About FoodNutri

Clear nutrition facts for every food

FoodNutri turns authoritative USDA & FooDB data into fast, comparable nutrition for thousands of foods — calories, macros, vitamins, minerals, amino acids and more. Free, no account, no clutter.

Why we built FoodNutri

Nutrition data is everywhere, but it's rarely easy to use. The numbers live in dense government spreadsheets, get buried under ads and pop-ups, or stop at a calorie count. We wanted something better: a fast, honest reference where you can look up any food, see the full picture, and actually compare your options.

Every value is shown per 100 grams of the edible portion so foods sit on equal footing — then you can rescale to any serving you like. Beyond calories, each page breaks down macronutrients, vitamins, minerals, amino acids, fatty acids and sterols, with % Daily Values based on current FDA reference intakes.

What you can do here

Look up any food

Search thousands of foods and get a complete, readable nutrition label per 100 g or per serving.

Compare side by side

Put two foods head to head to see which is higher in protein, lower in sugar, richer in a vitamin.

Calculate meals & macros

Build a recipe or a daily plate and get combined calories, macros and micronutrients instantly.

Read health at a glance

Color-coded bars flag nutrients to seek out in green and those best kept low in red.

Learn about nutrients

Plain-language guides explain what each nutrient does, how much you need and the best food sources.

Adjust the serving

Switch to a cup, a slice or a custom gram amount and every figure recalculates in real time.

Where our data comes from

FoodNutri is a curated, reorganized presentation layer on top of trusted public datasets. We don't invent values — we make existing ones easier to read and compare.

How we keep it accurate

  • Nutrient values are sourced directly from USDA records and converted with a single, documented unit registry — no hand-typed figures.
  • % Daily Values use the FDA's modern (2016+) reference intakes for a 2,000-calorie diet.
  • Color coding follows established FDA "5% low / 20% high" thresholds, judged by whether a high amount helps or harms.
  • Spotted something off? Tell us — we check corrections against the original sources.

Start exploring

Thousands of foods, fully broken down and ready to compare.