Samsung · EXIF & GPS
Most Galaxy A54 photos are geotagged by default. The phone writes your GPS coordinates into every shot unless you turn Location off for the camera — so a Galaxy A54 photo you share can reveal exactly where you were standing.
Analyse a Galaxy A54 photo →The Galaxy A54 tags each photo with latitude, longitude and often altitude, plus the direction the camera faced. It's stored inside the file's EXIF metadata, invisible on screen but trivial to read back.
If you'd rather not broadcast where a Galaxy A54 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.
By default, yes — as long as Location access is on for the camera. Turn it off in Settings and new Galaxy A54 photos won't carry GPS, but existing ones still do.
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.