File Size Analyzer for Photo Library Cleanup
See which image folders, edited exports, and old backups are actually making your photo library so heavy.
Photo libraries grow faster than most people expect. One event can create originals, edited copies, social-media exports, print exports, phone backups, and duplicate folders saved in slightly different places. Months later, it becomes hard to tell what needs to stay and what is just taking up space.
A file size analyzer helps by showing where the weight really sits. Instead of opening folder after folder and guessing, you can identify the largest image collections and the specific subfolders that are making the library unwieldy.
This is especially useful when your goal is not simply to delete photos. Many people want to archive intelligently, keep originals, remove redundant exports, and preserve the important work while still freeing up storage. A size-based view makes those decisions much easier.
Features
Visualize the Heaviest Image Folders
Quickly see which albums, backup folders, and export directories are using most of the space.
Find Duplicate Export Weight
Spot folders full of full-size JPEGs, repeated edits, and phone backups that quietly add up over time.
Inspect the Library Privately
Review the photo-folder structure locally in the browser without uploading image contents to another service.
How It Works
Select the folder containing the photo collection you want to understand better.
See which parts of the library are largest so you do not have to inspect everything manually.
Use the breakdown to identify where edits, exports, backups, and duplicates are consuming unnecessary space.
Move the large but important folders to long-term storage and remove the obvious extras more confidently.
Why Photo Libraries Need a Size-Based Cleanup View
Photo cleanup is rarely about deleting everything old. It is usually about understanding which versions of the same images are worth keeping. Originals may need to stay. A final edited set may need to stay. But multiple export folders, repeated phone transfers, and backup copies of backup copies often create a lot of silent storage bloat.
A size analyzer helps because it reveals those patterns quickly. You can tell whether the problem is really the original photos or whether the real space drain is the set of full-resolution duplicates created for social posts, client review, or print experiments months ago.
For photographers, creators, and everyday users alike, that makes cleanup much less risky. You get a clearer picture of the library before moving or deleting anything, which means you are less likely to remove something important just because the folder name did not look familiar.
Frequently Asked Questions
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