Geotag a Whole Set of Photos in One Pass
This page is built for the case where you have several photos from the same place — a hike, a wedding, a real-estate shoot, an event — and the camera didn't record GPS. Drop them all in, pick the location once on the map, and the same coordinates are written into every file's EXIF GPS block.
Each file is processed in your browser, one after the other, and packaged for download. There is no upload to a server, so the speed is limited only by your own machine. A typical batch of 10–20 JPEGs from a phone or DSLR finishes in a few seconds.
When this is the right tool
- Trip photos with no GPS — older cameras, mirrorless bodies without GPS, or phone shots taken with location services off. Add location data to your images effortlessly.
- Scanned film and prints — digitised analog photos have no EXIF GPS at all; you can backfill the location.
- Real estate listings — apply the property's coordinates to the full set of listing photos so they group correctly in catalog tools.
- Field documentation — surveyors, inspectors, and journalists who shoot a sequence at one site and need consistent geotags on every frame.
- Photographer deliverables — geotag a full session's selects before handing them to a client's catalog software.
What gets written into each file
The latitude and longitude you choose are converted from decimal degrees into the degrees-minutes-seconds format the EXIF GPS IFD expects, plus the corresponding N/S and E/W reference tags. Existing EXIF fields — camera model, lens, exposure, capture timestamp — are preserved exactly. The image pixels are not re-encoded, so there is no quality loss between input and output.
If you only have one photo
Use the simpler single-photo flow on add GPS to a photo online. To change coordinates that are already wrong, the geo tag editor page is set up for that workflow.