About This Tool
The Image Metadata Viewer shows basic file and pixel information available through browser APIs. After you choose an image, it reports the filename, MIME type, file size, width, height, simplified aspect ratio, and file modification date, alongside a local preview.
ToolPool runs this utility in your browser, so your input stays on your device and is not uploaded to our server.
How To Use This Tool
- 1Drop an image into the upload area or choose one from your device.
- 2Review the file properties, dimensions, aspect ratio, and preview.
- 3Use Clear to release the local preview and inspect another image.
Benefits
Common Use Cases
- Confirming image dimensions for a website upload requirement.
- Checking whether a downloaded image is PNG, JPG, WebP, or another type.
- Reviewing file size before optimization or email attachment.
- Comparing aspect ratios before cropping or resizing.
Workflow Tips
Image Metadata Viewer is designed for quick browser work, but it is still worth reviewing the result before you use it in a live project, client document, public page, or production workflow. Keep an original copy of important source material, compare the output with what you expected, and repeat the task with slightly different settings when quality, formatting, or accuracy matters.
For larger workflows, pair this page with Image Resizer, Image Compressor, Image Converter, Image Cropper. Moving between related utilities can save time when you need to clean source data, prepare web assets, create supporting IDs, check calculations, or package output for another system. Internal links also make it easier to stay in one private workspace instead of jumping between several single-purpose sites.
The local processing model helps protect sensitive content because ToolPool does not need to receive your files, text, or form values to complete the task. Good privacy habits still matter after the result leaves the page: avoid pasting unnecessary secrets, check downloaded files before sharing them, and clear the workspace when you are finished on a shared computer.