Editable AI output
The app should not pretend every photo is exact. It should show a draft and let you correct foods, grams, calories, and macros.
AI food scanner
Photo logging can make calorie tracking faster, as long as the app keeps the nutrition estimate editable.
Quick answer
A free AI food scanner should turn meal photos into editable calorie and macro drafts. Calorieo lets you scan a photo, review detected foods, adjust portions, and save the meal to your daily targets.
Decision criteria
These pages are built for searchers comparing tools. The right app should reduce logging friction, not just rank well in an app store.
The app should not pretend every photo is exact. It should show a draft and let you correct foods, grams, calories, and macros.
Photo estimates are strongest when you can adjust the serving size. Hidden oil, sauces, and dense toppings often need manual correction.
A scan is only useful if it updates your day. Look for calories, protein, carbs, fat, and goal progress after saving.
Photo scanning removes the blank search box problem. Instead of searching chicken, rice, broccoli, sauce, and oil one by one, you start with a visual draft of the meal and edit from there.
This is especially useful for common meals, leftovers, restaurant plates, and meal prep containers where the food is visible but exact weights are not always available.
A camera cannot always see oil, butter, sugar, dressing, cooking liquid, or ingredients hidden under the top layer. It may also struggle with dense foods that look small but carry many calories.
The best apps are honest about that limitation. Calorieo treats the AI output as a reviewable estimate so users can correct what the camera cannot know.
Use barcode scanning for packaged foods with labels. Use text entry for simple meals you already know, like '2 eggs and toast' or 'Greek yogurt with berries'. Use photo scanning when the visual meal is faster than typing.
A good food tracker should support all three because real eating is messy. Calorieo is built for switching input methods based on the meal, not forcing one workflow every time.
Use this as a quick filter when comparing calorie counters, macro trackers, barcode scanners, and AI food logging apps.
It can provide a useful estimate, but it should be reviewed. Hidden ingredients and portion size uncertainty mean edits are often needed.
Calorieo is free forever for the basics, including core food logging workflows. Premium features are planned for advanced nutrition tools later.
Meals with visible components work best: bowls, plates, meal prep containers, salads, and foods where the main ingredients can be seen.