App Feature
GPS Photo Location on Map adds live GPS, date/time, and notes as visible stamps on photos, lets you preview the overlay before capture, adjusts location manually, and visualizes stamped shots on an interactive map using customizable templates.
Verdict
Verdict: A handy GPS stamping camera for travel and fieldwork, but ad-heavy and less suited to power editors.
Who is it for
Best for:
- Travelers, bloggers, and outdoor users who want on-photo location stamps
- Inspectors, surveyors, and logistics roles needing geo-proof images
Not ideal for:
- Users who dislike frequent ads in the capture flow
- Photographers wanting deep manual controls or RAW/advanced editing
Real-world User Experience
Users like it:
Reports of being useful and working as intended for tagging photos with location and context.
Users complain about:
Complaints about too many ads disrupting usage.
Is it Worth Paying For?
The app is free with ads and offers in‑app purchases. While details aren’t specified, IAPs in this category typically remove ads or unlock extra templates. If you rely on it for work or frequent travel logs, paying to reduce ads and expand layouts can be worthwhile; casual users can stick with the free version.
How it Compares to Alternatives
Compared to standard cameras or Google Photos that store location in EXIF (not stamped on the image), this app focuses on visible, customizable overlays plus a map view of stamped shots. Versus alternatives like Timestamp Camera or GPS Map Camera, it offers similar live preview and template variety; the main tradeoff is ad volume versus any paid unlocks. Open Camera can tag GPS in metadata but lacks polished on-photo stamps and ready-to-share report-style outputs.
Summary
GPS Photo Location on Map turns your camera into a context-first tool, stamping photos with live GPS, time, and notes in clean templates and organizing results on a map. It suits travelers and field professionals who need shareable, geo-verified images. The large install base suggests a dependable core, but the mid-range rating and user feedback point to intrusive ads as the main drawback. If you need quick, credible, location-marked photos without post-processing, it delivers; those wanting advanced camera controls or an ad-free experience should consider the IAP or explore comparable GPS stamping apps.


