ExifTrace

DJI · EXIF & GPS

Where was this Air 3 photo taken?

Air 3 flights are almost always geotagged — the drone logs precise GPS and altitude into every image. That makes Air 3 photos easy to place on a map, and a real privacy consideration before you share them.

Analyse a Air 3 photo →

What a Air 3 writes into a photo

The Air 3 embeds latitude, longitude, absolute and relative altitude, and the gimbal/heading data into each photo's EXIF and XMP. It's some of the most location-rich metadata of any device.

Read a Air 3 photo in three steps

  1. Open ExifTrace in your browser.
  2. Drop the Air 3 photo onto the page — nothing is uploaded.
  3. See the result — the GPS location on a map (if present), plus the full EXIF: exposure, lens, timestamps and device details.

Remove GPS from Air 3 photos before sharing

If you'd rather not broadcast where a Air 3 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.

Common questions

Can I map where a Air 3 photo was taken?

Usually yes — Air 3 images carry precise GPS and altitude, so the launch/capture point pins on a map directly.

Is my Air 3 photo uploaded anywhere?

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.

Can EXIF coordinates be trusted?

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.

See where your Air 3 photo was taken →