To view a GLB file, drop it into the GLB viewer in your browser. You can rotate, zoom and pan around it, see its embedded textures, switch to wireframe, and read its real-world size and triangle count, with no software to install and nothing uploaded.
Here is how, and what you are looking at.
Open the file
- Go to the GLB viewer.
- Drag your
.glbonto the viewer, or click Open model and choose it. - The model appears, framed and lit. Drag to orbit, scroll to zoom, right-drag to pan.
The file is read on your own device and never sent anywhere.
See the textures and colour
Unlike an STL or a bare OBJ, a GLB usually bundles its materials and textures inside the file, so the model arrives with its colours. If a GLB looks plain grey, it was likely exported without materials, which is worth knowing before you ship it somewhere. The packaging differences are covered in GLB vs glTF.
Check the size and mesh
The info bar shows the model’s bounding-box dimensions and triangle count. That is the quick way to spot a model that is far bigger or heavier than it should be. Switch to wireframe to study the mesh density. If the file feels too large, see reducing a 3D model’s file size.
Save a screenshot
Once the angle looks right, the PNG button saves the current view as an image. The full how-to, framing, backgrounds and resolution, is in taking a screenshot of a 3D model.
On desktop or phone
The same viewer works in a mobile browser, so you can open a GLB on a phone too (see opening a 3D model on your phone). To start, open the GLB viewer and drop in your file.