TrakMac vs the rest
Honest side-by-side comparisons. Each page covers the feature differences, when the other app is the right call, when TrakMac is, and the call we'd actually make. No "we're the best at everything" — different tools fit different people.
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TrakMac vs Cronometer
Cronometer is the macro tracker for people who want every micronutrient measured and don't mind doing the data entry to get it. TrakMac is the macro tracker for people whose logging would have died by week three using anything that requires a search bar.
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TrakMac vs MacroFactor
MacroFactor and TrakMac both target the same audience: people who actually train and want their nutrition tool to respect that. They solve the targeting problem differently.
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TrakMac vs Lose It!
Lose It! and TrakMac both reduce logging friction — they just chose different shortcuts. Lose It! lets you snap a photo of your plate (Snap It) and matches it to a food database.
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TrakMac vs Carb Manager
Carb Manager is purpose-built for one diet — keto, carnivore, low-carb — and it's the best tool in the consumer space for that audience. TrakMac is a general macro tracker built around training, not diets.
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TrakMac vs Lifesum
Lifesum is a polished Swedish wellness app — pretty UI, big database, dozens of pre-built diet plans (Keto, Mediterranean, High-Protein, Scandi). TrakMac is a focused macro tracker built around training inputs, with no diet plans and no lifestyle paternalism.
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TrakMac vs Yazio
Yazio is a German weight-loss app with one of the largest food databases on the market and strong intermittent fasting tooling. TrakMac is a focused macro tracker built around voice logging and training inputs.
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TrakMac vs MyFitnessPal
MyFitnessPal is a food database you search. TrakMac is a voice-first macro tracker built for people who train. The full comparison.
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