About your photos’ locations
Your photo may have a location if your device’s camera saves your location with the photo, or if you manually add a location to a photo. Google Photos also estimates your location from information such as landmarks and locations in your other photos.
You can only change or remove estimated locations and locations that you manually added to your photos. If a location was automatically added by your camera, you can’t update or remove the location in Google Photos.
Manage your photos' location
To manage your photo or video location information, you can either add a location to a photo that doesn't have one or edit or remove an estimated location Photos has added.
Add a location
Important: To add a location on a photo or video, you must back it up first.
- On your iPhone or iPad, open Google Photos .
- Open the photo or video.
- Tap More Add a location .
- Add or select a location from your recent locations.
Edit or remove an estimated location from a photo
Important: You can only update or remove estimated locations. If the location of a photo or video was automatically added by your camera, you can't edit or remove the location.
- On your iPhone or iPad, open Google Photos .
- Open the photo or video.
- Tap More Edit .
- Add or select a location from your recent locations.
- To remove the estimated location, tap Remove location.
You can also edit the location of multiple photos:
- On your iPhone or iPad, open Google Photos .
- Select the photos whose location you want to edit.
- Tap More Edit location.
- Add or select the location.
- To remove the location, tap Remove location.
Estimate missing locations
Important: If you turn off location estimates, the previously estimated locations aren’t removed, but you can edit or delete them.
- On your iPhone or iPad, open Google Photos .
- At the top, tap your account profile photo or initial Google Photos settings .
- Tap Privacy Location options.
- Turn Estimate missing locations on or off.
Find previously estimated locations
When you turn off estimated locations, Photos won’t estimate locations for new photos. You can manage estimated locations and use previously estimated locations for your new photos.
- On your iPhone or iPad, open Google Photos .
- At the top, tap your account profile photo or initial Google Photos settings .
- Tap Privacy Location options View and manage estimated locations.
Share a photo with a location
If you share a photo with Google Photos, the location of your photo may be shared if you added it, changed it, or if it was provided by your camera.
You can control if your location is shared in each shared album, link, or conversation you create or join. If you set up partner sharing, all photos you share will include location details.
The following situations happen if you choose to share the location of your photos:
- If you add a location or edit an estimated location of a photo, and then share it with someone on Google Photos, you also share the location.
- If your camera adds a location and you share that photo on Google Photos, the photo shows the location provided by the camera.
- If you share a photo with a location estimated by Google Photos, the location won't be shared.
This doesn't affect photos or videos you share outside of Google Photos, such as when you download and email them to someone. In this case, the original location your device saved shows without any edits you made in Google Photos.
Even if you hide your photos' locations from people, they can guess the location based on landmarks in your photo.
When you add photos to shared albums, you can control if the location details of your photos are shared in each album.
- On your iPhone or iPad, open the Google Photos app .
- Tap Sharing .
- Select the shared album.
- At the top, tap More Options.
- Turn on or off Share photo location.
You can also control if the location details of your photo are shared when you create a new shared album.
- On your iPhone or iPad, open the Google Photos app .
- Tap Sharing Create shared album.
- Add a title and photos to the new shared album.
- At the top, tap Share Album options.
- Turn on or off Share photo location.
Tip: This option also appears when you share a private album for the first time.
When you add photos to a new conversation you create, it won’t include location details. Location sharing is turned off by default.
If you started a conversation before August 18 2021, any photos that you add or previously added to that conversation will show their locations unless you previously turned off location sharing for that conversation.
To share location details for the photos that you add, or have added, to a specific conversation:
- On your iPhone or iPad, open Google Photos .
- At the top, tap Sharing .
- Important: For some users, Sharing can be found at the bottom.
- Tap the conversation.
- In the conversation, tap your account profile picture or initial.
- Turn on Share photo location.
To check if you are sharing location details in partner sharing:
- On your iPhone or iPad, open Google Photos .
- At the top, tap Sharing .
- Important: For some users, Sharing can be found at the bottom.
- Tap on your partner's name.
- At the top, tap More Settings.
- From “Your partner can access,” you can check if you share location details.
Find your photos on a map
You can find the location of your photos and videos on an interactive map.
- At the bottom, tap Collections Places.
- To find photos taken in that place, tap a place name.
- To open a grid view of your photos, tap the map.
The grid contains the photos in your library that are in the visible map area, including shared photos you've saved.
- To change the area of focus: Pinch and zoom the map.
- To find photos you took in the visible map area: Scroll the grid or tap the heatmap.
To check if you are sharing location details in partner sharing:
- On your iPhone or iPad, open Google Photos .
- At the top, tap Sharing .
- Important: For some users, Sharing can be found at the bottom.
- Tap on your partner's name.
- At the top, tap More Settings.
- From “Your partner can access,” you can check if you share location details.
- In map view, tap More .
- Turn on or off Show your personal Timeline.
- You can choose Default, Satellite, or Terrain for your map view.
- To find the entire Timeline path for a certain day, tap Zoom out .
- When you hide the Timeline from your map view, Photos doesn't remove your Location History data. Learn how to delete your Location History.
Control whether your camera adds location information
- Open your iOS device's Settings.
- Tap Privacy Location services.
- Set the Camera permission to While Using the App.