EXIF Viewer Online

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Drag & drop an image, or click to select
All processing happens locally in your browser.

Metadata

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Help

FAQ

What is EXIF data?Show
EXIF is metadata embedded in photos, often including camera model, capture time, lens settings, and sometimes GPS location.
Can EXIF include GPS location?Show
Yes. Many phone photos can contain latitude/longitude if location services were enabled.
Why do some images show no metadata?Show
The image may not contain EXIF/XMP/IPTC data, or the metadata may have been stripped by an app or export.
Does this tool remove EXIF?Show
No. This page only reads metadata. If you need to remove metadata, re-export the image using a converter or editor.

How to view EXIF metadata

  1. Drop an image file (JPG/PNG/WebP/TIFF and more).
  2. Review the parsed metadata (formatted view and raw JSON).
  3. Copy JSON or download a metadata file.

Privacy

Full guide

What this tool does

This page reads image metadata and shows it in a human-friendly format.

You can use it to:

  • Check whether a photo contains GPS location
  • Verify camera model / lens information
  • Inspect capture time and other technical fields
  • Copy or download the parsed metadata as JSON

What metadata you may see

Depending on the file, you might see fields like:

  • Date/Time (DateTimeOriginal / CreateDate)
  • Camera / Lens (Make, Model, LensModel)
  • Exposure settings (ISO, FNumber, ExposureTime)
  • Dimensions (width, height)
  • GPS (latitude, longitude)
  • Software/Author (Software, Artist, Copyright)

Examples

Example 1: Check if a photo leaks location

  1. Upload a photo taken on a phone.
  2. Look for GPS fields (latitude/longitude).

If GPS exists, consider removing metadata before sharing publicly.

Example 2: Export metadata for debugging

If a tool or website rejects your photo, metadata can be useful for debugging.

  • Click Copy JSON to paste into a bug report.
  • Or click Download JSON to save photo-metadata.json.

Troubleshooting

  • If parsing fails, try a different file export (some apps produce unusual metadata).
  • If you only need the image without metadata, converting/compressing the image often results in a clean export.

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