A list that adds itself up
Plan your meals and Kitchergo rolls them into one shopping list, combining duplicate ingredients — 2 cups of milk plus 2 cups becomes 4. Sorted by aisle, shareable with your household.
Plan · Shop · Cook · Track
Import a recipe, add it to your meal plan, and Kitchergo builds the shopping list for you — combining quantities across every meal. Then cook, log, and track nutrition without the spreadsheet.
Free to start · Available on iPhone and Android
How it works
Type one in, import it from any recipe URL, or save one you found in Discover.
Drop meals onto your plan for any day — on your own or shared with your household.
Kitchergo merges every planned ingredient into a single list, adds up duplicates, and sorts it by aisle.
Log what you made, track USDA-backed calories and macros, and earn achievements as you go.
Cook mode
Paste a link from any cooking site and Kitchergo parses the whole recipe — then weaves each amount directly into the step that uses it. No more scrolling back to the top mid-sauté.
Toast the 1 cup orzo in olive oil until golden, then pour in 2 cups stock and 1 can tomatoes. Simmer, stirring often, until creamy.
What's inside
Plan your meals and Kitchergo rolls them into one shopping list, combining duplicate ingredients — 2 cups of milk plus 2 cups becomes 4. Sorted by aisle, shareable with your household.
Log what you actually cooked and track calories and macros backed by USDA food data. Scan a barcode, adjust a portion, and set your own targets.
Type a recipe in or import it from any URL. Keep cook time, difficulty, and ratings — then share your best in Discover, follow other cooks, and find your next favorite.
Invite family or housemates to share a meal plan and shopping list. Everyone sees what's planned, what's been picked up, and what still needs buying — in real time.
Your kitchen, your data
Meal logs, nutrition data, and weight are always private to you. Recipes can be shared publicly in Discover — but only when you choose to. We never sell your personal data or treat your health information as anything less than sensitive.