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Image Metadata Remover - Online Clean Privacy Data

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Image Metadata Remover

Strip EXIF, GPS location, camera info & hidden privacy data from your images — 100% in your browser.

No upload · Local processing only
Drop images here or click to browse

Supports JPEG, PNG, WebP, BMP · Max 40MB per file

Upload images to see detected metadata and clean them

Frequently Asked Questions

What is image metadata (EXIF)?
EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) is a standard that stores technical information inside image files—especially JPEGs from digital cameras and smartphones. This metadata can include camera model, lens type, exposure settings, date/time of capture, software used for editing, and critically, GPS coordinates revealing exactly where the photo was taken. While useful for organizing photos, this data can compromise your privacy when sharing images online.
What private information can EXIF reveal?
Common privacy-sensitive EXIF fields include: GPS latitude/longitude (pinpointing your home, workplace, or current location within meters), date and time the photo was taken, camera serial number (uniquely identifying your device), software/editing history, and even thumbnail images embedded in the file. Our tool detects and removes all of these in one click.
Will cleaning metadata reduce image quality?
For JPEG images, our tool re-encodes at 92% quality, which preserves virtually all visual detail while stripping metadata. The file size may change slightly. For PNG images, the output is lossless—no quality degradation at all. In most cases, you won't notice any visual difference, but the privacy-sensitive hidden data will be completely removed.
Are my images uploaded to any server?
No. All processing happens entirely within your browser using HTML5 Canvas technology. Your images never leave your device. We don't have access to them, and no data is transmitted over the internet. This is a core design principle—you can verify this by disconnecting your internet and the tool will still work perfectly.
Which social platforms automatically strip metadata?
Most major platforms do some metadata removal, but practices vary: Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter (X) generally strip EXIF/GPS data from uploaded images. Flickr and 500px preserve metadata for photography communities. Email attachments, cloud storage links, and direct file transfers typically preserve all metadata. The safest approach is to clean your images before sharing them anywhere.
Why does my image show "No metadata detected"?
Some images naturally lack EXIF data: screenshots, images created in graphic editors, photos from certain apps that strip metadata, or images already processed by social media. PNG files rarely contain EXIF (though they may have other text chunks). Even if no metadata is detected, running the image through our cleaner ensures any hidden or non-standard metadata blocks are removed via Canvas re-rendering.
How accurate is the GPS location in my photos?
Modern smartphones record GPS coordinates with accuracy typically within 3–10 meters (10–33 feet). This is precise enough to identify which room of a house or which street corner a photo was taken on. EXIF GPS data stores coordinates as degrees, minutes, and seconds with up to 6 decimal places of precision. Our tool displays this in an easy-to-read decimal format and provides a map link so you can see exactly what's revealed.
What's the difference between EXIF, IPTC, and XMP metadata?
EXIF is technical metadata automatically recorded by cameras (GPS, settings, timestamps). IPTC is used by photojournalists for captions, credits, and keywords. XMP is Adobe's extensible format that can wrap both EXIF and IPTC data. Our Canvas-based cleaning removes all three types since the image is fully re-rendered, eliminating any embedded metadata regardless of format.
Can I process multiple images at once?
Yes! You can select multiple files at once or drag a batch of images onto the upload area. Each image is processed independently, and you can download them individually or use the "Download All Cleaned" button to save all cleaned images in sequence. There's no hard limit on the number of files, though very large batches may take a moment to process.