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The first quarter of 2024 has seen varying performances among the top food and diet tracking applications in Australia. Data provided by Sensor Tower offers insights into user engagement and financial success across these popular health-focused platforms.
MyFitnessPal: Calorie Counter experienced a gradual decline in revenue, starting at $156K in the first week of January and dipping to $108K by the end of March. Downloads followed a similar downward trend, from 15K in the first week to under 7K in the last. Weekly active users also decreased, from 367K to 279K.
Yuka - Food & Cosmetic Scanner showed a slight decrease in revenue from the start of the quarter, with $3K in the first week and falling to $2K by the end of March. Downloads peaked at 11K in late January before settling to 9K in the final week. Active users remained relatively stable, starting at 39K and ending at 40K.
Calorie Counter - MyNetDiary witnessed revenue beginning at $10K and reaching a high of $14K in late January, then declining to $8K by the quarter's end. Downloads saw a modest decrease from 6K to just over 3K. Weekly active users showed a slight decline from 25K to 21K.
YAZIO Calorie Counter & Diet began the quarter with revenue at $7.6K, dipping to $4.5K by March. Downloads saw a downward trend from 6.7K to 2.3K. The app's weekly active users reduced from 13K to below 10K.
Evolt Active, despite a promising start in downloads, with an increase from 2.4K to 5.5K in early February, saw a subsequent fall to 2K by the end of March. The app's revenue ceased in mid-February, but weekly active users saw an overall increase from 14K to 15K.
For more detailed insights and in-depth analytics, Sensor Tower's platform provides a comprehensive overview of app performance metrics.