Making nutrition tracking simple, accurate, and accessible for everyone.
I believe everyone deserves easy access to accurate nutrition information. Whether you're grabbing coffee from your local cafe or ordering from a popular chain, you should know exactly what you're consuming — without digging through a PDF.
WhatsThatFood bridges the gap between delicious food and informed choices, helping you maintain a healthy lifestyle without sacrificing the foods you love.
The principles behind every decision I make on this project
I pull calorie and nutrition data from trusted sources and keep it as accurate as possible.
Every feature is designed around what you actually need — not what looks impressive on a landing page.
No bloat, no sign-ups, no paywalls. Just pick your food, customize, and get the numbers.
The whole point is helping you make more informed choices — without making it feel like a chore.
Hi, I'm Marcellop — and I built WhatsThatFood.com from scratch, on my own. Before this, I created the Starbucks Calorie Calculator — one of the most loved tools of its kind, shaped entirely by support and feedback from the Reddit community.
That project opened my eyes to how badly people wanted simple, interactive nutrition info. And the more I looked around, the more I realized the problem was everywhere — not just Starbucks.
Every time you visit a restaurant or food chain, you end up digging through PDFs just to find basic calorie info. Most chains don't even have an interactive calculator — they hand you a static nutritional PDF and expect you to figure it out.
Scrolling through 30-page PDFs on a phone screen, squinting at tiny tables, trying to figure out how customizations like milk type or syrup affect the total — it just shouldn't be this hard.
So I built WhatsThatFood: browse menu items, pick your size, customize your order, and instantly see the full nutrition breakdown. No more PDFs. No more guessing.