Comparisons

Bento Bunny vs Foodvisor (2026)

Bento Bunny vs Foodvisor: two AI photo calorie trackers compared on recognition, privacy, free tiers, and price. See which photo-first app wins in 2026.

By Bento Bunny Team
Photographing a meal with an iPhone — comparing Bento Bunny and Foodvisor's AI photo logging

Foodvisor was doing AI photo food recognition before it was cool — the French app has been pointing neural networks at dinner plates since 2018. Bento Bunny is the newer photo-first tracker built around Apple's on-device AI. Since both apps log meals by camera, this comparison comes down to the details: recognition quality, privacy, what's free, and what you pay for.

Bento Bunny vs Foodvisor at a Glance

Feature Bento Bunny Foodvisor
AI photo loggingYes — core featureYes — core feature
Where AI runsOn-device (iOS 26+)Cloud servers
Works offlineYes (iOS 26+)No — needs a connection
Free tierFull features during betaPhoto logging with limits
Paid tierNone during betaPremium subscription for coaching/plans (as of mid-2026)
ExtrasBarcode + text logging, MFP/Cronometer importDiet plans, dietitian coaching (premium)

Same Idea, Different Architecture

Both apps agree on the core thesis: searching a database for every meal is why people quit tracking, and a camera is the fix. The biggest difference is where the AI lives. Foodvisor uploads your meal photos to its servers for analysis, which is how nearly every photo tracker worked until recently. Bento Bunny runs Apple's Foundation Models directly on your iPhone (iOS 26+), so photos are processed on-device — they never leave your phone, and recognition works even offline.

If you don't care where your food photos go, this is a tie. If you do — and a photo log of everything you eat is surprisingly intimate data — it's the clearest difference between the two apps.

What Foodvisor Does Better

Foodvisor has years of head start in food recognition, and it shows in its handling of French and European cuisine especially. Beyond tracking, its premium tier is closer to a nutrition program: personalised diet plans and, on higher tiers, access to registered dietitians. If you want human guidance attached to your photo tracker, Foodvisor offers something Bento Bunny doesn't try to. Our Foodvisor review covers the premium tiers in detail.

What Bento Bunny Does Better

Privacy and price. Foodvisor's free tier is functional but limited, with the full experience behind a subscription (pricing varies by plan and region as of mid-2026). Bento Bunny's core features — photo logging, barcode scanning, text descriptions — are all free during the iOS beta. And if you're coming from another tracker, Bento Bunny imports your MyFitnessPal or Cronometer history so you don't start from zero.

Who Should Choose What

Choose Foodvisor if: you want diet plans or dietitian coaching bundled with photo tracking, or you eat a lot of European cuisine where its recognition is strongest.

Choose Bento Bunny if: you want photo logging that's free and on-device, you care where your food photos are processed, or you're switching from MyFitnessPal or Cronometer and want your history to come with you.

The Bottom Line

Foodvisor proved photo-based tracking could work; Bento Bunny moves it on-device and makes it free. If coaching matters, pay for Foodvisor Premium. If fast, private, free logging is the goal, Bento Bunny is the cleaner choice.

Start tracking with Bento Bunny

AI calorie tracking — just Type what you eat.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Bento Bunny better than Foodvisor?
Both are photo-first AI trackers. Bento Bunny processes photos on-device (iOS 26+), works offline, and is free during its iOS beta. Foodvisor processes photos in the cloud but offers diet plans and dietitian coaching on its premium tiers. For private, free photo logging choose Bento Bunny; for coaching choose Foodvisor.
Is Foodvisor free?
Foodvisor has a free tier with basic photo logging, but meaningful limits apply, and diet plans plus coaching require a premium subscription (pricing varies by plan as of mid-2026). Bento Bunny's core features are free during its beta.
Does Foodvisor process photos on-device?
No — Foodvisor analyses meal photos on its cloud servers, which also means it needs an internet connection. Bento Bunny runs Apple's Foundation Models on-device on iOS 26+, so photos never leave your phone and recognition works offline.
Which AI food recognition is more accurate?
Both produce solid estimates for common foods and both are approximate for mixed dishes — that's inherent to photo estimation. Foodvisor has a long-trained model that's strong on European cuisine; Bento Bunny uses Apple's on-device models and lets you correct any item in a tap. For packaged foods, both offer barcode scanning for exact data.