4.9 on the App Store

Nommie vs Cronometer

Cronometer is the nutrition geek's calorie tracker — famous for verified micronutrient data. Nommie is built for speed, using AI photo logging instead of database search. Here's how the two compare.

Cronometer built its reputation on data quality: a vetted database sourced from the USDA and NCCDB, with tracking for 80+ nutrients including vitamins, minerals, and amino acids. Nommie takes a different route — you point your camera at a meal and the AI logs it in seconds. Both count calories. The real question is how much detail you need, and how much friction you're willing to accept to get it.

What makes Nommie different

Logging speed

Nommie logs a meal in about 3 seconds from a photo. Cronometer typically takes longer per meal because its value is in precise database entries and portion detail.

Micronutrient depth

Cronometer is the leader here — it tracks vitamins, minerals, and amino acids with verified data. Nommie covers calories, macros, and common micros from photo-based estimates.

Real-food accuracy

Cronometer excels when you can match a canonical database entry. Nommie was built for real plates — home cooking, restaurants, and mixed dishes where database search breaks down.

Free tier

Both apps offer free tiers. Cronometer's free plan is generous for tracking. Nommie keeps photo logging and macro tracking free.

Cronometer's advantage is real and worth naming clearly: if you're tracking for a specific reason — managing a deficiency, following a protocol, optimizing micronutrient intake — its verified database is genuinely hard to beat. You can see whether you hit your magnesium, your B12, your omega-3s, and trust the number. That's not marketing; that's what Cronometer was built for.

Nommie is built for a different person. Most people who want to track calories aren't optimizing micronutrients — they're trying to build a consistent habit without spending five minutes per meal searching a database. Nommie's answer is the camera: photograph your plate, and the AI identifies the foods, estimates portions, and logs calories and macros. Three seconds, no search bar.

If you genuinely need per-nutrient precision, Cronometer is the right tool. If you've quit other trackers because manual logging wore you out, Nommie is built for exactly that case. Some users do both — Nommie for daily speed, Cronometer for periodic deep audits. The best tracker is still the one you'll actually open tomorrow.

Nommie vs Cronometer

FeatureNommieCronometer
Logging methodPhoto → AI identifies and logsManual database search + barcode scan
Time per meal~3 seconds~60-90 seconds
Micronutrient trackingCalories, macros, common microsDeep — vitamins, minerals, amino acids
Data sourceAI vision model + nutrition databasesUSDA, NCCDB, verified entries
Works on restaurant mealsYes — trained on real platesLimited to submitted entries
Learning curveOpen app, take photoModerate — designed for detail-oriented users
Best forConsistent everyday loggingNutrition tracking for specific deficiencies or protocols

Frequently asked questions

Does Nommie track micronutrients like Cronometer?+

Nommie tracks calories, macros (protein, carbs, fat), and common micronutrients from photo-based estimates. Cronometer goes deeper — vitamins, minerals, and amino acids with verified data. If micronutrient precision is your primary goal, Cronometer is still the better fit.

Is Nommie more accurate than Cronometer?+

It depends on the food. Cronometer is more precise when a canonical database entry matches what you ate. Nommie is more accurate — and much faster — on home-cooked meals, restaurant plates, and mixed dishes where no database entry exists.

Can I import my Cronometer history?+

Not directly today. You can export from Cronometer and continue fresh in Nommie. Most users find the photo workflow so different that a clean start feels natural.

Can I use both?+

Yes. Some users log daily in Nommie for speed and run an occasional Cronometer week when they want a detailed micronutrient audit. The workflows are complementary rather than redundant.

Try Nommie for free

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