Image Size Checker

Instantly check image dimensions, file size, DPI, color mode, and EXIF metadata — all locally in your browser without any uploads.

Width · Height · DPI
EXIF metadata
100% Private

Drag & Drop Images

or click to browse multiple files

Results
No Upload · Client-Side Processing

Image Information We Detect

Complete metadata analysis for your images

📐

Dimensions

Width and height in pixels (e.g., 1920×1080)

📁

File Size

Size in bytes, KB, or MB for storage planning

🖨️

DPI / PPI

Print resolution for quality assessment

Aspect Ratio

Proportions like 16:9, 4:3, or 1:1

How It Works

Three simple steps to get started

1
Upload Your Image

Drag and drop or click to upload any image file you want to inspect.

2
View Image Details

Instantly see dimensions (px), file size, DPI, color space, format, and EXIF metadata.

3
Use the Information

Copy values or use the information to decide on resizing, compression, or format conversion.

Instant
Metadata Read
EXIF
Full Data Extract
DPI
Resolution Check
Private
No Upload

Why Use This Tool?

Built for quality, speed, and privacy

Full Dimensions

View exact pixel width and height, plus physical dimensions calculated from DPI.

EXIF Metadata

Access camera make/model, GPS coordinates, exposure settings, and all embedded metadata.

100% Private

All analysis is local. Your images never leave your device or touch any server.

Instant Results

Image information is displayed in milliseconds — no processing wait time.

Multiple Formats

Works with JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, and most common image file formats.

Completely Free

No sign-up, no limits. Check as many images as you want for free.

Frequently Asked Questions

Width and height in pixels, file size, format, DPI/PPI resolution, color mode, and all available EXIF metadata including GPS if present.
No. All analysis happens locally in your browser. Your images never leave your device.
EXIF is metadata embedded in image files by cameras and phones. It includes settings like exposure, ISO, GPS coordinates, camera model, and date/time.
Yes. Upload multiple images and view the details for each one.
DPI (dots per inch) indicates print resolution. 72 DPI is standard for screens; 300 DPI is standard for print.
Yes. Check the pixel dimensions and file size to determine if resizing or compression is needed before uploading.

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