Every time you take a photo, your phone or camera quietly records hidden data alongside the image — this is called EXIF metadata. It can include the precise GPS coordinates where the picture was taken, the exact timestamp, and your device model. When you post or send that photo, anyone who downloads it can read that data and figure out where you live, work, or spend your time. Removing EXIF before sharing is a simple, powerful privacy habit.
Clean your photo's metadata now
Drop an image in and download a clean copy. It runs in your browser — your photo is never uploaded.
Open the EXIF remover →What EXIF metadata can reveal
- GPS location — often accurate to a few metres.
- Date and time the photo was captured.
- Device make and model, plus lens and settings.
- Sometimes a unique device identifier or software version.
Step-by-step: strip EXIF and GPS data
- Open the EXIF remover tool.
- Drag in the photo you're about to share (or tap to browse).
- The tool removes all embedded metadata, including GPS coordinates.
- Download the cleaned image — it looks identical.
- Share the clean copy instead of the original.
When you should always remove EXIF
- Selling items on marketplaces with photos taken at home.
- Posting to forums, dating profiles, or public galleries.
- Sharing photos of children or your home.
- Sending images to people you don't fully trust.
Handy extras
- Need a smaller file too? Pair this with our image compressor.
- Want to resize before posting? Use the image resizer.