100% private — nothing uploaded
Your photo stays in your browser while EXIF, IPTC, and XMP tags are read locally. Image bytes never travel through any API route.
Read hidden camera settings and location tags instantly — 100% in your browser, nothing uploaded.
9 images processed
18 minutes saved
When you need to view EXIF online before publishing, a local reader beats emailing files to a cloud inspector. Drop one photo and read camera settings, timestamps, and copyright blocks without uploading bytes.
Use this tool to check metadata image tags for verification workflows — confirming a listing photo still carries the right attribution, or spotting GPS coordinates before a social post goes live.
Upload a JPG, PNG, or WebP file. The workbench groups tags into Camera Settings, File Info, and Copyright/Creator sections, with a collapsible list for every other embedded field.
Extracting metadata from images takes seconds in the browser. Paid tiers remove hourly limits when you inspect tags across a full product shoot in one session.
After you inspect tags here, use the Image Metadata Editor to strip GPS or inject corrected copyright and date fields on your exports.
Your photo stays in your browser while EXIF, IPTC, and XMP tags are read locally. Image bytes never travel through any API route.
Check metadata image tags for Artist, Copyright, and Creator fields before listing product photos or handing off client files.
View ISO, shutter speed, aperture, and lens data without desktop software — ideal for quick catalog verification.
EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) stores camera settings, timestamps, and sometimes GPS coordinates inside a photo file. This tool reads those tags in your browser.
You can view EXIF online from JPEG, PNG, and WebP files. Tag coverage varies by how the image was saved or exported.
Yes. GPS coordinates are extracted locally and shown only to you. The optional map loads from OpenStreetMap only after you toggle it on.
Yes. Copyright, Artist, Creator, and related IPTC/XMP fields appear in a dedicated section when present in the file.
No. Extracting metadata from images happens entirely in your browser with exifr. No image data is sent to any API route.