4.9 on the App Store

Take a picture of food for calories — free, in seconds.

Nommie is the free app that lets you take a picture of food for calories and macros. Point your camera at any meal and get an instant nutrition log — no database search, no barcode, no manual entry.

If you've been looking for an app that lets you take a picture of food for calories, this is literally what Nommie does. The camera opens, you snap the plate, and an AI vision model identifies the food, estimates portion size, and writes a full calorie and macro entry in under three seconds. It works on packaged food, home cooking, and restaurant meals — and the core photo logging is free.

What makes Nommie different

One photo, one log

Open the camera, take a picture of the food, and Nommie returns calories and macros. That's the whole workflow — no searching, no typing, no scrolling a database.

Free to use

Photo calorie logging is included on the free plan. Paid features are clearly separated — you don't need a subscription to log a meal from a picture.

Works on any plate

Packaged, home-cooked, restaurant, mixed dishes, leftovers — the model is trained on real plates, not just labels, so it handles meals a barcode scanner can't touch.

Fix it in one tap

If the AI misreads a portion or an ingredient, tap to edit. Your correction sticks for next time, so the model adapts to how you actually eat.

The reason people search for an app that lets you take a picture of food for calories is simple: manual logging is unsustainable. Searching a food database for every ingredient, guessing serving sizes, and tapping through menus is what makes the average calorie tracker get abandoned inside two weeks. A camera-first workflow cuts that whole chain down to a single action.

Nommie was built around the photo, not bolted on after the fact. The vision model identifies every item on the plate, estimates portion size from visual cues like plate and utensil references, and fills in calories, protein, carbs, fat, and fiber automatically. Meals that would take three minutes in a traditional tracker — think a stir-fry, a burrito bowl, a home-cooked pasta — take about five seconds here.

The free plan covers what most people actually need: unlimited photo logging, daily calorie and macro totals, and meal history for the current week. Premium adds longer history, Apple Health sync, and custom macro targets, but the core promise — take a picture of food, get the calories — doesn't require a credit card. That's unusual in this category, and it's deliberate.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a free app to take a picture of food for calories?+

Yes — Nommie's free plan includes photo-based calorie and macro logging with no meal limit. You download the app, point the camera at your food, and get a full nutrition entry without paying. Premium features exist, but photo logging itself isn't paywalled.

How does taking a picture of food calculate calories?+

An AI vision model identifies each item on the plate, estimates portion size from visual references like the plate and utensils, and maps the result to nutrition data. The output is calories plus protein, carbs, fat, fiber, and sugar — the same fields you'd get from a manual database search, without the searching.

How accurate is photo-based calorie tracking?+

On typical home and restaurant meals, Nommie lands within about 10-15% of lab-verified values. Manual estimation, by comparison, is usually 20-30% off. Accuracy improves when you correct mistakes, because the model adapts to your specific foods and portion sizes over time.

What if I can't get a clear photo of my food?+

You can log text entries as a fallback — describe the meal and Nommie parses it the same way. For mixed dishes or poor lighting, a single overhead photo usually works best. If the AI isn't confident, it'll ask a clarifying question rather than guess silently.

Try Nommie for free

Snap a photo, get instant nutrition — no manual logging.