Image Metadata Extractor

Read EXIF, IPTC, and XMP metadata from any image. View camera settings, GPS location, timestamps, and more.

Drop files here or click to browse

image/*,.heic,.heif,.avif

What is Image Metadata?

Image metadata (EXIF, IPTC, XMP) is hidden information embedded in photo files by cameras and editing software. It includes camera model, exposure settings, GPS coordinates, timestamps, copyright info, and more.

Why view image metadata?

Photographers use metadata to review camera settings. Designers check resolution and color profiles. Privacy-conscious users verify what personal data is embedded before sharing photos online.

How to Use

1
Drop or select an image file
2
Metadata is read instantly
3
Browse by category (EXIF, IPTC, XMP)
4
Copy or export metadata

Key Features

All Metadata Types

Reads EXIF, IPTC, XMP, and ICC profiles

GPS Location

Shows GPS coordinates with map preview

Camera Details

Model, lens, aperture, shutter speed, ISO

100% Private

Files processed in your browser — never uploaded

All Formats

JPEG, PNG, WebP, TIFF, HEIC, AVIF

Export Data

Copy metadata as JSON or plain text

Supported Image Formats

Raster
JPEGTIFFWebPHEICAVIF

Frequently asked questions

What image formats support EXIF data?
JPEG is the most common format with EXIF data. TIFF, HEIC, AVIF, and WebP also support EXIF. PNG files typically don't contain EXIF data but may have text metadata.
Can I see where a photo was taken?
If the camera or phone had GPS enabled when the photo was taken, the GPS coordinates will be in the EXIF data. Our tool displays these coordinates and can show the location on a map.
Is my image uploaded to a server?
No. All metadata reading happens entirely in your browser. Your images never leave your device.
Can I remove EXIF data from images?
Our current tool is read-only — it displays metadata but doesn't modify files. To strip metadata for privacy, you can use image editing tools or our future metadata removal feature.
Why is there no EXIF data in my image?
Some apps and social media platforms strip EXIF data when processing images. Screenshots typically don't contain EXIF data. PNG files also rarely have EXIF information.