Exif Viewer icon

Exif Viewer

Extension Actions

CRX ID
kbnpbnmjmgabkfemdehelbgdppngihhg
Description from extension meta

A simple tool to read the Exif data from your JPG images!

Image from store
Exif Viewer
Description from store

This utility lets you open a JPG image from your computer or from a URL to view its Exif data. There's lots of interesting information held in image files for you to explore. Some images have GPS data so you can see exactly where it was taken. Nikon also records the camera's shutter count in the Exif data.
You can also right-click on a JPG image in your browser and select Exif Image Info from the context menu.

Latest reviews

sabt
don't work
omegatron
Works, but opens a separate tab to an EXIF viewer website which doesn't show all the EXIF data
Andi K
This extension just opens a link to an ugly website full of ads. Cannot handle data urls. Preferable alternative in the terminal using curl and exiftool: curl URL | exiftool -f -G -a -struct -fast -
Andi K
This extension just opens a link to an ugly website full of ads. Cannot handle data urls. Preferable alternative in the terminal using curl and exiftool: curl URL | exiftool -f -G -a -struct -fast -
asad ali
I Like this extension. Works for me perfectly on stored images. I am just curious if it does not collect my images to its own database or something
asad ali
I Like this extension. Works for me perfectly on stored images. I am just curious if it does not collect my images to its own database or something
Inge Jones
I wanted to know exactly what field was showing what info, and it didn't bother showing the full EXIF fieldnames, so I could have been viewing any old metadata fields that happened to hold content.
Inge Jones
I wanted to know exactly what field was showing what info, and it didn't bother showing the full EXIF fieldnames, so I could have been viewing any old metadata fields that happened to hold content.
Chris Orbz
Not a real extension. Just forwards the URL of an image (via a context menu item) to a web based tool. Doesn't pass any arguments in the URL properly either. This could be accomplished without installing anything using a bookmarklet. In fact, I'll write one right now - add a new 'EXIF' bookmark to your Bookmarks Bar and after you copy/paste the line below, you'll need to add javacript: to the beginning because Chrome will parse it out for security reasons. (There's no issue though, you can probably see what the javascript does even if you don't know how to code.) Then open any JPEG image in its own tab and click the EXIF bookmark. Exact same results, except it'll work 100% of the time. javascript:location.href='https://linangdata.com/exif-reader/?url='+window.location
Chris Orbz
Not a real extension. Just forwards the URL of an image (via a context menu item) to a web based tool. Doesn't pass any arguments in the URL properly either. This could be accomplished without installing anything using a bookmarklet. In fact, I'll write one right now - add a new 'EXIF' bookmark to your Bookmarks Bar and after you copy/paste the line below, you'll need to add javacript: to the beginning because Chrome will parse it out for security reasons. (There's no issue though, you can probably see what the javascript does even if you don't know how to code.) Then open any JPEG image in its own tab and click the EXIF bookmark. Exact same results, except it'll work 100% of the time. javascript:location.href='https://linangdata.com/exif-reader/?url='+window.location
Bukhori Sulistyanto
ok
Bukhori Sulistyanto
ok
Jordan Train
Exactly what I was looking for.
Jordan Train
Exactly what I was looking for.
Howard P
It's ok, but missing a lot of information - especially the shutter count.
Howard P
It's ok, but missing a lot of information - especially the shutter count.
Charles Haacker
As Lance Sloan says, It doesn't show the EXIF data of online images. It works with images stored on your computer only. Which is fine for me. I have the EXIF viewer that shows the data for online photos, but I've never been able to figure out how to make that one work with images on my computer. Now I have both so I can use one when I need the data from an online image, and the other when I need it for my own stuff. We all forget sometimes, so it's nice to be able to get the info when needed in seconds.
Charles Haacker
As Lance Sloan says, It doesn't show the EXIF data of online images. It works with images stored on your computer only. Which is fine for me. I have the EXIF viewer that shows the data for online photos, but I've never been able to figure out how to make that one work with images on my computer. Now I have both so I can use one when I need the data from an online image, and the other when I need it for my own stuff. We all forget sometimes, so it's nice to be able to get the info when needed in seconds.
Mr. Lance E Sloan
It doesn't show the EXIF data of online images. It works with images stored on the local computer ONLY.
Mr. Lance E Sloan
It doesn't show the EXIF data of online images. It works with images stored on the local computer ONLY.