Media Info Viewer
View comprehensive metadata for images, videos, and audio files. Extract EXIF data including GPS location, camera info, and date taken. Browser-based, no upload required.
Drop your media file here
Supports images, videos, and audio files
Why use our Media Info Viewer?
Our Media Info Viewer instantly reveals all the technical details and hidden metadata from your images, videos, and audio files. Extract EXIF data including GPS coordinates (where the photo was taken), camera make and model, lens information, exposure settings, and the exact date and time the media was created.
For images, you can see dimensions, orientation, color profile, and full camera settings like ISO, aperture, and focal length. For videos, view resolution, codec, frame rate, and duration. Audio files show codec, sample rate, and channel information.
All processing happens locally in your browser - your files are never uploaded anywhere. This ensures complete privacy for sensitive content while providing fast, instant results. Perfect for photographers, developers, forensic analysts, and content creators.
Frequently Asked Questions
What information can I see about my media files?
For images: dimensions, EXIF data (GPS location, camera make/model, lens, exposure, aperture, ISO, focal length, flash, date taken), color profile, and orientation. For videos: resolution, codec, frame rate, duration, and aspect ratio. For audio: codec, sample rate, and channels.
Are my files uploaded to a server?
No, all analysis happens entirely in your browser. Your files never leave your device, ensuring complete privacy.
What file formats are supported?
Images: JPEG, PNG, WebP, HEIC, TIFF. Videos: MP4, WebM, MKV, MOV. Audio: MP3, WAV, OGG, FLAC, AAC.
Can I see where a photo was taken?
Yes! If the photo contains GPS data (location was enabled when the photo was taken), you'll see the exact coordinates and can open the location directly in Google Maps.
Why can't I see GPS or camera data for some files?
EXIF data depends on how the file was created. Photos from smartphones usually contain rich metadata, while screenshots or images from the web often have EXIF data stripped for privacy.