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Image EXIF Metadata Viewer - Online Photo Detail Inspector

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Image EXIF Metadata Viewer

Upload a photo to inspect hidden metadata — camera settings, GPS location, timestamps & more.

Drop your photo here

or click to browse

JPEG, TIFF, WebP, HEIC supported

You can also paste an image from clipboard

Note: Cross-origin images may not expose EXIF data.

Frequently Asked Questions

EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) is a standard that embeds metadata into image files captured by digital cameras and smartphones. This data includes camera settings (aperture, shutter speed, ISO), GPS coordinates, date/time stamps, device make & model, lens information, and even software used for editing. It's essentially a digital fingerprint of how, when, and where a photo was taken.

EXIF is most commonly found in JPEG/JPG and TIFF files. Many modern formats like WebP and HEIC/HEIF (used by iPhones) can also contain EXIF data within their container structures. RAW formats (CR2, NEF, ARW, DNG) from professional cameras store extensive EXIF information. However, PNG and GIF generally do not use EXIF — they may use other metadata formats like XMP or iTXt chunks instead.

EXIF data can be stripped in several scenarios: social media platforms (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter/X) automatically remove EXIF to protect user privacy; screenshot tools don't capture EXIF; some image editors may discard metadata on export; certain file formats like PNG don't natively support EXIF; and photos taken with very old devices may not have EXIF capability. If you need to preserve EXIF, export directly from your camera or use lossless transfer methods.

Yes, if your smartphone or camera has GPS enabled and location tagging is turned on, precise latitude, longitude, and altitude are embedded into each photo's EXIF data. This can reveal your exact location — including your home, workplace, or frequently visited places. Before sharing photos online, consider disabling location services for your camera app, or use tools to strip GPS metadata. Our tool highlights GPS data with a warning badge so you're always aware.

There are several ways to remove EXIF: Windows — right-click the photo, go to Properties > Details, click "Remove Properties and Personal Information"; macOS — use the Preview app's Tools > Show Inspector, then use a third-party tool to strip metadata; Online tools — many free EXIF removers exist; Smartphones — use apps like "EXIF Eraser" or disable location tagging in camera settings before taking photos. Some social media platforms automatically strip EXIF upon upload.

Aperture (f/stop) — controls depth of field; lower numbers (f/1.8) = blurry background, higher (f/16) = more in focus.
Shutter Speed — how long the sensor is exposed; fast speeds (1/1000) freeze motion, slow speeds (1/30) create motion blur.
ISO — sensor sensitivity; low ISO (100) = cleaner image, high ISO (3200+) = more noise/grain in low light.
Focal Length — measured in mm; wide-angle (<35mm) captures more scene, telephoto (>70mm) brings distant subjects closer. These three settings form the "exposure triangle" that determines a photo's brightness and creative look.

Absolutely! This tool is fully responsive and works on smartphones and tablets. Simply tap the upload area to select a photo from your gallery or take a new picture. On iOS, the Photos app shows basic EXIF by swiping up on a photo; on Android, Google Photos shows limited info under "Details." For a complete EXIF inspection on mobile, our online viewer provides all hidden metadata in one place — no app installation required.

No. This tool processes everything entirely in your browser using client-side JavaScript. Your photo never leaves your device — it's not uploaded to any server, cloud, or third-party service. The EXIF parsing happens locally using your device's processing power. This means your images remain 100% private and secure. You can even use this tool offline after the page has loaded, as no server communication is required for the EXIF analysis.

EXIF data is generally very accurate as it's written directly by the camera's firmware at the moment of capture. GPS coordinates are typically accurate within 3–15 meters depending on signal strength. Timestamps rely on the camera's internal clock — if the clock was incorrectly set, the date/time will be off. Some editing software may modify or add EXIF tags, and certain tags (like "Software") can be overwritten. Always treat EXIF as strong evidence but not absolute proof, especially for forensic purposes.

Yes, EXIF data can be easily edited or completely fabricated using tools like ExifTool, Adobe Lightroom, or various online EXIF editors. Anyone can modify dates, GPS coordinates, camera information, and other tags. Therefore, EXIF should not be relied upon as forensic evidence without corroboration. However, for everyday photography — learning settings, organizing photos by date/location, or appreciating the technical details of a shot — EXIF remains highly useful and mostly trustworthy.