How to Check Your Canon Shutter Count — Free Tool + Guide (2026)
How to Check Your Canon Shutter Count — Free Tool + Guide (2026)
Whether you're buying a used Canon camera or checking the health of your own, knowing the shutter count takes less than a minute. This guide covers every method — free website, Mac, Windows, and mobile — so you can get the number regardless of what device you're on.
The fastest method: camerashuttercount.com
Take a photo with your Canon camera — RAW format works best
Go to camerashuttercount.com
Upload the photo
Your shutter count appears instantly
Canon EOS R-series cameras use CR3 RAW files. Older DSLR models use CR2. Both work on camerashuttercount.com.
How to check Canon shutter count on a Mac
Option 1 — Preview (built-in, no download needed):
Open your RAW file in Preview
Go to Tools → Show Inspector
Click the "i" icon, then the EXIF tab
Scroll down to "Image Number" or "Shutter Count"
ShutterCheck (available on the Mac App Store) also works specifically for Canon EOS cameras and shows your shutter count alongside the camera's rated lifespan.
Option 2 — ExifTool (most reliable):
Download ExifTool from exiftool.org— free
Open Terminal
Type: exiftool /path/to/your/photo.CR3 and press Enter
Look for "Shutter Count", "Image Count", or "Shot Number" in the output
How to check Canon shutter count on Windows
ExifTool (free):
Download ExifTool from exiftool.org
Drag your RAW file onto the ExifTool executable
A text window opens — look for "Shutter Count" or "Image Number"
PhotoMe (free, visual interface):
Download PhotoMe from photome.de
Open your RAW file
Find the shutter count in the EXIF data panel
How to check Canon shutter count on iPhone or Android
Upload a recent RAW photo to camerashuttercount.com directly from your phone browser. No app download needed — works on both iOS and Android.
Canon shutter life by model
| Model | Type | Rated shutter life |
|---|---|---|
| EOS R50 / R100 | Mirrorless (current) | ~100,000 |
| EOS R10 | Mirrorless (current) | ~150,000 |
| EOS R8 | Mirrorless (current) | ~150,000 |
| EOS R7 | Mirrorless (current) | ~200,000 |
| EOS R6 Mark II | Mirrorless (current) | ~300,000 |
| EOS R6 Mark III | Mirrorless (current) | ~300,000 |
| EOS R5 Mark II | Mirrorless (current) | ~500,000 |
| EOS R3 | Mirrorless (current) | ~500,000 |
| EOS 1300D / 2000D / 4000D | DSLR (older) | ~100,000 |
| EOS 800D / 850D (Rebel T7i / T8i) | DSLR (older) | ~100,000 |
| EOS 90D | DSLR (older) | ~150,000 |
| EOS 80D / 77D | DSLR (older) | ~150,000 |
| EOS 70D | DSLR (older) | ~150,000 |
| EOS 7D Mark II | DSLR (older) | ~200,000 |
| EOS 6D / 6D Mark II | DSLR (older) | ~150,000 |
| EOS 5D Mark III / IV | DSLR (older) | ~150,000 |
| EOS 1D X / Mark II / Mark III | DSLR (older) | ~500,000 |
Canon does not show shutter count in the camera menu on most models. The only way to check it is via EXIF data from a RAW file.
What is a good shutter count for a used Canon?
| Shutter count | What it means |
|---|---|
| Under 10,000 | Essentially new. Barely used. |
| 10,000 – 30,000 | Light use. Great condition. |
| 30,000 – 50,000 | Normal hobbyist use. Plenty of life left. |
| 50,000 – 100,000 | Moderate use. Fine for casual photography. |
| 100,000 – 150,000 | Getting up there for entry-level bodies. Negotiate the price. |
| 150,000 – 200,000 | Approaching end of life for most mid-range cameras. |
| 200,000+ | High mileage. Only consider for pro bodies rated for 400,000+. |
Pro tip: If a seller won't share the shutter count or claims not to know how to check it, ask them to send a recent RAW file. If they refuse that too, walk away.
Does a high shutter count affect image quality?
No. A high shutter count does not affect photo quality as long as the shutter is functioning correctly. Image quality is determined by the sensor, lens, and your settings — not mechanical wear.
The only risk with a high shutter count is mechanical failure of the shutter itself. Until that happens, your photos look identical at 300,000 clicks as they did at 1,000.
How to extend the life of your Canon shutter
Use electronic shutter mode (silent mode) when you don't need the mechanical shutter — it puts zero wear on the mechanism
Avoid holding down the burst button unless you actually need rapid-fire shots
Keep your camera in a dry, dust-free bag when not in use
Have it serviced every few years if you shoot professionally
FAQ
Can I reset my Canon shutter count?
No. The shutter count is stored in the camera's firmware and cannot be reset. Any camera advertised with a "reset" shutter count has been tampered with — avoid it.
My camera doesn't appear on camerashuttercount.com — what now?
Use ExifTool and look for fields labelled "Shutter Count", "Image Number", or "Shot Number". If none appear, your specific model may not record this in accessible EXIF data — rare but possible on some older models.
Is a shutter replacement worth it?
A shutter replacement typically costs $200–$400 including labour. If your camera body is worth $800+, replacing it makes sense. If it's worth $300, put that money toward a newer body.