Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Clem is an AI-powered food scanning app for iOS, currently in Private beta/TestFlight, with the page showing only 100 available spots. It is aimed at users who know how to read food labels but still often feel unsure: after you take a photo of a food label or browse the catalog, the app provides a health score, ingredient breakdown, nutrition highlights, additive information, and suggestions for better alternatives.
Clem’s differentiation is not simply assigning a red/yellow/green score. Instead, it first asks users to enter sensitivities, dietary goals, sources of anxiety, and their preferred explanation style, then matches foods against that personal profile. Users can choose between “just tell me whether I can eat it,” “show me why,” or “explain it step by step.” Its terms disclose that AI analysis uses Google Gemini, and photos are transmitted for generating the analysis.
The product uses a free tier plus a Clem Pro subscription. The free tier has no time limit; Pro costs $4.99/month or $29.99/year and renews automatically through Apple ID. There is currently no free trial for Pro, and some features, such as product comparison, are Pro-only.
Its strengths are clear positioning and an emphasis on individual differences, making it suitable for users with sensitivities such as lactose intolerance, or those who easily become anxious because of food scores. The output also focuses on brief reasoning and alternative choices, reducing the need to Google repeatedly. The limitations are also clear: the official materials state that AI may make mistakes, scores are only estimates, and the app should not be used as a basis for medical, nutritional, or allergy-safety decisions. Time-sensitive information such as recalls and safety alerts is also not covered.
Clem is best suited to iPhone users in the United States or English-speaking environments who buy packaged foods, frequently read ingredient lists, and want a quick way to judge whether a product fits their needs. It is not suitable for serious medical diet management, critical allergy-safety decisions, or users who rely on Chinese food databases.
Access from China is unknown. The materials do not mention a Chinese interface, Chinese label recognition, domestic payment options, or a China-specific food database. In addition, Google Gemini-related connectivity may be unreliable in mainland China. If your main use case is within China, you may also want to consider alternatives such as 薄荷健康, Open Food Facts, and Yuka.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on clemapp.com official site.
clemapp.com is an United States AI Apps provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach clemapp.com directly.