One of our favorite adages is “A picture is worth a thousand words”. It refers to the notion that a still image can convey a complex idea. Images can portray a lot of information quickly and more efficiently than text. They capture memories, and never let you forget something you want to remember, and refresh it in your memory.
Images are part of every day internet usage, and are particularly important for social media engagement. A good image viewer is an essential part of any operating system.
Linux offers a vast collection of open source small utilities that perform functions ranging from the obvious to the bizarre. It is the quality and selection of these tools that help Linux stand out as a productive environment. This is particularly true when it comes to image viewers. There are so many image viewers that are available for Linux that it can make selection difficult.
Here’s our verdict captured in a legendary LinuxLinks-style ratings chart. Only free and open source software is eligible for inclusion.
Click the links in the table below to learn more about each image viewer.
Graphical Image Viewers | |
---|---|
feh | Fast and light Imlib2-based image viewer |
Regards | Modern image viewer with OpenGL/OpenCL support |
qimgv | Qt5 image viewer with video support |
PhotoQT | Good looking, highly configurable, yet easy to use and fast |
gThumb | Advanced image viewer and browser |
Loupe | Written with GTK 4, Libadwaita and Rust |
Gwenview | Simple image viewer for KDE |
Geeqie | Lightweight Gtk+ based image viewer |
QuickViewer | Graphic image viewer for comfortable browsing |
GPicView | Simple and fast image viewer |
nomacs | Handles most image formats including RAW images |
Eye of Gnome | Fast and functional image viewer |
Vooki | Lightweight viewer with fast image preview |
qView | Image viewer designed with minimalism and usability in mind |
Viewnior | Designed with usability in mind |
sxiv | Simple X Image Viewer |
Ristretto | View and scroll through images |
This article has been revamped in line with our recent announcement.
![]() The software collection forms part of our series of informative articles for Linux enthusiasts. There are hundreds of in-depth reviews, open source alternatives to proprietary software from large corporations like Google, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, IBM, Cisco, Oracle, and Autodesk. There are also fun things to try, hardware, free programming books and tutorials, and much more. |
Historic comments have been retained.
Regards is hard to get running on Debian, just get lots of crashes.
How is Regards so high on this list?! Its a slug to use, painfully slow performance compared to something as quick and fully featured such as XnView MP (closed source but free to use, no ads) or digiKam. Both quicker and more stable than Regards on Arch, Debian, and Ubuntu.
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Regards is an excellent image viewer and fully deserves its high rating (which would be even higher if it was easier to install and more stable on some distros). It does have performance issues on older hardware.
XnView MP is obviously not eligible for inclusion as it’s not open source.
And digiKam is better described as an image organizer rather than an image viewer. We love digiKam scoring it very highly in some of our roundups e.g. Photo Management
You might have a look PLIO Image Viewer, especially if you want to change the order of the images (sort temporarily while viewing, or persistently by bulk-renaming the files) …