Yuka lets you scan product barcodes to get instant health ratings. These alternatives offer similar product scanning or food label analysis features.
Each app below addresses a specific gap in Yuka's offering. We picked them based on real user review patterns and feature differentiation.
Open Food Facts is a free, open-source, community-built database of food products. Users can scan barcodes to access nutritional data, additives, and Nutri-Score ratings. It also powers several third-party apps.
Explore Open Food Facts data →Fooducate scans barcodes and grades foods A through D based on nutritional quality. It goes beyond calorie counts to analyze ingredients, added sugars, and processing levels. Also includes a food diary.
Explore Fooducate data →Think Dirty focuses exclusively on cosmetics and personal care products. It rates products on a 0–10 clean scale based on potentially harmful ingredients. It covers over 850,000 products.
Explore Think Dirty data →The Environmental Working Group's app rates food and personal care products using EWG's extensive research database. It flags ingredients of concern and provides transparency about chemical exposures.
Explore EWG's Healthy Living data →Buycott lets users scan barcodes to trace products back to parent companies and check alignment with personal values like environmental impact, labor practices, or GMO use.
Explore Buycott data →Cronometer provides highly detailed micronutrient and macronutrient tracking. While not a health-score app, it gives users complete visibility into the nutritional composition of their diet.
Explore Cronometer data →Yuka has over 50 million users across Europe and North America and a database of over 4 million products.
Shopping alternatives.
Team Communication alternatives.
Open Source Note-Taking alternatives.
Forms and Surveys alternatives.