Information about Seek by iNaturalist
App Feature
Seek by iNaturalist uses on-device image recognition backed by the iNaturalist community to identify plants, animals, and fungi via a live camera, shows commonly recorded species in your area, awards badges/challenges for discoveries, and lets you keep a simple observations journal—without requiring an account or collecting personal data by default.
Verdict
Verdict: An excellent, privacy-conscious nature ID companion for families and casual naturalists, though power users may hit performance and sorting limits.
Who is it for
Best for:
- Families, educators, and beginners exploring local biodiversity
- Privacy-focused users who want kid-safe, no-signup identification
- Casual naturalists seeking quick, camera-based IDs and fun badges
Not ideal for:
- Heavy users managing thousands of observations who need fast browsing/sorting
- Professionals needing advanced taxonomy tools, batch processing, or export workflows
- Users wanting social features without linking an iNaturalist account
Real-world User Experience
Users like it:
High identification usefulness and accuracy for common species, smooth camera-driven detection, and a transparent, comfortable privacy policy with optional sign-in; badges and challenges add motivation.
Users complain about:
Observation list slows with very large libraries, limited sorting/filtering (e.g., by newest), and occasional lag when scrolling extensive histories.
Is it Worth Paying For?
The app is free with no ads or in-app purchases, delivering strong value at zero cost—there is nothing to buy, and optional iNaturalist sign-in is free.
How it Compares to Alternatives
Compared with PlantNet or PictureThis, Seek is more kid-safe and privacy-first, with gamified badges but fewer curation/sorting tools; versus Google Lens, it’s more nature-focused with localized species suggestions; compared to Merlin Bird ID, Seek covers broader taxa (not just birds) but lacks Merlin’s specialized birding features and sound ID. Seek’s optional tie-in to iNaturalist strengthens data quality but advanced community features require linking an account.
Summary
Seek by iNaturalist turns your camera into a capable field companion, identifying plants, animals, and fungi while teaching you about nearby species. It stands out for transparent, kid-safe privacy (no account required), locality-aware suggestions, and a badge system that encourages exploration. For casual users and families, it’s a top pick: quick to use, educational, and free. Power users who accumulate thousands of observations may notice slower loading and want better sorting/filtering, and professionals might need more advanced tools. Overall, Seek is a well-designed, community-backed entry point into nature identification that pairs nicely with an iNaturalist account if you want deeper participation.




