Record with ease.
Photo, barcode, label, or a sentence — capture turns food into 50+ nutrients in seconds, and you can repeat yesterday's meals in one tap.
Record nutrition in seconds, connect your biometrics, and ask Intelligence what's actually driving your energy, glucose, training, sleep, and recovery — with the evidence behind every number.
Most health products store records. StatsKey builds a private operating model of you: meals, micronutrients, CGM, activity, sleep, hydration, symptoms, training, and the decisions that connect them.
Fast capture at the edge, structured records underneath, and a clean interface for the patterns that matter.
Photo, barcode, label, or a sentence — capture turns food into 50+ nutrients in seconds, and you can repeat yesterday's meals in one tap.
Meals, glucose, workouts, sleep, recovery, hydration, GI health, and mood live in one model — synced from Apple Health and your Apple Watch.
Generate nutrition, CGM, training, and GI reports built from real records instead of averages — exportable across any date range.
Metabolic targets can move with Apple Health activity, training load, and recent intake behavior — not a fixed number you set once.
Track runs, walks, rides, swims, hikes, trail runs, mountain and road cycling, rowing, elliptical, stair stepper, yoga, pilates, strength, HIIT, CrossFit, basketball, soccer, tennis, golf, volleyball, skiing, snowboarding, surfing, skateboarding, paddleboarding, kayaking, climbing, dance, martial arts, boxing, and other workouts. GPS sessions can include route maps, distance, moving time, pace, speed, elevation, calories, heart-rate samples and zones, cadence, splits, segments, weather, perceived effort, notes, and photos. Trends & Averages roll your run history up over any period — a week, a month, a year, or all time — and best efforts from the mile to the marathon are graded for your age and sex, with every session synced from Apple Health and your Apple Watch.
Verified trackers are rigorous but slow and leave most micronutrients blank. Effortless photo apps are fast but shallow. StatsKey is the missing middle — low-friction capture, per-nutrient provenance, deficit detection, and a connected model neither side has.
✓ yes · ~ partial · — no. Comparison from independent 2026 app reviews and vendor materials; StatsKey figures from code & internal evals.
Every food record carries a three-axis trust model, so your data stays legible — not just present.
What the food is — barcode match, official label, visual recognition, or grounded search.
Where each value came from — barcode database, the official label, USDA-grounded data, or an Intelligence estimate, each with its own confidence.
How sure we are of the amount you ate — user-adjusted, an assumed serving, or a visual estimate.
Grounded in USDA FoodData Central. For branded items StatsKey never fabricates a label — if it can't be verified, it returns nothing. Intelligence estimates are flagged and reversible.
StatsKey grades your intake against reference levels and flags likely shortfalls across the nutrients that populate on a typical day — the gaps nutrition science has named for decades and most trackers still leave blank.
NHANES 2007–2010 / 2003–2018 (Linus Pauling Institute; 2020 DGAC shortfall nutrients) — even counting supplements.
Connect a CGM and StatsKey reads each meal's real effect on you: incremental area under the curve, peak, and recovery, plus second-meal effects — from Dexcom, Libre, or Nightscout. Personal context, not a headline number.
Illustrative interaction. In the app, these are computed from your own CGM for every recorded meal — iAUC, peak, recovery, dips, and second-meal effects.
Intelligence reads your connected record — meals, micronutrients, glucose, training, sleep, and wellness — and answers in plain language, grounded in your own data and remembered across sessions. Not generic averages.
43g protein, 11g fiber, 620mg sodium.
Peak +24 mg/dL, back to baseline in 72 minutes.
Moderate load. Recovery target increased tonight.
Higher potassium days are tracking with better morning energy.
Answers stay grounded in your own records, cite their methods, and refuse to invent numbers or percentiles. Deeper analysis and Deep Dives run on metered Intelligence tokens from the Store.
Set a goal and StatsKey maintains the math: a formula ensemble tuned to your body, thirty days of Apple Watch activity, and your gap-aware weight trend, reconciled into one maintenance number. When measured reality disagrees with the formula, reality wins — in proportion to the evidence.
Confidence gates the correction: Baseline (formula) → Medium (+ Watch) → High (+ weight trend). Manual edits always win — flip one switch and it's your number again.
Today's totals, recent workouts, glucose, and wellness are in context on every question — and it keeps a running set of notes about you, so it doesn't start cold each session.
Claude Sonnet or Opus on the web, plus managed Gemini, OpenAI, and Grok routes in the app — no API key to manage, metered by Intelligence tokens.
Tap Insight for a per-food read and a one-line summary in the style you set — detail level, emphasis, even your own instructions. It runs only when you ask, never automatically.
Deep Dive reads your timeline month by month, then synthesizes what actually changed. One report, grounded in all of it.
Around 40% of people have a disorder of gut–brain interaction and ~12% have IBS; most name food as a trigger, but every trigger list is individual. In one US study, more than 60% of patients hid bowel-urgency symptoms from their own doctor out of embarrassment.
StatsKey records bowel movements on the Bristol scale right alongside food, fiber, glucose, and training — a judgment-free record you can simply ask Intelligence about. No one has to say a word.
NIDDK (IBS ~12%) · Rome IV DGBI epidemiology (Sperber 2021; Palsson 2020) · Lilly CONFIDE (bowel-urgency underreporting).
Recording compounds. StatsKey turns a week of data into something you want to come back to — and rewards the habit instead of punishing a slip.
Finish a recording week and unlock a shareable recap that names your athlete type from your real data. Add your age and sex and your VO₂max and protein show up as a national percentile.
Build a recording streak and earn streak freezes as you go. Miss a day and a freeze is used automatically instead of resetting you to zero — and the 7-Day Challenge earns a free month of Pro.
Invite a friend and you both get a free month of Pro. Compare activity, share what you choose with granular privacy controls, and view your own record exactly the way friends see it.
Recording and deficit detection estimate what your body is likely missing. The roadmap closes the loop: confirm it with real labs, read the results against how you actually live, then change one thing and re-measure.
Recording plus deficit detection surface probable gaps — vitamin D, fiber, magnesium — from food alone, today.
On the roadmap: at-home blood & stool panels through a CLIA/CAP partner lab confirm what intake can only estimate.
Labs interpreted against your nutrition, glucose, training, and sleep history — not isolated numbers on a portal.
A personal, longitudinal feedback loop on your actual body — estimate, measure, correct, re-measure.
StatsKey is a wellness and self-tracking tool — it doesn't diagnose or treat, and the lab features above are on the roadmap, delivered through partner labs within the wellness boundary. Intelligence estimates are approximate by design.
Hardware is the long-term product platform. Wearable CKM is the outpatient potassium trend monitor. Hospital CKM is the bedside potassium prototype. Urine AKI U1 is early research for ICU renal monitoring.
The wearable hardware layer: reusable puck, disposable cartridge, phone-facing readings, and interactive product viewer.
In ProgressA standalone potassium monitor with an interactive viewer, triplicate K+ cartridge, dual-reference QC, and fail-closed validation gates.
Hospital PrototypeA bedside inline potassium monitoring concept for ICU, dialysis, CRRT, insulin, DKA, and post-cardiac-surgery workflows.
Early ResearchA Foley-drainline ICU hardware concept for artifact-aware urine output, KDIGO windowing, and optional urine electrolyte/pH excretion context.
Mobile Data CenterA containerized edge compute concept with a public bid model, bill of materials, and 3D viewer.
Portable ScaleA portable restaurant plate scale concept with a Zemic 5 kg platform load cell, fold-out moving arms, integrated display, and procurement-ready build package.
Start free today, then add optional Pro ($4.99/mo) or Pro+ ($19.99/mo) when you want more — annual plans save more, and subscribing on the web costs less than the App Store. Free access is introductory, and pricing may change as StatsKey grows.
Now available in English, Spanish, German, Japanese, and Brazilian Portuguese.