巨量已經容易了,微量才是下一個前線。
為何在卡路里上「贏」的 App,在鐵、B12 與 omega-3 上常常徹底失準。
上方標題與摘要已翻譯;正文目前為英文,我們正在進行在地化。
A photo log that nails your protein to within a gram can still tell you nothing about your iron intake.
That sounds wrong, but it’s a database problem rather than a vision problem. Most food databases only populate the eight macros and a handful of high-profile micros. Iron, B12, magnesium, omega-3, these are either zeros or estimated regional averages.
What we measured
In our Q4 2025 sub-benchmark, we cross-referenced 320 mixed meals against full lab assays for 14 micronutrients. The best app for calories (Welling) was the third-best for iron. The best app for iron (Cronometer) was sixth for calories.
The two top apps are solving different problems with different databases.
What this means in practice
- If you have a clinical micro target, pregnancy, anemia, athletic recovery, pair a photo-first app with Cronometer for the foods that matter.
- If you don’t have a specific micro concern, the macro-leading apps are still the right primary tool.
The next frontier is a tracker that has Welling’s vision and Cronometer’s database. Neither team has shipped it yet.
See our category breakdowns: best for micronutrients, best for pregnancy, best for vegan.