Labels are confusing by design
Serving sizes, sugar aliases, and vague allergen statements make it nearly impossible to interpret a label while juggling groceries.
Why FoodGrader
Version 1.4.0 adds the allergen, FODMAP, and comparison intelligence families have been asking for — with Vision scanning as the reliable fallback when barcodes fail.
Serving sizes, sugar aliases, and vague allergen statements make it nearly impossible to interpret a label while juggling groceries.
A “B” for the average shopper could be an “F” for someone with IBS, high blood sugar goals, or a shellfish allergy.
One pantry has diabetic parents, nut-free kids, and athletes counting protein. You need one scanner that respects everyone.
FoodGrader looks at the person in front of the screen — not a generic nutrition chart.
IBS / FODMAP
Low FODMAP cereal earns an A, complete with a badge that shows throughout the app.
Nut Allergy
Hazelnut oil flagged from the granular allergen sheet drops the score instantly.
Low Sodium
High sodium content triggers a warning even if the other profiles see a higher grade.
Create profiles for the kids, your partner, visiting family, or clients. Swipe to compare products, reuse favorites, and lean on Vision scans when a barcode won’t cooperate — all while keeping your data anonymous.
Claim one of the remaining FoodGrader+ early adopter spots — premium tools are free for the first 1,000 users.