Strip camera info, GPS location, timestamps, and other hidden data from PNG and JPEG images, right in your browser. No uploads, no signup, nothing leaves your device. Up to 20 files at once.
Drop PNG or JPEG images here
or click to browse · up to 20 files · 25 MB each
No signup, no upload to any server, nothing to install. Drop your images in, click the button, and download. Metadata stripping happens entirely inside your browser tab.
Drag & drop PNG or JPEG files onto the upload area, or click to browse. Up to 20 images at a time, 25 MB each. PNG and JPEG can be mixed in the same batch.
Click "Remove Metadata" and the tool re-encodes each image through a canvas, leaving the pixels intact but discarding every EXIF tag, GPS location, camera identifier, and timestamp.
Each cleaned image gets a "no-exif-" prefix so you never mix it up with the original. Download individually or grab the whole batch as a single ZIP file.
Every photo from a phone or camera carries hidden data: GPS coordinates, device serial number, exact timestamp, camera settings, sometimes thumbnail previews. This tool strips all of it so the image you share is just an image.
Images never touch a server. Metadata stripping happens locally in your browser using the native Canvas API, so you can safely scrub photos before sharing them anywhere.
Phone photos often embed exact latitude and longitude in EXIF tags. Posting one to a public forum or marketplace can reveal a home address. This tool wipes all geotagging cleanly.
Camera make, model, lens, serial number, software version, and even unique pixel-level "PRNU" patterns can identify a device. Stripping EXIF removes all of the metadata-based identifiers.
The capture date, time, and timezone are often more revealing than people realize, they can confirm where someone was on a given day. All time-related EXIF fields are erased.
Clean up to 20 images in one pass. PNG and JPEG can be mixed freely. Each file gets its own row showing the source format, size change, and a green "EXIF removed" badge on completion.
One click on "Download All" bundles every cleaned image into a single ZIP file named "no-exif-images.zip", ready to upload, share, or hand off without any privacy worries.
Metadata leaks happen quietly. A vacation photo on Instagram, a marketplace listing, an evidence file shared with a colleague, each can carry information you didn't intend to share. These are the people who reach for an EXIF remover most.
Photos posted to Facebook, Instagram Stories, Reddit, or X may strip EXIF on upload, but many platforms don't. Strip metadata yourself before posting to avoid revealing your home address or workplace.
Selling on Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, eBay, Vinted? Listing photos often retain GPS coordinates from where they were taken, sometimes your home. Clean every photo before uploading.
Publishing photos from a source, a tip line, or a sensitive location? EXIF data can deanonymize the contributor. Strip metadata before publication to keep sources and subjects safe.
Selling stock photos or sharing client portraits? You may want to strip your camera serial and settings before public posting, both for personal privacy and to discourage style replication.
Sharing exhibits, evidence photos, or screenshots in case files? Metadata can leak the time, location, or device used to capture material, even when that wasn't supposed to be on record.
For survivors using new phones or hiding locations, every shared photo is a potential breadcrumb. Strip EXIF from any photo before sending it through messaging apps, email, or social media.