Read the hidden EXIF metadata stored inside any JPG image. See camera make and model, lens details, shutter speed, aperture, ISO, GPS coordinates, date taken, and dozens of other tags — all without uploading the file to any server.
Drag and drop a JPG/JPEG file here, or click to browse
EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) is a standard for storing metadata inside image files. Every time a digital camera or smartphone takes a photo, it records dozens of technical details about the shot alongside the image pixels.
This data is invisible in normal photo viewers but is read by photo management apps, image editors, and search engines. EXIF is why your phone gallery can automatically group photos by date, and why Google Photos can place your images on a map.
EXIF data is often stripped when images are uploaded to social media platforms (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, etc.) or resaved by certain image editors. Screenshots, images created in drawing apps, and images exported from web browsers often contain no EXIF data at all.
Yes — if GPS was enabled on the device when the photo was taken, the EXIF data contains the exact latitude and longitude. This is why many people choose to strip EXIF data before sharing photos publicly. This tool shows a link to OpenStreetMap when coordinates are present.
No. EXIF data is read entirely in your browser using JavaScript. Your image is never sent to any server.
This website may contain affiliate links. If you click on an affiliate link and make a purchase, we may receive a small commission at no additional cost to you.