Read and display EXIF metadata from images. View camera make/model, date taken, resolution, GPS coordinates, ISO, aperture, shutter speed, focal length, flash, orientation, colour space, and software. Shows file info (name, size, dimensions, type). Copy all metadata as JSON. Best with JPEG images.
Drop an image here or click to upload
JPEG, PNG, WebP, GIF up to 20 MB. JPEG files contain the most EXIF data.
LevnTools Image Metadata Viewer lets you edit and optimize your images directly in your browser. Everything runs locally in your browser — your images and photos never leave your device. Unlike cloud-only alternatives that require uploads and accounts, this tool is completely free with no usage limits or watermarks. It is designed for designers preparing assets for web and print, photographers batch-processing shots, marketers creating social media visuals — anyone who needs a fast, reliable image tool without the overhead of installing software. Just open the page and start working.
Image Metadata Viewer is used by a wide range of people. Explore how different groups use this tool:
Resize images with custom dimensions, percentage, or social media presets.
Convert images between JPEG, PNG, and WebP formats in batch.
Compress images to reduce file size with adjustable quality.
Combine multiple PDF files into one document with drag-to-reorder.
Pick colors visually and convert between HEX, RGB, HSL, CMYK.
The tool displays file information (name, size, type, dimensions) and EXIF data including camera make/model, date taken, ISO speed, aperture (f-number), shutter speed, focal length, flash status, orientation, colour space, GPS coordinates, and software used.
JPEG images from digital cameras and smartphones contain the most EXIF metadata. PNG and WebP files typically have minimal or no EXIF data. The tool will still show file information for any image format.
Yes. Click the "Copy as JSON" button to copy all file information and EXIF entries to your clipboard in JSON format. This is useful for documentation or further processing.
Yes. All metadata reading happens locally in your browser. Your images are never uploaded to any server. The EXIF parser reads the raw file bytes directly in the browser.