The Images page is the scan-level inventory for image assets Siteimp collected during a scan.

It helps you see what kinds of images the site uses, where image assets appear, whether they were fetched successfully, and whether Siteimp found EXIF or GPS metadata.

This page is especially useful for reviewing image hygiene before launch, publication, client delivery, or support handoff. It turns image data into a table you can filter, inspect, and drill into.

What this page is for

The Images page helps answer:

  • what image assets did this scan find?
  • how are those images used?
  • which images appear across multiple pages?
  • which images have EXIF metadata?
  • which images appear to contain GPS metadata?
  • which images failed or returned unusual status codes?

The page is not only about broken images. It is also about visibility, metadata, reuse, and evidence.

Image types

The Image types section summarizes how images were used in the scan.

Common image types include:

  • Image sources, from regular image source attributes
  • Responsive images, from responsive image markup
  • Picture sources, from picture/source markup
  • Open Graph images, used for social sharing previews
  • Twitter images, used for social card previews
  • Favicons, used by browsers and bookmarks
  • CSS images, found in CSS references
  • Video posters, used as preview images for videos
  • Other, when the usage does not fit a more specific label

Each card shows the number of unique assets for that type and how many usages Siteimp found across pages.

Filtering image rows

Use Show image type to choose which image categories appear in the table.

Show all displays every image type collected for the scan.

Selecting one or more specific types narrows the table to those image usages.

If no image type is selected, Siteimp asks you to select at least one image type before showing rows.

How to read the images table

Each row represents an image asset collected during the scan.

Image shows the image URL, shortened when it belongs to the scanned site.

Usage shows the primary way Siteimp saw the image used. If the same asset is used in multiple ways, the label can show the primary usage plus additional usage types.

Source pages shows how many pages referenced the image.

Dimensions shows the intrinsic image dimensions when Siteimp could read them.

Size shows the response size.

Type shows the content type returned by the server.

EXIF shows whether Siteimp found EXIF metadata.

GPS shows whether the EXIF metadata appears to include GPS information.

Status shows the HTTP status code returned when Siteimp fetched the asset.

Why EXIF and GPS matter

EXIF metadata can contain useful technical details, such as dimensions, camera information, timestamps, and image processing details.

It can also contain information you may not intend to publish.

The GPS flag deserves extra attention. If an image contains GPS metadata, that may reveal where a photo was taken. For product screenshots, graphics, icons, and generated assets this is usually not expected. For photos, it may be accidental.

Siteimp does not decide whether EXIF is good or bad. It shows the evidence so you can decide what belongs on the site.

What to check next

Open an image row to review the image detail page.

Prioritize images with:

  • GPS: Yes
  • unexpected EXIF metadata
  • large file sizes
  • failed status codes
  • unusual content types
  • images used across many pages
  • social preview images or favicons that may affect sharing and branding

If an image looks wrong, check the source page, template, static asset folder, CMS entry, or build output that created the reference.

Why this page may be empty

If the page says No images have been collected for this scan, Siteimp did not collect image assets for this snapshot.

That can happen if the scan is still running, the scanned pages have no detectable image references, or the scan did not reach pages that contain images.

If the scan is still running, wait for it to complete or refresh the scan results.