US Nutrition Apps Market in 2026: Growth, Trends, and What Is Driving Adoption
The US has been the world's largest market for diet and nutrition apps for years — and 2025–2026 data shows that lead widening, not shrinking. Market research firms estimate the global diet and nutrition apps segment at roughly $5.9 billion in 2025, with projections reaching $27.73 billion by 2035 at a compound annual growth rate near 16.6%.
Headline takeaway: North America dominates revenue share because of high health awareness, smartphone penetration, obesity-related demand, and early adoption of AI nutrition tools.
Why the US leads
Several structural factors keep the United States at the center of calorie-tracking innovation:
- Health consciousness and disposable income supporting paid wellness subscriptions.
- High smartphone penetration making daily logging feasible for mainstream users, not just fitness enthusiasts.
- Rising obesity and metabolic health concerns driving preventive digital tools.
- GLP-1 medication adoption creating new app categories for protein tracking, side-effect logging, and habit support.
- Advanced healthcare infrastructure enabling partnerships between apps, clinicians, and wearable data.
2025–2026 product launches shaping the market
- Alma (February 2025) — intelligent nutrition companion backed by Menlo Ventures, using Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health-informed data for personalized dietary insights.
- MyFitnessPal Premium+ (February 2025) — AI meal planning tier at $100/year alongside the Intent acquisition.
- MyNetDiary PlateAI (August 2025) — next-gen AI logging with real-time coaching.
- MyFitnessPal + Cal AI (March 2026) — consolidation of legacy database scale with viral AI photo logging.
Three trends defining 2026
1. AI replaces manual search as the default input. Photo, voice, and natural-language logging are now table stakes. Barcode scan remains useful but is no longer the primary onboarding hook for new apps.
2. Accuracy validation is becoming a marketing battleground. Independent benchmark panels comparing photo-logged meals to weighed reference plates are influencing dietitian recommendations and App Store positioning.
3. Free-tier economics are shifting. Several incumbents moved formerly free features behind premium tiers in 2026, which triggered user switching — a reminder that market growth does not always mean user satisfaction.
What this means if you track macros today
More competition generally means better tools — but also noisier marketing. Focus on adherence metrics you control: logging frequency, protein consistency, and weekly calorie averages. The app market will keep consolidating; your logging habit is the durable asset.
MacroChat sits in the natural-language AI segment — optimized for users who want to describe meals in plain English without navigating heavy dashboard redesigns.