Your photos know where you live
Every photo from a phone carries EXIF metadata: GPS coordinates precise to a few meters, a timestamp, your device model, and dozens of camera settings. Drop a photo above and see it for yourself — if there's a location, we'll show it on a map.
One click then strips every metadata segment from the file, losslessly. The pixels are untouched; only the hidden data is gone. Do this before posting photos of your home, selling items online, or sharing pictures of your kids.
Frequently asked questions
Wait — removing private metadata by uploading the photo somewhere?
Exactly the problem with most EXIF tools. This one reads and strips metadata entirely in your browser; the photo never touches a server. You can even use it offline.
What's hiding in my photos?
Phones embed the GPS coordinates of where each photo was taken, plus the exact time, device model, and camera settings. Share the file and you share all of it — this tool shows you exactly what's there, including the location on a map.
Does removing metadata reduce image quality?
No. The metadata segments are cut out of the JPEG file directly — pixels are never re-encoded, so the image is byte-for-byte identical in quality and the file gets slightly smaller.
Don't social networks strip EXIF anyway?
Major platforms strip it on display (though they keep it for themselves). But email, messaging apps, cloud drives, and forums often pass the original file through — anywhere you share an actual file, the metadata travels with it.