Tracking should be fast, or people will not do it.
The app has to fit real life, not some ideal version of your day.
Kibora is a nutrition tracking app for people who want to understand and improve how they eat, without turning food tracking into another job.
It helps you log meals quickly, review the details, and turn your food data into useful, science-based insights you can actually use.
Hi, I'm Ziga.
I built Kibora because I wanted to track food, but I did not want food tracking to feel like work.
I tried over 10 calorie and nutrition apps before building Kibora.
Most of them felt way too complicated, with multi-step food logging, having to build recipes before logging meals, or AI detection that didn’t allow me to adjust the actual calories.
I know myself well enough to know I wouldn’t stick with that for long. And not to mention aggressive paywalls that forced me to pay before I could even properly test the app.
I am lazy about tools in a very practical way. If something takes too many steps, I eventually stop using it. So the first idea behind Kibora was simple: make logging food fast enough that I would actually keep doing it.
But speed was only one part of the problem.
A lot of apps also gave me numbers and insights without making it clear where they came from. I like to understand the reasoning behind advice, especially when it is about food, health, or long-term habits. I do my own research, I check credible sources, and I want to know why something matters before I take it seriously.
That is why I included the science behind insights in Kibora. Not to make the app feel academic, but to make the advice feel more trustworthy.
Once I started building, another thing became obvious: if the app already knows what I eat, when I eat, what I repeat, and how my days usually look, it should be able to help more proactively.
That is really the reason Kibora exists.
I do not think food tracking should be about perfect logging. For most people, the real value is awareness: understanding what is happening, spotting patterns, and making slightly better decisions without turning every meal into a project.
The app has to fit real life, not some ideal version of your day.
Fast estimates are useful, but you should still be able to review and correct the details.
The point is not to overwhelm people with studies. The point is to explain why something matters in plain language.
To help busy people understand and improve how they eat with fast meal logging, useful science-based insights, reviewable AI, and privacy-conscious data handling.
Food data is personal, and nutrition advice should not feel random.
Kibora is built around reviewable AI estimates, science links where they help, EU hosting, GDPR-minded controls, anonymous access, export and deletion options, and no data selling.
Kibora is for people who want food tracking to feel useful, not obsessive.
It is a good fit if you want to log meals faster, understand your patterns, see what to focus on next, and stay in control of the data behind your insights.
Start free, log a few meals, and see if the insights help you understand what is actually going on.
Open Kibora on your phone
Scan this QR code to continue in the mobile app.