Honest comparison
Whey to Go vs MacroFactor.
MacroFactor is the serious lifter’s tracker, and its coaching algorithm is genuinely clever. But there is no free tier - it is a subscription from £51.99 a year, forever - workouts are a separate paid app, and your data lives in their cloud. Here is the honest side-by-side.
| Whey to Go | MacroFactor | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | One payment of £5.99 | From £51.99 a year, no free tier |
| Cost over five years | £5.99 | £259.95 |
| Coaching | You set your own targets | Adaptive weekly coaching - excellent |
| Ads | None, ever | None |
| Account | None - no sign-up, no password | Required |
| Your data | Stays on your device | Stored on their servers |
| Works offline | Fully | Limited |
| Training | Plans, sessions and lifts built in | A separate paid app |
| Apple Health | Two-way sync | Yes |
Prices from each app’s UK App Store listing, June 2026, taking the cheapest annual plan; they change, vary by plan and promotion, and most also offer pricier tiers.
Where MacroFactor wins
The adaptive coaching is the best reason to pay for it: it estimates your real energy expenditure from your logs and adjusts your targets weekly. If you want an algorithm steering your cut or bulk and you are happy renting it, MacroFactor does that brilliantly.
Where Whey to Go wins
You pay £5.99 once instead of £50+ every year, and training is included rather than sold as a second subscription. There is no account and your data stays on your device. You set your own targets - which, if you know your numbers, is exactly what you want.
What five years costs
More: vs MyFitnessPal · vs Cronometer · vs Lose It! · the category at a glance
Buy it once. Keep it for good.
£5.99 one-time, no subscription, no ads, no account - and your data never leaves your phone. Launching soon.
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