

I was having to switch between two apps to track water intake and food intake. One thing I never knew I needed was also adding a drink to the list and it tracks both calories and the amount of oz to water, that’s a game changer for me. This app fixes that by creating a local copy of the correct nutrient information to log.
#CRONOMETER VS MFP PLUS#
Plus it still allows you to do recipes and meals like MFP! Also MFP would hide anything except micronutrients behind a toggle and if the information is incorrect you can report it but have to wait for it to be fixed. I used to use MyFitnessPal but the problem I had with it is it wouldn’t sync ALL of the information to Apple Health.
#CRONOMETER VS MFP FREE#

Track your nutrition and fasting goals right from your Home Screen.Leave the food scale at home and instead record the accuracy of your recordings.Log food and check on your goals with Siri and the Shortcuts app.Save time using Smart Suggestions, which recommends foods to log based on your food habits.Automatic tracking of intermittent fasts.Discover which foods are helping you and which ones are holding you back.Track your success for each of your goals over time.Learn about your nutrition, and use that knowledge to reach your health and fitness goals. Set specific nutrition goals for calories, macros (protein, fat, carbohydrates), net carbs, cholesterol, fiber, sugars, water, alcohol, caffeine, and more.ģ. Log what you eat and drink with a fast, beautiful interface.Ģ. Set custom nutrition goals, log your food, and measure your progress.ġ. I like both sites, but have to give the edge to MFP merely for the community here (and all the ex-Sparkers).FoodNoms is a food tracker designed to be fast, powerful, and easy to use.

On both sites you have to sort of "exit" out to get to them, not a big deal but it is a few extra clicks.Ĭhronometer seems set up for the person (or athlete) who really wants to get down to the nitty-gritty of nutrition, and all those numbers can be confusing at times. But MFP has a ton of groups that haven't been active in quite a while. Chronometer really doesn't have much of an active community. It's important to me because I do that type of work 3 days per week and would like to get the 'credit'.ģ. For example: "farmwork" comes with a light, moderate, or heavy effort for varying caloric expenditures. Chronometer has a huge, easy database of exercise.

It's not bad, but some of the entries are wrong and/or aren't filled out completely.Ģ. MFP, like SparkPeople, has a database made up of moslty user-entries. Yes, there are multiple entries for the foods chosen, but there's always one that has a defined nutritonal count by the site using scientific methods and is the correct one. There are some subtle and not-so-subtle differences per my interactions with both.ġ. I've been doing double enrty for a while now between Chronometer and MFP.
