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EXIF Metadata Viewer

Extract GPS coordinates and metadata from photos

πŸ“Έ Your Photo Might Be Revealing Your Data Location

You took a photo, posted it online, and moved on. But did you know that image might contain hidden data β€” including your exact photo location? This information, known as EXIF data, is quietly embedded in most digital images and can be accessed with the right tools.

Your photo might be reveal your data location

πŸ” What Is EXIF Data and Why It Matters

EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) metadata includes technical details about how and where a photo was taken. This can include camera settings, timestamps, and GPS coordinates. If your phone or camera had location services enabled, your image may contain precise latitude and longitude data β€” revealing your home, workplace, or travel route.

That’s why understanding EXIF data view is essential for photographers, travelers, and anyone concerned about privacy.

πŸ› οΈ How to Check If Your Photo Revealing Location Data

You don’t need to install anything. Just use our free online tool:

Visit ExifDataView.com
  • EXIF Metadata Viewer: Instantly see all metadata embedded in your image
  • GPS from Photo: View exact coordinates and map location
  • Image Metadata Extractor: Analyze camera settings, timestamps, and more
  • EXIF extractor online: Works directly in your browser β€” no uploads stored

πŸ›‘οΈ Why You Should Remove EXIF Data Before Sharing

If you're posting photos publicly β€” especially on social media β€” it's smart to remove EXIF data to protect your privacy. Strangers could use EXIF data location to pinpoint where the photo was taken.

Our tool will soon offer a built-in feature to strip metadata safely. Until then, you can use the viewer to audit your images and decide what to share.

πŸš€ Try It Now

Visit ExifDataView.com to explore your image metadata. Whether you're a photographer checking camera settings or a traveler verifying photo location, our metadata viewer gives you full control over what your photos reveal.

Your images tell a story β€” make sure you're the one writing it.