pedigree.

4. Lose It!

The hybrid-on-a-budget option. Snap It photo logging is more basic than Foodvisor's, but the database behind it is strong for North American foods and the free tier is genuinely usable. Premium is around $40 a year as of mid-2026.

Best for: People who mostly eat packaged or chain foods and want a cheap, reliable app.

5. MyFitnessPal

The database heavyweight, with Meal Scan photo logging on its top tier. If Foodvisor's database coverage was your frustration, MyFitnessPal's 14-million-item catalogue is the deepest available — at the cost of ads, a paywalled barcode scanner, and Premium from around $80 a year as of mid-2026.

Best for: People who want maximum database breadth with occasional photo logging.

How to Choose

If you want newer photo-AI, the realistic shortlist is Cal AI, SnapCalorie, and Bento Bunny — and they split cleanly on price and privacy: Cal AI and SnapCalorie are paid and cloud-based; Bento Bunny is free during beta and on-device. If you've gone off photo logging entirely, Lose It! and MyFitnessPal are the database routes. There's also our wider Cal AI alternatives roundup if you're comparing the whole photo-AI field.

Free during beta

Foodvisor's idea, current-generation AI — free

Join the iOS beta: photo, barcode, and text logging with on-device AI. Free during TestFlight.

  • Bento Bunny iOS beta (free during TestFlight — no card)
  • Better recognition on mixed and home-cooked meals
  • On-device AI on iOS 26+ — meal photos never leave your phone

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Foodvisor alternative?
Bento Bunny for most people — it's the same photo-first, database-fallback concept with newer AI, free during its iOS beta, and processes photos on-device on iOS 26+. Cal AI is the most popular paid option; Lose It! and MyFitnessPal are the database routes.
Is there a free alternative to Foodvisor?
Yes. Bento Bunny is free during its iOS beta with full AI photo logging, barcode scanning, and text logging. Foodvisor's own free tier allows photo logging too, but its recognition model is older; most other photo-AI apps (Cal AI, SnapCalorie) are subscription-only after a trial.
Which photo calorie tracker is most accurate?
All photo trackers are estimators, and all of them are weakest on mixed dishes, sauces, and hidden fats. The newer-generation models (Bento Bunny, Cal AI, SnapCalorie) are noticeably better than older ones like Foodvisor's on mixed plates, but for gram-level precision a food scale still wins.
Does Foodvisor send my photos to the cloud?
Yes — Foodvisor processes meal photos on its servers, as do Cal AI and SnapCalorie. If you want photo recognition without uploading photos, Bento Bunny runs its AI on-device using Apple's Foundation Models on iOS 26 and later.