Most calorie tracking apps are built for the US market. Calix is the first Greek-made AI calorie tracker, designed for people who eat souvlaki, spanakopita and Greek yogurt every week.
Why local matters for a calorie app
International calorie trackers like MyFitnessPal, Cronometer and Lose It! all do a great job for typical US/UK foods. But the moment you log a real Greek meal — moussaka, gyros, spanakopita, fasolada — the database struggles. Portions are often wrong, ingredients are missing, and the AI coach (if any) doesn't reply in Greek.
Calix: built in Greece, for the Greek market
Calix is the first Greek-made AI calorie tracking app. It combines a Greek-first food database with three smart scanners and a 24/7 AI coach that speaks fluent Greek (and English). Key features:
- AI meal recognition from a single photo (Gemini 2.5 Pro & GPT-5)
- Barcode scanner for Greek supermarket products
- AI label analysis — photograph the nutrition table
- AI coach 24/7 in Greek or English
- Weekly AI meal plans tailored to your calories, macros, allergies
- Free version, no ads; Premium €6.49/month or €64.99/year
Calix vs the international options
- Greek food accuracy: Calix ✅ · MyFitnessPal ⚠️ · Cronometer ⚠️
- AI photo scan: Calix ✅ · MyFitnessPal partial · Cronometer ❌
- Greek-language AI coach: Calix ✅ · others ❌
- Ad-free free tier: Calix ✅ · MyFitnessPal ❌
- Local support: Calix ✅ · others ❌
Who Calix is for
Calix is built for people in Greece (locals and expats) who want a calorie tracker that actually understands what they eat, with AI features that save time and a coach that talks like a Greek nutritionist would.
Related reads: Calix vs MyFitnessPal (in Greek) · How AI food scanners work.