Today’s Question: I have a fairly large number of photos in Lightroom Classic that show there is a metadata mismatch. I’m confident that the information in the catalog (rather than on the hard drive) is correct. Is there a way to batch process all these photos to resolve the metadata mismatch?
Tim’s Quick Answer: Yes, you can fix this issue for all affected photos by selecting all images that have a metadata mismatch and then applying the update to all selected images.
More Detail: A metadata mismatch occurs in Lightroom Classic when the information in metadata for an image file on the hard drive doesn’t match the metadata in Lightroom Classic. This can occur if you make metadata changes using software other than Lightroom Classic, which is something you should not do. But it can also occur with something more innocuous, such as editing a raw capture directly in Camera Raw rather than in Lightroom Classic.
If you’re not sure why there is a mismatch and believe you may have made meaningful updates outside of Lightroom Classic, you should review the metadata mismatches more carefully to ensure you don’t lose any important updates. But if you’re confident that all meaningful metadata updates have been made in Lightroom Classic and that nothing updated outside of the catalog needs to be preserved, you can batch correct the issue for all affected photos to resolve the metadata mismatch indications.
For example, you could select the “All Photographs” collection in the Catalog section of the left panel in the Library module so you can apply the correction to all photos in the catalog. You could also select one or more folders to correct specific images.
Switch to the grid view, and on the Library Filter bar at the top of the screen (choose View > Show Filter Bar if it isn’t visible) choose the Metadata tab, making sure no other criteria on other tabs are enabled unless you want to use more specific filter criteria. Click the heading popup at the top of one of the columns on the Metadata tab, go to the Develop submenu, and choose “Metadata Status”.
From the Metadata Status column, you can then select any status other than “Up to date”. The status that will most likely represent the largest number of photos with a metadata mismatch, for example, will be “Changed on disk”. Once you’ve set the filter for the status options you want to batch correct, select all the currently displayed photos.
Finally, click the metadata mismatch icon at the top-right of one of the selected thumbnails and then click the “Overwrite Settings” button. This will cause the metadata that differs in the source files compared to the catalog to be updated to match that in the catalog.

