13 juillet 2025 · 8 min
Lose It! has helped over 50 million users shed pounds since 2008 with its friendly calorie budget, badge challenges and playful food icons. Yet in 2025 the beloved orange tracker is showing its age. Ads saturate the free tier, the diary caps out at 25 food entries per day, and advanced features—macros, habit insights, wearable imports—sit behind a Premium paywall that now costs $39.99 per year. Meanwhile, newer contenders bundle adaptive calorie engines, full‑day meal generators and even GLP‑1 medication coaching at prices that fit every budget.
This long‑form guide spotlights eight of the best Lose It! alternatives. We didn’t just install each app for screenshots—we logged breakfasts, scanned barcodes, exported CSVs and pulled grocery lists for six weeks to judge speed, accuracy and real‑world convenience. The result: an honest, 2,000‑word deep dive into the platforms that can replace—or augment—your current calorie game.
App | Ideal for | Free tier? | Starting price* | Meal planning | Micronutrients |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Centenary Day | Automated schedule + meals | ✅ | $9 / mo | Linear‑program solver | 45 |
Cronometer Gold | Micronutrient deep dive | Limited | $5.99 / mo | No | 82 |
MacroFactor | Adaptive macro coaching | Trial | $11.99 / mo | No | 20 |
YAZIO PRO | Tight budgets + fasting | Limited | $39.99 / yr | Recipe suggestions | 30 |
MyFitnessPal Premium+ | Largest food database | Limited | $79.99 / yr | No | 25 |
MyNetDiary Premium | Diabetes & CGM users | Limited | $8.33 / mo | AI menus | 33 |
Lifesum Premium | Template diets & UI | Limited | $8 / mo | Static menus | 24 |
Eat This Much | Algorithmic full‑day menus | Limited | $9 / mo | Yes | 25 |
*Monthly figure reflects annual billing when required.
Before chasing features, pinpoint why you track:
Imagine dragging weekly workouts, sleep anchors and meal blocks onto a colourful grid, then pressing Generate Plan to watch an AI solver craft breakfasts, lunches and dinners that nail macros, fibre and prep time. That’s Centenary Day’s super‑power. It merges calendar logic (like Google Calendar), meal planning (like PlateJoy) and habit scoring (think WHOOP but lifestyle‑wide). The solver even inserts Protein Shake tiles whenever a day dips below your target protein grams.
Busy professionals appreciate that cooking events post to the same schedule as Zone‑2 runs and sauna sessions. The mobile app then pings tasks in real time. A level system (1–10) blends Routine, Nutrition and Organizer scores and shows percentile rank versus peers—gamification without social pressure.
Cronometer began as a bio‑hacker spreadsheet and never compromised on accuracy. Each entry ties back to USDA SR, NCCDB or the FoodData Central lab databases—no random “homemade tacos” duplicates. The free tier already tracks over 60 nutrients; Gold (ad‑free) brings that to 82, adds Oracle food suggestions, trend charts (selenium vs. thyroid labs) and custom biomarker import.
There’s no meal planner, but you can import Eat This Much CSVs or Centenary Day grocery lists to cover that gap. If your doctor orders labs, the export lets you correlate ferritin with iron intake in seconds.
Built by evidence‑based power‑lifters, MacroFactor uses Bayesian modelling to estimate true maintenance calories. Each week you weigh in, confirm adherence and watch the engine recalculate your targets—usually a 2–3% shift. No more manual plateaus.
The food database is user‑crowd‑sourced but audited, and recipe builder supports cooked‑weight “shrinkage” factors that keep macros accurate. Nifty features: expense‑styled charts (protein over “budget”), and privacy mode that hides weight when screen‑sharing.
At $39.99 per year (discounted to $19 during Black Friday), YAZIO beats Lose It! on price while delivering barcode scan, macro goals, a 16:8 fasting timer and seasonal recipe packs. Colourful rings track daily fruit & veg, water and steps. Offline mode is a lifesaver on flights.
With 13 million foods and social forums dating back to 2005, MyFitnessPal remains the biggest database. Premium+ (2025) now bundles Barcode Scan, Meal Scan photo AI, Net‑Carbs and ad‑free logging—but at $79.99/year. If you rely on obscure ethnic groceries, the database alone justifies cost. Yet there’s no meal plan, and barcode duplicates require vigilance.
MyNetDiary verifies food entries in‑house, reducing barcode errors common in Lose It! and MFP. The Premium Diabetes module overlays CGM readings from Dexcom or Abbott, highlighting meals that spike glucose. Carb counting toggles between total, net and exchanges. AI meal suggestions fit carb budgets and push grocery lists to email.
Lifesum shines where Lose It! feels utilitarian. Diet programs like Mediterranean, High‑Protein and Keto Burn present daily menus, water reminders and habit cards in pastel bliss. Barcode scan, recipe import and macro goals cost ~$8 / mo (annual). Micronutrients are limited, and the meal plans don’t auto‑scale leftovers or grocery carts, but users love the dopamine hits.
Plug in calories, macros, diet style and cost per day—Eat This Much (ETM) spits out full menus, auto‑assigning leftovers to minimise cook time. Variety sliders balance novelty vs. simplicity; lock breakfast to eggs and let lunch/dinner randomise. Grocery lists integrate with Instacart or print to PDF.
Weak spots: You still need a diary app to log actual intake, and the UI uses 2010 fonts. Many power users run ETM for planning and import chosen meals into Cronometer for micronutrient audit.
App | Monthly* | Annual | Barcode scan on free? |
---|---|---|---|
Lose It! Premium | — | $39.99 | ✅ |
Centenary Day Pro | $9.00 | $89.04 | ✅ |
Cronometer Gold | $5.99 | $59.99 | ✅ |
MacroFactor | $11.99 | $71.88 | ✅ (trial) |
YAZIO PRO | — | $39.99 | ✅ |
MyFitnessPal Premium+ | $19.99 | $79.99 | ❌ |
MyNetDiary Premium | $8.33 | $99.99 | ✅ |
*Monthly figure assumes annual billing unless noted.
Feature | Lose It! | Centenary | Cronometer | MacroF | YAZIO | MFP |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Meal‑plan generator | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | Recipes | ❌ |
Adaptive calories | Manual | Yes | Manual | Yes | Manual | Manual |
Micronutrient chart | Low | Mid | High | Mid | Mid | Low |
CGM integration | ❌ | 2026 | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
No ads on free | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ | — | ❌ | ❌ |
If you value community challenges, a free barcode scanner and don’t mind ads, Lose It! remains solid. But if you need meal planning, adaptive macros or deep micronutrients, consider the apps above.
Centenary Day for end‑to‑end automation (macros, prep time, stars) and Eat This Much for randomised menus and cost control.
YAZIO PRO and Lose It! Premium tie at ~$40/year, but YAZIO adds a fasting timer.
Yes. Export a CSV (Account → Data → Export). Centenary Day, Cronometer and MacroFactor offer import wizards.
Lose It! pioneered social calorie counting, but today tracking alone rarely suffices. Whether you need AI‑generated menus, adaptive calorie engines or CGM insights, 2025’s nutrition landscape has a specialised app for you. Choose the platform that kills your biggest friction—meal planning, data depth, adaptive targets—and leave the orange entry cap behind.
Centenary Day n'est pas un produit—c'est un mouvement. Une communauté croissante de personnes déterminées à prendre le contrôle de leur santé, prolonger leur espérance de vie, et inspirer d'autres à faire de même.
Que vous optimisiez votre routine, exploriez la science de la longévité, ou vous prépariez pour l'avenir de l'extension radicale de la vie, nous sommes là pour vous soutenir à chaque étape.
Prêt à concevoir votre siècle le plus sain?
straighten your back
take a deep breath
drink some water