Comparison guide

TinEye vs InVID vs ExifTool for Image and Video Verification

Compared set

3 tools checked for scenario fit, access model, and verification caveats.

Fit signal

No universal winner here. Pick by workflow, evidence type, and how much verification friction you can tolerate.

Read first

TinEye is best for quick reuse checks, InVID for video/keyframe workflow, and ExifTool for local metadata handling. They are complementary, not substitutes.

TinEye

Reverse-image search for reuse and chronology checks

Best for: Reverse-image corroboration, earlier-publication checks, image reuse detection, modified-copy discovery, and quick visual-claim triage.

Pricing: Paid

Access: Browser-Based

Workflow: Verification

Strengths: Good at surfacing prior appearances and visually similar copies without needing a social-platform account.

Limits: Does not prove original authorship, full provenance, manipulation intent, or that no earlier copy exists elsewhere.

Tested

Open profile

InVID Verification Toolkit

Newsroom toolkit for image and video verification

Best for: Frame-level video and image verification, keyframe extraction, reverse-search preparation, metadata clues, and visual-claim triage.

Pricing: Free

Access: Browser-Based

Workflow: Attribution Support

Strengths: Combines several visual-verification steps into one practical workflow for fast-moving claims.

Limits: Does not replace geolocation, chronology checks, source reporting, forensic review, or specialist deepfake/media analysis.

Tested

Open profile

ExifTool

Local metadata extraction for files and media

Best for: Reading, comparing, exporting, and cleaning metadata from local image, video, audio, PDF, and document files during verification workflows.

Pricing: Free

Access: Desktop

Workflow: Reporting

Strengths: Detailed, scriptable, and useful across many file types when metadata needs to be documented carefully.

Limits: Does not prove authenticity, authorship, original capture, location, or chain of custody; metadata may be missing, modified, or misleading.

Tested

Open profile

Decision notes

This comparison is for journalists, fact-checkers, and researchers deciding how to start a visual verification pass.

Decision rule

Choose TinEye when the first question is whether an image appeared earlier or was reused. Choose InVID when a video or complex visual claim needs keyframes and a structured verification workflow. Choose ExifTool when a local file needs metadata extraction, timestamp review, or careful metadata handling.

Where each wins

  • TinEye is fastest for earlier appearances, modified copies, and reuse checks.
  • InVID is better for videos, keyframes, reverse-search preparation, and newsroom-style verification sequences.
  • ExifTool is the right support tool when file metadata needs to be documented or cleaned before sharing.

What not to infer

Reverse-image matches do not prove origin, keyframes do not settle chronology or geolocation, and metadata can be missing, edited, or misleading. Strong visual verification usually combines all three with archives, geolocation, source reporting, and publication judgment.

For the broader route, use image and video verification tools and OSINT for Journalists.

Editorial fit signal

No single tool leads every scenario here. Choose by workflow fit, access model, and the caveats outlined above.

TinEye is best for quick reuse checks, InVID for video/keyframe workflow, and ExifTool for local metadata handling. They are complementary, not substitutes.

How to read this comparison

This comparison weighs speed, verification burden, evidence type, and the risk of overstating what a visual clue can prove.

Related coverage

Collections

Reviews