MyFitnessPal
Records what you ate.
Huge barcode + branded-food database
Exhaustive daily diary and history
Recipes, social features, reminders
You still hand-math the gram split
You still decide what to eat next
A different kind of alternative
If you are searching for a MyFitnessPal alternative, you have probably hit its limit: it is excellent at recording what you ate, but it still leaves you to work out the grams and decide what to eat next. Macroji does exactly that one thing — and nothing it already does well.
Two different jobs
This is not a feature-for-feature face-off, because the two tools do not compete. One records the past; the other decides the next meal. The honest version:
Records what you ate.
Huge barcode + branded-food database
Exhaustive daily diary and history
Recipes, social features, reminders
You still hand-math the gram split
You still decide what to eat next
Decides what to eat next.
Solves the gram math instantly
Ranks combos that fit your remaining macros
1,500-food USDA database, browser-side
One shared budget across every screen
No account, no install, no diary to keep
We do not claim feature parity — we claim a different purpose. If you want a full diary that records every meal, MyFitnessPal is genuinely better at that; use it. Reach for Macroji in the moment between meals.
You want a complete record of everything you eat
You scan barcodes or log restaurant meals
You want long-term history and trends
You have macros left and no plan for the next meal
You know the foods you want — you just need the grams
You are tired of doing the math by hand
How it works
Calories, a protein minimum, and fat and carb caps. Or use the built-in calculator to turn your age, weight and goal into numbers.
Quick-add chips re-log a recent food in one tap. Whatever you log subtracts from what is “remaining today”.
The Solver returns the grams of the foods you want. The Adviser ranks singles and combos that fit your remaining budget. Both auto-fill.
No, and it does not try to be. MyFitnessPal is a food diary built to record everything you eat, with a huge barcode database, recipes and history. Macroji does not log your whole day or scan barcodes. It solves the opposite problem: once you know what you have left for the day, it works out the grams to eat and suggests foods that fit. Many people use both — a diary to record, Macroji to decide.
A diary tells you what you have already eaten. Macroji tells you what to eat next. Give it the foods you want and it returns the exact grams of each that hit your protein target with the fewest calories, or it ranks single foods and combinations from a 1,500-food USDA database that fit your remaining macros. No hand-calculating the gram split.
No. There is no exhaustive diary to keep. You set your daily targets once, note what you have eaten so the tool knows what is left, and it does the rest. If you already log elsewhere, just type in your remaining numbers and go.
No. Macroji runs in your browser at a single web address. There is nothing to install and no sign-up. Your targets and what you log stay on your own device.
Anyone eating to a macro target — from someone who just got their numbers and does not know what to eat, to bodybuilders, competitors and athletes who track every day. If you have calories and macros to hit and do not want to do the math by hand, it is for you.
Keep your diary if you love it. Use Macroji for the part it cannot do — deciding what to eat next, in seconds.
Open the tool