EXIF Metadata Viewer | Camera, Date and GPS Data

Read photo metadata such as camera make, model, capture date, ISO, aperture, exposure time, focal length, flash, and embedded GPS when available.

Image Preview

Inspect Photo Metadata Before Sharing

Read EXIF fields from JPG photos, including camera maker, model, date taken, ISO, aperture, exposure time, focal length, flash, orientation, and GPS data when present.

Check Privacy-Sensitive Fields

Some photos may include location, device, timestamp, and camera details. Review metadata before publishing images from personal, client, workplace, or private locations.

When EXIF Viewing Is Useful

Use it for photography review, upload troubleshooting, checking whether metadata survived compression, or confirming whether a shared image still contains camera details.

About This Tool

EXIF Viewer reads the metadata embedded in a photo file and displays camera settings, GPS coordinates, date and time, device model, and other technical details stored at the moment the image was captured.

When to Use It

Use this before sharing photos online to check whether GPS location data is embedded and should be removed, when investigating details of an image file, or when reviewing camera settings from a previous shoot.

How to Use

  1. Upload a JPG or TIFF photo file.
  2. The EXIF data is displayed in a readable table.
  3. Review GPS, camera model, exposure settings, and date fields.
  4. Note any sensitive data before sharing the file publicly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is EXIF data?

EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) is a standard for embedding metadata in image files. It stores camera make and model, shutter speed, aperture, ISO, date, and often GPS coordinates.

Should I remove EXIF data before posting photos online?

If the photo contains GPS coordinates, removing location data before posting to public platforms is recommended for privacy.

How do I remove EXIF data from a photo?

Re-saving a JPG with a tool that strips metadata will remove most EXIF fields. Many image converters offer an option to discard metadata during conversion.