Log meals from text or photos
Use typed meal descriptions or images to build faster food entries when you do not want to search manually for every item.
The DiabetesConnect AI Meal Analyzer helps you log meals faster by letting you describe a meal, upload an image, or use a photo to estimate calories, macros, and nutrition without separating food logging from the rest of your health record.
Meals become more useful when they live beside blood sugar, weight, calorie goals, daily nutrition totals, and longer-term diabetes trends. Estimates are for guidance only and are not exact nutritional analysis. AI meal estimates are approximate and not medical advice.
What this page is for


How it helps
Use typed meal descriptions or images to build faster food entries when you do not want to search manually for every item.
Food entries make more sense when reviewed alongside blood sugar, weight, BMI, HbA1c, daily calorie patterns, and the rest of your health record.
Over time, saved meal records, daily nutrition totals, and adjustable portions can help you spot routine meals, calorie patterns, and habits that are easier to miss when logging is inconsistent.
App screens
These screens show how DiabetesConnect turns quick meal inputs into records you can actually review later.
Lead with the analyzer screen that shows how someone can begin from text, photo, or a quick meal entry.

An image-analysis screen helps communicate that the app can estimate meals visually, not just through typed entries.

A history view reinforces that the feature is useful beyond one estimate because it feeds into ongoing tracking.

Watch
AI Meal Analyzer inside Diabetes Connect breaks down your food in seconds.
FAQ
This page focuses on the broad AI Meal Analyzer experience in DiabetesConnect: analyzing meals from text or photos, saving food entries faster, and keeping them connected to blood sugar, weight, and wider diabetes tracking.
AI calorie estimates work by looking for likely meal components and approximate portion patterns. They are useful for guidance, but they are not exact nutritional measurements.
That depends on your routine. AI can reduce logging friction, while manual tracking can be more precise when you already know the details. Many people use AI for speed and manual edits when they want more control.
Two meals with the same ingredients can have very different calorie and carb totals depending on portion size. That is one reason estimates should be treated as approximate.
No. They are intended as practical support for logging and awareness, not as medical advice or exact dietary analysis.
DiabetesConnect includes a generous free version, and people who want more flexibility can choose options such as a monthly subscription. The best fit depends on how often you use features like AI meal analysis.
People often use the AI Meal Analyzer to review calorie intake, macronutrients, daily nutrition totals, meal history, and how meals relate to the rest of their diabetes tracking.
Related pages
Download DiabetesConnect
DiabetesConnect is designed to help you track data, review patterns, and stay more organised over time. AI meal estimates are approximate and not medical advice.