EXIF Data Viewer
View the EXIF metadata stored in a photo, in your browser.
Drop a photo here
Or choose one from your device. Everything is read locally in your browser — nothing is uploaded.
Your photo is read entirely in your browser. It is never uploaded to a server.
Recommended next steps
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Frequently asked questions
No. The photo is read entirely in your browser using JavaScript, and the EXIF block is parsed on your device. Nothing is sent to a server, so your image and its metadata never leave your computer.
EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) is metadata that cameras and phones embed in a photo. It can include the camera make and model, the date and time the photo was taken, exposure, aperture, ISO, focal length, lens, the editing software used, and — if location services were on — GPS coordinates.
This viewer reads EXIF from JPEG photos (the most common source of EXIF) and the JPEG-style metadata found in many camera files. PNG and most screenshots usually contain no EXIF; if none is present, the viewer tells you so and still reports the image's pixel dimensions where it can.
Use the Image Metadata Remover, which re-encodes the photo in your browser and strips the embedded metadata. Removing EXIF — especially GPS coordinates — is a good idea before posting photos publicly.
Last updated 2026-06-23.