Teenagers and artificial intelligence make for an increasingly common pairing, especially when it comes to food. Millions of young people now turn to AI chatbots to help them plan meals, manage weight and track nutrients. But a new study suggests that this growing habit may be doing more harm than good.
Research published in the journal Frontiers in Nutrition found that AI-generated meal plans for adolescents consistently underestimate calorie needs by an average of nearly 700 calories per day. That is roughly the equivalent of skipping an entire meal, and scientists say the gap is wide enough to carry serious health consequences for a population that is still growing.
Why teenagers are turning to AI for nutrition help
The appeal is easy to understand. Tools like ChatGPT, Gemini and other popular chatbots are free, fast and available around the clock. For teenagers trying to lose weight or eat better, they offer something that feels personalized without the wait time or cost of seeing a professional.
Researchers behind the study tested five widely used AI platforms, asking each to generate three-day meal plans for four 15-year-olds across different body weight categories. The results were then measured against plans developed by a registered dietitian who specializes in adolescent health.
The contrast was stark. Across every AI platform tested, the suggested daily calorie counts fell significantly below what the dietitian recommended. In addition to the calorie shortfall, the macronutrient breakdowns were off in ways that compound the risk.
The teenagers’ nutrition gap hiding in plain sight
The AI-generated plans recommended roughly 20 additional grams of protein per day beyond what guidelines suggest, while dramatically cutting carbohydrates. On average, carbohydrates made up only 32 to 36 percent of the energy in AI meal plans, well below the recommended range of 45 to 50 percent.
That imbalance matters because carbohydrates are the body’s primary fuel source, particularly for young people whose brains and bodies are still in active development. A diet consistently low in carbohydrates and overall calories during adolescence can interfere with bone density, hormonal balance and cognitive function.
The study also noted that AI tools appear to draw from generalized or trending diet patterns rather than age-specific nutritional science. High-protein, low-carb frameworks that are popular among adults get applied to teenagers without the necessary adjustments for their unique physiological needs.
What this means for teenagers going forward
The findings carry a clear warning. Adolescence is one of the most nutritionally demanding periods in human development. Getting too few calories or the wrong ratio of nutrients during these years can have lasting effects that extend well beyond the teenage years themselves.
None of this means AI is without value in health and wellness conversations. But the study underscores a meaningful limitation. These tools are not yet equipped to fully account for the specific demands of a growing adolescent body, and using them as a substitute for professional dietary guidance can quietly create deficits that are hard to detect and slow to reverse.
For parents, educators and teenagers themselves, the takeaway is not to abandon technology but to approach it with greater skepticism. A chatbot can suggest a meal. It cannot assess a child’s growth chart, medical history or developmental stage. That distinction, the study suggests, is one that matters far more than most users currently realize.

