MyFitnessPal is striking while meal-tracking is hot.
What’s happening: The food logging platform acquired AI-powered nutrition app Cal AI, expanding its product stack and courting younger consumers.
Nutrition facts. A top-grossing health & fitness app, MyFitnessPal is synonymous with calorie and macro tracking — garnering roughly 900K downloads and $13M in revenue per month, according to Sensor Tower.
Evolving from manual entry to AI photo recognition—and integration with ChatGPT Health—its database recognizes 20M foods, ~70M brands, and ~400 restaurants.
Point & shoot. Built for low-friction logging, Cal AI’s easy-to-use UX helped the two-year-old startup amass 15M downloads and $40M+ in revenue.
Complementing its ecosystem, the deal helps MyFitnessPal attract more users without forcing existing members to change their habits.
Take a byte. Eliminating tedious entry, AI multi-modal input across photo, voice, and text is becoming table stakes for health apps.
The next battleground, brands are layering features like UPF detection, grocery/shopping integrations, and personalized nudges to turn logging into a lifestyle.
Punchline: Building on its acquisition of meal-planning app Intent, MyFitnessPal is stacking a broader nutrition operating system with Cal AI’s low-lift tech as the on-ramp.