Canon · EXIF & GPS
The EOS R5 doesn't usually geotag on its own, so many photos won't carry coordinates — but each file still holds rich EXIF: exposure, lens, shutter count and the body's serial number. Paired with a GPS accessory or phone sync, EOS R5 files can be located too.
Analyse a EOS R5 photo →Even without GPS, a EOS R5 records make, model, lens, exposure settings, timestamps and sometimes a serial number — enough to link a set of photos to one camera. When geotagging is enabled, coordinates land in the same EXIF block.
If you'd rather not broadcast where a EOS R5 photo was taken, you can strip the location and metadata in one click. See how to remove EXIF & GPS — the cleaned copy is rebuilt entirely in your browser.
Only if the EOS R5 was paired with a GPS unit or a phone app that writes location. Otherwise you'll see full EXIF (lens, exposure, serial) but no coordinates.
No. The photo is read entirely in your browser. Only GPS coordinates (never the image) are sent to a map service to look up the address.
Treat them as a claim to verify. EXIF is user-editable, so location and timestamps can be faked — ExifTrace also flags things like a sun position or timezone that doesn't match.