Zero upload · Browser-local · Privacy-first

See what your photo knows.

View camera, location, date and technical metadata hidden in your photos. Remove it all with one click before sharing — everything stays in your browser.

Why check here

Know what you're sharing. Decide before you post.

01

Private by design

Reading and removal both run in your browser. Your photos never touch a server — open devtools to verify.

02

GPS flagged in red

When your photo carries GPS coordinates, we warn you loudly. One click strips it along with the rest of the EXIF.

03

Batch cleaning

Paste or drop multiple photos. Strip metadata from all of them, then download as a ZIP.

Frequently Asked Questions

EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) is a block of metadata embedded in every photo. It includes the camera model, lens, exposure settings, the original date and time, and — if you took the photo on a phone with location services on — the exact GPS coordinates.
A photo shared on a forum, Slack channel, or dating profile still carries the GPS coordinates and timestamp of where it was taken. Removing EXIF prevents accidental address leaks and makes the file roughly 5–20 KB smaller.
No — pixels are not touched. EXIF is a separate metadata block; removing it does not recompress the image or change a single pixel. The visible image is byte-for-byte identical.
Yes. The tool lets you strip GPS only, strip all metadata, or strip a specific tag group. You can also view every field before deciding what to remove.
Yes. Drop a folder of photos and the tool processes them in parallel — same setting applied to all. Download individually or as a ZIP.

Related guides

Related tools

Paste a photo and clean it now.

Free, no registration. Reads and strips EXIF, IPTC, GPS. 9 languages.