Dietary calories
Calories you ate, usually written to Apple Health by a food tracking app.
Help Center
Use these guides to connect Apple Health, understand your calorie balance, tune resting calories, and troubleshoot missing data.
When CalBal asks for permission, allow access to dietary calories, active calories, resting calories, and weight so the app can build your daily balance.
Continue entering food, workouts, and weight in the nutrition, fitness, scale, or Apple Watch apps that already write to Apple Health.
CalBal reads Health data after it is available on your device. If a recent meal or workout is missing, give the source app a moment to finish syncing.
Calories you ate, usually written to Apple Health by a food tracking app.
Calories from movement and workouts, often supplied by Apple Watch or a fitness app.
Your estimated baseline burn. This is the value CalBal can help you fine-tune over time.
Daily, weekly, and monthly views help separate real direction from normal day-to-day noise.
A single day can be noisy. Use weekly or monthly patterns before changing your resting calorie adjustment.
If your calorie balance and weight trend consistently disagree, your resting calorie estimate may need a small adjustment.
Adjust gradually, then watch the next trend period. CalBal is meant to support clearer tracking, not rapid or extreme changes.
Confirm your nutrition app is writing dietary energy to Apple Health and that CalBal has permission to read it.
Check that your fitness source is writing active energy to Apple Health, then reopen CalBal after the data syncs.
Make sure your scale app or manual Health entry is saving body weight, and verify that CalBal can read weight data.
Open the Health app or iOS Settings, find CalBal under Health data access, and update the categories CalBal can read.
No. CalBal is designed to work with the apps and devices you already use by reading compatible data from Apple Health.
Today may be missing meals, workouts, weight entries, or delayed Health syncs. Trend views become more useful as the day and week fill in.
Yes, as long as Apple Health has the data CalBal needs. An Apple Watch can help with active and resting calorie data, but other compatible sources may work too.
CalBal is built around data you authorize through Apple Health and does not store it's own copy. See the Privacy Policy for details about data handling.
First check the source data in Apple Health. CalBal can only calculate from the data available to it, so duplicate, missing, or delayed entries can affect totals.
Email support@calbalapp.com