// Indépendant · Noté par niveau de preuve · Aucune compensation d'affiliation Cadre Divulgation

Traduction en cours. Le texte original en anglais est affiché ci-dessous ; la terminologie localisée sera revue par un rédacteur clinique de langue maternelle avant publication.

// Head-to-head clinical comparison

Cronometer vs MyFitnessPal (2026): Verified Database vs Crowdsourced Breadth

Criterion-by-criterion

Cronometer vs MyFitnessPal
Critère Cronometer MyFitnessPal Gagnant
Evidence & Validation Grade B — verifiable database provenance, cited in published nutrition research Grade B — most-cited tracker in published behavioral weight-management RCTs Égalité
Database Quality (Per-Entry Provenance) Verified by default (USDA / NCCDB / manufacturer); user submissions opt-in only ≈14M entries, mostly crowdsourced; verified filter is opt-in Cronometer
Database Breadth ≈1.3M verified entries ≈14M entries; widest in category MyFitnessPal
US Chain Restaurant Coverage Adequate Best in category MyFitnessPal
Micronutrient Tracking 80+ micros per food (full panel) Calories + standard macros + a few key micros Cronometer
Pricing Free + Gold $54.99/yr Free (heavy ads) + Premium $79.99/yr Cronometer
Logging Speed Fast for search-based; slightly slower than MFP Fast; recent-meals re-log is best in mainstream MyFitnessPal
Free Tier Usefulness Generous (full macros, basic micros, diary) Increasingly paywalled Cronometer
Data Export / API Open API, CSV export Limited export, paywalled API Cronometer

The Architectural Difference

Cronometer and MyFitnessPal represent two opposing food-database design philosophies. MyFitnessPal optimizes for breadth — any food you might search for is probably already there, with crowdsourced accuracy. Cronometer optimizes for per-entry trust — fewer entries, but every entry has a known provenance.

For clinical and research use, Cronometer’s design wins. For chain-restaurant and casual use, MyFitnessPal’s breadth wins.

Foire aux questions

Should I switch from MyFitnessPal to Cronometer?

Switch if per-entry data quality matters more than database breadth or chain-restaurant coverage. Cronometer is what dietitians and quantified-self users recommend. Stay with MyFitnessPal if you have years of historical logs you want to preserve or if your diet is chain-restaurant-heavy.