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processed in your browser · never uploaded
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Location found in this photo
This photo records where it was taken.
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A viewer that lists every piece of EXIF metadata embedded in a photo. EXIF is the data a camera or phone writes into an image when you shoot: the camera make and model, lens, capture date and time, exposure settings (shutter speed, f-number, ISO, focal length), orientation, software, and even GPS coordinates of where the photo was taken. This tool reads the IFD0, Exif sub-IFD, GPS, and Interoperability blocks. It formats common tags into a human-readable form (for example exposure as "1/250 s", aperture as "f/2.8", focal length as "35 mm") while still showing every other tag — including ones not in its dictionary — as `Tag 0x____`, so nothing is hidden. When GPS is present it is surfaced first as a warning, with a one-click link to open the location on a map (nothing leaves your device until you click it). Use it to check whether a resale listing photo, social post, or blog image gives away where it was taken or where you live, to review the camera settings of a shot, or to verify whether AI-generated images still carry original camera metadata. It is strictly read-only — it never rewrites or re-encodes your image (use an EXIF remover if you want to strip the data). It reads only the TIFF bytes without decoding the pixels, so it stays fast even on large photos. Your image is never uploaded, stored, or sent anywhere — every step runs locally on your device. Supported formats are JPEG, PNG, and WebP.
How to use
- Drop a JPEG / PNG / WebP photo in, click to choose, or paste it.
- If GPS (the capture location) is present, it appears first as a warning with a map link.
- Browse every EXIF tag and value, grouped by block (Image / IFD0, Exif, GPS, …).
- Viewing only — no save needed. Use an EXIF remover if you want to strip the metadata.
FAQ
What is EXIF?
EXIF is the side information a camera or phone writes into an image when shooting: camera model, lens, capture date/time, exposure settings (shutter/f-number/ISO), orientation, software, and GPS (where it was taken). This tool shows all of it, with nothing omitted.
Can I see where a photo was taken (GPS)?
Yes. If GPS is embedded, the latitude/longitude is surfaced first and a link lets you open it on a map — useful for checking whether a photo reveals your home or location. Nothing is sent anywhere until you click the link.
Is my image uploaded to a server?
No. All parsing happens in your browser. Your image is never uploaded, stored, or sent anywhere — it is handled entirely on your device.
Can this tool delete EXIF?
No — it is a read-only viewer and never modifies your file. To strip EXIF or location data, use an EXIF remover (check what remains here, then remove it there).
Which image formats are supported?
JPEG, PNG, and WebP. It reads the TIFF block from the JPEG APP1 (Exif) segment, the PNG eXIf chunk, or the WebP RIFF EXIF chunk respectively.
Why does it say no EXIF was found?
Screenshots, images re-saved by social media, and exports from drawing apps often carry no EXIF, so there is nothing to show. EXIF only exists when a camera (or similar) wrote it in the first place.