Best GPS Camera Apps in 2026 (Free & Paid)
What a GPS camera app is, what makes a good one, and how the free, paid, and field-grade options compare in 2026.
A GPS camera is a camera that records where a photo was taken. On a smartphone that typically means the device writes a latitude and longitude pair into the photo's EXIF metadata when location services are on. A "GPS camera app" goes further: it usually renders the coordinates and time directly onto the visible image, so the location survives uploads, screenshots, and crops.
If you've landed on this page, you're probably trying to pick one. Here's what actually matters in 2026, and a comparison.
What makes a good GPS camera app
There are a lot of GPS camera apps in the iOS and Android stores. Most of them do the basics: write coordinates, render a stamp. The differences show up in the corners.
Pixel-rendered stamp, not just EXIF. EXIF metadata gets stripped by almost every social platform and many enterprise systems. If the GPS only lives in EXIF, it disappears the moment you upload. A good GPS camera app rasterizes the coordinates onto the image so they travel everywhere the file does.
Atomic (network-synced) time. Device clocks drift. For evidence and audit work, you want the timestamp pulled from a network time source at capture, not from the device's own clock. Otherwise a 10-minute drift becomes "the timeline is unreliable" in a dispute.
Reverse-geocoded address. Numbers like 37.7749, -122.4194 are correct
but not human-readable. Apps that include the address line ("1247 Mission St,
San Francisco, CA") next to the coordinates produce photos that report and
audit cleanly without anyone having to look up the location.
Offline support. If the app calls a server to render the stamp, it won't work in a basement, a remote site, or at a disaster scene. Look for apps that capture GPS, time, and the stamp locally; addresses can fill in later when signal returns.
Per-photo notes / labels. A unit number, defect type, or claim ID in the stamp turns a "photo" into a "documented record." Without it, you're back to naming files manually.
Custom watermark. Pro field workflows want the company name or logo small in a corner, both for branding and to make the source traceable.
A comparison: 2026 GPS camera apps
A few categories of apps you'll see in the stores:
Free, ad-supported. Adequate for personal use; usually limited stamp formats, no batch, no offline reliability. Fine if you just want a date and GPS on a vacation photo.
Pro field apps (general). Apps like Timestamp Camera, GPS Map Camera, Field Camera, and CamToPlan fall here. They have most of the checklist above. Pricing tends to be a small monthly fee or a one-time purchase.
Industry-specific suites. Construction-photo apps (e.g. CompanyCam) and inspection apps (Spectora, Inspectivity) include GPS-stamped photos as part of a larger documentation product. Powerful but expensive, and you don't own the data the same way.
Browser tools. A free web tool can stamp photos you've already taken on any device, including Android phones and DSLRs. Useful for end-of-day cleanup and for one-offs without an install. The catch: you have to enter the coordinates manually (or pull them from the photo's EXIF) since browsers can't read GPS at the moment of capture the way an app can.
Where TimeStamp Camera fits
The site you're reading this on, timestampcamera.net, pairs a free browser tool with a paid iOS app:
- The web tool is free, runs in the browser, no upload, no account.
- The iOS app captures GPS and atomic time live in the field, including offline.
- Pro features (custom watermark, all formats, big batches) cost $2.99/month or $9.99 once.
If you mostly need to stamp photos you've already taken, start with the web tool. If you need GPS at the moment of the shot (for construction, deliveries, claims), the iOS app is the right tool.
What about Android?
There isn't an Android version of TimeStamp Camera today. If you're on Android and want a similar workflow:
- Use any Android camera app with location services enabled. The photos will carry GPS in EXIF (verifiable with the EXIF viewer).
- Then use the browser stamp tool to render the GPS and time onto the visible image. Drag and drop, no install.
That two-step flow gets you most of what an Android-native GPS camera app would, with no install and no account.
How to evaluate any GPS camera app
If you're shopping, run this quick test:
- Take a photo with the app.
- Upload it to Instagram, then download it back.
- View the EXIF data. Most platforms strip GPS on re-download. If the GPS from the visible stamp is still legible, you're good. If it's only in EXIF, the photo lost its location.
That single test eliminates roughly half the apps in the stores. The rest come down to atomic time, offline reliability, watermarking, and price.
Related reading:
Try the tools
Stamp a photo right now in your browser, or get the iOS app for live capture with GPS and atomic time.