Market intelligence

BitePal v2.13.1 adds manual calorie editing in May 2026, reversing scam allegations

BitePal's version 2.13.1 update introduced a manual calorie adjustment feature, successfully addressing widespread user complaints about inaccurate AI scanning. The change shifted user perception away from scam allegations, driving a massive 1.74-star increase in the app's average rating.

2 min read
The update successfully shifted user perception from a 'scam' to a trustworthy and adjustable calorie tracker, directly addressing previous critical complaints.
BitePal: Food Calorie Tracker
On this page
  1. Trust Restored
  2. Manual Editing Added
  3. Ratings Rebound
  4. Escaping Scam Status
  5. Protecting Acquisition
  6. Health Sync Wanted

Key takeaways

  1. 01REFACE LITHUANIA UAB released BitePal v2.13.1, adding manual edits for AI-scanned food calories.
  2. 02The update triggered a 1.74-star rating jump, pushing the app from 2.29 to 4.03 stars.
  3. 03Users previously labeled the app a 'scam' due to rigid, inaccurate AI tracking.
  4. 04The manual adjustment feature restored user trust and core utility.
  5. 05Users now actively request Apple Health integration to sync burned calories.

Trust RestoredLead

REFACE LITHUANIA UAB released BitePal version 2.13.1 in May 2026, introducing a manual calorie adjustment tool that successfully reversed widespread scam allegations and salvaged user trust.

Manual Editing AddedRelease Summary

While the official App Store release notes vaguely described the update as "just tuning, cleaning, and smoothing", version 2.13.1 delivered a critical functional overhaul.[1] The update allows users to manually edit the calories and macronutrients of AI-scanned foods.

Before this release, the rigid AI frequently miscalculated complex meals, rendering the tracker useless for precise dieting. According to a 3-star reviewer on version 2.13.1, the update also introduced an aggressive forced review prompt early in the onboarding flow, which appears designed to capture positive sentiment from the improved experience.

Ratings ReboundUser Reception

BitePal's average rating climbed 1.74 stars following the update, jumping from 2.29 to 4.03 stars. Prior to version 2.13.1, users expressed severe frustration with the rigid AI. A 1-star reviewer on version 2.13.0 stated, "The app is extremely inaccurate and I asked for a refund... Seems like a scam to me."

Post-update feedback shows a stark shift in perception. A 5-star reviewer on version 2.13.1 noted, "Look I’m from the hood, in Baltimore This ain’t no scam! I lost 30lbs from this app." Another 4-star user praised the newfound flexibility, stating that when the AI miscalculates, they "just change it so that’s nice too."

Escaping Scam StatusRoot Cause

The developer likely shipped the manual override to stop a flood of negative reviews driven by the AI's inherent inaccuracies. Users felt trapped paying for a tool that provided incorrect nutritional data. By allowing manual corrections, REFACE LITHUANIA UAB restored the app's core utility.

A thread on r/weightwatchers previously highlighted aggressive billing practices, including confusing duplicate subscriptions, which fueled the "scam" narrative. Archived.

Protecting AcquisitionMarket Impact

BitePal maintains a massive footprint, securing over 516k downloads on the US iOS App Store over the last 30 days. The dramatic rating recovery likely lowers user acquisition costs and improves the app's conversion rate. By addressing the functional complaints that drove refund requests, the publisher appears to have stabilized its revenue stream.

Health Sync WantedExpert Verdict

The improved 4.03-star rating will likely boost BitePal's organic visibility in the short term. However, the developer may need to prioritize Apple Health and fitness syncing in upcoming releases, as users consistently request the ability to track burned calories alongside food intake.[4] Furthermore, if the forced review prompt remains too aggressive, it could trigger a secondary backlash from users who resent the early interruption.

Citations

  1. [1]

    The release notes vaguely described the update as minor tuning.

    "While the official release notes on the App Store vaguely mentioned "just tuning, cleaning, and smoothing""
  2. [2]

    The rating jumped 1.74 stars from 2.29 to 4.03.

    "BitePal's version 2.13.1 update increased the app's rating by 1.74 stars, bringing it from 2.29 to 4.03."
  3. [3]

    Users widely praised the manual editing capability as a necessary fix for the AI's previous inability to accurately log complex meals.

    "- **Calorie Adjustment:** App Store reviews confirm that the AI's previous inability to accurately log complex meals was a major pain point, and the new manual editing capability has been widely praised as a necessary fix"
  4. [4]

    Users highlight the lack of Apple Health and fitness syncing as the primary missing feature.

    "- **Apple Health Integration:** Multiple App Store reviews highlight the lack of Apple Health and fitness syncing as the primary missing feature, with users requesting the ability to track burned calories and step counts alongside their food logging"

Sources

11 references

Maxime Doussin, CTO at MWM

Maxime Doussin

CTO

Maxime Doussin is the CTO of MWM, where he leads engineering, data infrastructure, and the mobile-app market-intelligence platform. He writes MWM's weekly app trend analysis, drawing on proprietary ranking data covering millions of iOS and Android apps across 150+ countries.

This article is an independent editorial analysis. App names, trademarks, and brands mentioned are the property of their respective owners. Market data and rankings referenced are based on MWM's proprietary estimates.

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