| Image metadata | |
|---|---|
| File name | |
| File size | |
| File type | |
| MIME type | |
| Last Modified Date | |
| Camera settings | |
|---|---|
| Make | |
| Model | |
| Focal length | |
| Aperture | |
| Exposure Time | |
| ISO | |
| Flash | |
| Full metadata | Image uploading....Please wait for full metadata... |
|---|
An EXIF data viewer extracts hidden metadata embedded in your digital photos, revealing camera settings, timestamps, and GPS coordinates without specialized software. ToolsPivot's free online EXIF viewer processes your images instantly, displaying comprehensive technical details that help photographers analyze their work and verify image authenticity.
ToolsPivot's EXIF Data Viewer reads the Exchangeable Image File Format data stored within your digital photographs. Upload any JPEG, PNG, TIFF, or RAW image file, and the tool extracts over 50 metadata fields including camera make and model, lens specifications, exposure settings, and geolocation coordinates. The viewer processes files locally in your browser for maximum privacy and displays results in an organized, easy-to-read format.
Photographers use this tool to study exposure settings from successful shots and learn from their camera decisions. Digital forensics professionals verify image authenticity by examining timestamp consistency and device information. Content creators check photos before sharing to ensure sensitive location data is removed for privacy protection.
Photos contain invisible metadata that reveals personal information like your home address through GPS coordinates. Without an EXIF viewer, this data remains hidden until someone extracts it from images you share online. ToolsPivot's viewer lets you inspect every detail before posting, protecting your privacy while helping you understand the technical aspects of your photography.
Instant Metadata Access. View complete photo information in seconds without downloading software or creating accounts. Simply upload your image and receive detailed results immediately.
Privacy Protection. Identify embedded GPS coordinates and personal device information before sharing photos online. Know exactly what data your images contain to make informed sharing decisions.
Photography Learning. Study the aperture, shutter speed, and ISO settings from photos you admire. Understanding these parameters helps improve your own camera work over time.
Image Authentication. Verify photo timestamps and camera information to confirm image authenticity. Useful for legal documentation, journalism, and digital forensics investigations.
No File Size Limits. Process high-resolution RAW files and large JPEG images without restrictions. Professional photographers can analyze full-quality images directly.
Browser-Based Processing. Files are processed locally without uploading to external servers. Your images remain private throughout the entire analysis process.
Multi-Format Support. Compatible with JPEG, PNG, TIFF, WebP, HEIC, and various RAW formats including CR2, NEF, and ARW from major camera brands.
Camera Information Extraction. Displays manufacturer, model name, lens specifications, and firmware version stored by your camera at capture time.
Exposure Settings Display. Shows aperture (f-stop), shutter speed, ISO sensitivity, exposure compensation, and metering mode for each photograph.
GPS Coordinate Mapping. Extracts latitude, longitude, and altitude data with optional map visualization showing exactly where photos were captured.
Timestamp Analysis. Reveals original capture date, digitization time, and modification timestamps to track image history.
Image Dimension Details. Reports resolution, pixel dimensions, orientation, color space, and compression information for technical specifications.
Flash Status Indicator. Shows whether flash fired, flash mode settings, and red-eye reduction status during capture.
White Balance Information. Displays color temperature settings and white balance mode selected at the time of shooting.
Focal Length Display. Shows actual focal length and 35mm equivalent values for understanding lens perspective.
Color Profile Data. Identifies embedded ICC profiles and color space information for accurate color management workflows.
Software Detection. Reveals which applications have processed or edited the image, including Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom, and mobile editing apps.
Thumbnail Preview. Displays embedded preview images stored within photo files for quick visual confirmation.
Batch Processing. Analyze multiple images sequentially to compare settings across a photo series.
Upload Your Image. Click the upload area or drag and drop your photo file into the designated zone. The tool accepts single images up to maximum file size limits.
Automatic Processing. The viewer immediately reads all embedded EXIF tags from your file without manual configuration required.
View Organized Results. Metadata displays in categorized sections covering camera info, exposure settings, GPS data, and timestamps.
Explore Map Location. If GPS coordinates exist, click the map view option to visualize the exact capture location on an interactive map.
Export or Copy Data. Copy specific values or download complete metadata reports for documentation and record-keeping purposes.
Use an EXIF viewer whenever you need to understand the technical details behind a photograph or verify its authenticity. The tool serves multiple purposes across photography, security, and content management workflows.
Before Sharing Photos Online. Check for embedded GPS data that could reveal your home address or frequently visited locations before posting to social media.
Analyzing Photography Techniques. Study exposure settings from professional photographs to understand how specific visual effects were achieved.
Organizing Photo Collections. Extract capture dates and location information to sort and categorize large image libraries efficiently.
Verifying Image Authenticity. Examine metadata consistency when authenticating photographs for legal, journalistic, or investigative purposes.
Troubleshooting Camera Issues. Review settings from problematic shots to identify patterns causing exposure or focus problems.
Learning New Equipment. Compare metadata from different cameras or lenses to understand how each device records information differently.
Checking Photo Edits. Identify which software processed an image and when modifications occurred through embedded metadata trails.
Edge cases include images where EXIF data has been stripped by social media platforms or messaging apps, and GIF files which don't support EXIF metadata storage.
Context: A portrait photographer wants to replicate lighting conditions from a successful outdoor session.
Process:
Outcome: The photographer recreates similar conditions by matching proven exposure parameters and scheduling future shoots at the same time.
Context: An investigator needs to verify the authenticity of photographic evidence submitted in a legal case.
Process:
Outcome: Metadata analysis confirms or challenges the authenticity of submitted photographs, supporting evidence evaluation.
Context: A blogger preparing travel photos for publication wants to protect location privacy.
Process:
Outcome: The blogger publishes content with full awareness of what location data readers could extract from shared images.
Context: A photography enthusiast comparing two camera models wants to understand their metadata capabilities.
Process:
Outcome: The buyer makes an informed decision based on which camera better supports their metadata analysis workflow.
Context: A designer needs to verify that purchased stock images are original photographs, not AI-generated.
Process:
Outcome: Designer confirms image authenticity through camera metadata presence before using in commercial projects.
EXIF data contains standardized fields that cameras populate automatically during image capture. Understanding these fields helps photographers interpret viewer results accurately.
Camera Settings Fields. Aperture values appear as f-numbers (f/2.8, f/11) indicating lens opening size. Shutter speed shows as fractions (1/250, 1/60) or seconds for long exposures. ISO values indicate sensor sensitivity settings ranging from 100 to 12800 or higher on modern cameras.
Location Data Fields. GPS coordinates use decimal degrees or degrees-minutes-seconds format. Altitude records elevation above sea level in meters. Some cameras also store GPS timestamp and processing method information.
Image Technical Fields. Resolution reports pixels per inch for print sizing. Color space indicates sRGB or Adobe RGB color gamut. Orientation tags tell software how to display rotated images correctly.
Different image sources affect EXIF availability. Screenshots lack camera EXIF data. Social media platforms strip most metadata. Images edited heavily may lose original capture information while gaining software modification tags.
Complete your workflow with these complementary ToolsPivot tools:
EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) is metadata automatically embedded in digital photos by cameras and smartphones. It records technical settings, timestamps, and often GPS coordinates, which matters for both learning photography techniques and protecting your privacy when sharing images online.
JPEG, TIFF, and most RAW formats (CR2, NEF, ARW, ORF) fully support EXIF metadata. PNG files have limited EXIF support. GIF images cannot store EXIF data at all.
Most social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter automatically strip EXIF metadata when images are uploaded. Photos downloaded from these platforms typically contain no original camera data.
GPS accuracy depends on the device and signal conditions at capture time. Smartphone GPS is typically accurate within 5 meters under open sky. Indoor photos may have less accurate or missing location data.
No, ToolsPivot's EXIF viewer only reads metadata without altering your original file. Your image remains unchanged throughout the viewing process.
Photos may lack EXIF data if captured with devices that don't record metadata, edited with software that strips information, shared through platforms that remove metadata, or if the original file format doesn't support EXIF.
Yes, EXIF metadata can be edited using various software tools. This means EXIF data alone cannot serve as definitive proof of when or where a photo was taken for legal purposes.
Use ToolsPivot's EXIF Data Remover to strip all metadata before sharing. Many image editors also offer options to remove metadata during export.
Standard EXIF data includes camera manufacturer, model name, lens specifications, firmware version, aperture, shutter speed, ISO, focal length, flash status, white balance, metering mode, and exposure compensation.
EXIF metadata adds a small amount to file size, typically 10-50KB depending on the amount of data stored. Embedded thumbnails can add additional size.
Yes, RAW files from Canon (CR2), Nikon (NEF), Sony (ARW), and other manufacturers contain extensive EXIF data. RAW files often include more detailed information than JPEG exports.
ToolsPivot processes EXIF extraction in your browser locally. Your image data is not transmitted to external servers, ensuring privacy during analysis.
Copyright © 2018-2026 by ToolsPivot.com All Rights Reserved.
