Review what an image is exposing, remove the hidden details you do not want to keep, and save a cleaner copy for sharing.
Privacy
Metadata
See what is embedded in your photos first, then remove the hidden details in a straightforward local workflow.
Bring in a batch of files and prepare multiple photos for sharing without repeating the same steps one by one.
Check for location clues, camera details, dates, and identifiers first so you know exactly why a file may need cleaning.
The normal cleanup flow runs in the browser, which helps you handle personal or sensitive images more privately.
Every image is labeled so you can tell whether it contains location data, device details, other metadata, or nothing meaningful at all.
Once the hidden details are removed, save cleaned versions for sending, posting, or storing with fewer privacy concerns.
Use common JPG, PNG, and WebP files in one consistent cleanup flow that fits typical sharing needs.
Use this simple process to review a file, remove its extra metadata, and save a cleaner version.
Choose one image or a batch from your device so you can review what each file contains before cleaning it.
Look through the privacy summary to see whether the image carries location data, device details, dates, or other hidden context.
Remove the metadata and download the cleaned result when you want a simpler file for sharing or storage.
Check what the file reveals, remove the hidden details you do not need, and keep a cleaner copy.
Remove EXIF NowCommon questions about cleaning image metadata before sharing or storing files.
The goal is to keep the picture looking the same while creating a new copy without the hidden metadata. In normal use, the visible image should stay intact, but the cleaned file no longer carries the extra details that were embedded in the original.
This page works with JPG, PNG, and WebP images. Other formats are left out so the cleanup flow stays consistent and reliable in the browser.
Yes. You can load multiple images, review what each one contains, and then clean supported files in the same batch. That is useful when you want to prepare a full set of photos before posting them or sending them to someone else.
The cleaned export is meant to remove EXIF and related hidden details that can reveal extra information about the file, such as location data, device information, dates, and shooting context. The aim is to create a simpler copy with less private baggage attached to it.
No. The normal cleanup flow is designed to run in your browser, so the image does not need to be uploaded just to remove its metadata. That local approach is especially helpful for personal, private, or client-facing material.
Yes. You can review the privacy summary and metadata sections first, understand what the image contains, and then decide whether to remove it. That makes the process clearer than using a cleaner without seeing what was there.
If an image is already clean, the page tells you that nothing meaningful was found. That is still useful because it confirms the file is already simpler to share without needing another cleanup step.
Metadata can reveal more than many people expect. A photo may include location clues, device information, dates, or other details that say something about where it came from and how it was taken. Removing that extra information helps reduce accidental privacy leaks when you post, send, or publish images.
Yes. You can resize and download images for free, with no signup required. Processing happens locally in your browser, so there are no usage caps or hidden fees.
No. All resizing and compression run in your browser. Files never leave your device and are not stored on our servers, keeping your images private.
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