Visible pixels are exported into a new image instead of copying the original metadata blocks.
Remove metadata from image
Create clean image copies by re-encoding them in your browser.
Drop files here or pick from your device. Supported: JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC.
Up to 30 files, 100 MB each.Drag the crop box. Use the handle to resize.
- 1SelectChoose or drop your images.
- 2ProcessAdjust the options and run the tool.
- 3DownloadSave the finished files.
Your images stay private.Processing happens locally in this browser. Files are never uploaded or stored.
Continue with ImgMini
Related workflows use the same private browser pipeline.
Create a sharing copy without common embedded image metadata
Photos can contain EXIF fields such as camera details, capture time, software information, and sometimes location. ImgMini removes common embedded metadata by decoding the visible image and writing a fresh file in the browser rather than copying the original container.
The result is a practical sharing copy, not a forensic privacy audit. Information can also appear visibly inside the pixels, filename, cloud account, or surrounding message. Keep the original separately if capture details, color-management data, or archival provenance matter.
Create a cleaner copy before posting, emailing, or publishing a personal photo.
The tool does not audit filenames, visible information, accounts, or every possible side channel.
Share the cleaned copy and preserve the source privately
Use this tool when common metadata should not travel with a photo. Retain the original in private storage if you rely on capture date, camera settings, location history, or editing metadata.
Checks before downloading
- Rename the downloaded file if the original filename itself reveals information.
- Review the visible image for addresses, screens, badges, reflections, and other identifying details.
- Use a dedicated forensic workflow when the privacy requirement is legal, investigative, or high risk.
Questions
Are my images uploaded to ImgMini?
No. ImgMini runs the conversion in your browser. The selected files stay on your device unless you choose to share them elsewhere.
Is this forensic metadata removal?
No. It creates a fresh browser-encoded image and removes common metadata, but it is not a forensic privacy audit.