EXIF Viewer & Remover
See exactly what a photo reveals — then download a clean copy with metadata stripped and pixels untouched.
Drop an image here, or click to choose
JPG shows full metadata · other formats can still be cleaned
How to use
- Drop a photo to inspect the metadata table and any GPS warning.
- Review the fields you do not want to share, especially location and timestamps.
- Select Download clean copy to save a metadata-free version.
Before you share
Keep the original if you may need its capture details later, and send the clean copy instead. Check every file separately: a message thread or cloud link can preserve metadata even when a social network usually removes it.
What gets removed
Camera make and model, capture time, software, lens data, and — most importantly — GPS coordinates. For JPEGs the metadata segments are cut out of the file directly, so the image pixels are untouched and quality is byte-identical. Other formats are re-drawn onto a clean canvas and saved as lossless PNG.
Why this matters more than you think
A photo taken at home and posted online can carry your home address in its EXIF block. Most big social networks strip metadata on upload, but email, messengers, cloud drives and your own website usually do not. Because this tool runs entirely in your browser, checking a sensitive photo here does not create yet another copy on someone’s server. More in the guide: what your photos reveal about you.