AI Calorie Calculator is a nutrition-focused AI tool for people who want quick meal estimates, diet planning helpers, and simple calculator workflows in one place.
External tool opens in a new tab.
What is this tool?
Estimate calories and nutrition from meal photos, then explore related calorie deficit, maintenance, protein, and goal-date calculators.
Best for
People who want fast nutrition estimates and calorie planning helpers.
Pricing note
Listed as a free-to-use external website. Always check the tool page for current limits or policies.
Key features
Use cases
Estimate a meal before logging it in a fitness routine.
Compare maintenance calories and calorie deficit goals.
Find a lightweight nutrition calculator to reference from diet content.
Pros
Cons
How to use
Open the tool website from this directory page.
Choose the calorie or nutrition workflow that matches your goal.
Upload or describe the meal when the tool asks for input.
Use the estimate as a planning reference, then verify important nutrition decisions separately.
FAQ
Is AI Calorie Calculator free to use?
It is listed as a free external AI calorie tool in this directory. The provider may still change limits, login requirements, or paid features, so check the live site before relying on it for daily tracking.
Can it estimate calories from a food photo?
Yes. It is designed around meal-photo analysis, so it can identify visible foods and estimate calories, macros, and nutrition ranges from an uploaded image.
How accurate are photo-based calorie estimates?
Treat the result as a practical estimate, not an exact nutrition label. Photo angle, hidden ingredients, sauces, portion size, and mixed dishes can all change the final calorie and macro numbers.
What kind of photo gives the best result?
Use a clear, well-lit photo that shows the full plate from above or at a slight angle. If the meal has sauces, oils, drinks, or side dishes, add those details manually when the tool supports notes.
Is it a medical or dietitian tool?
No. It is useful for quick food logging and calorie awareness, but it should not replace professional nutrition, medical, or eating-disorder care.