INFO ON FLORIDAS TINT LAWS
Florida law regulates automotive window tinting based on Visible Light Transmission (VLT), which measures how much light must pass through your tinted windows. For front side windows, tint must allow at least 28% of visible light in, meaning anything darker is illegal without an exemption. Rear side and rear windows on passenger cars must let at least 15% of light in, while SUVs, trucks, and vans can go darker—with a minimum of 6% VLT on rear glass. Windshield tint is limited to a non-reflective strip above the manufacturer’s AS-1 line (usually the top ~5 inches) to protect driver visibility. The law also restricts reflectivity (no more than 25% on front windows and 35% on rears) and prohibits colored tints like red, blue, or amber that can confuse other drivers. Medical exemptions are available for qualifying conditions through the Florida DMV, but standard legal limits must still be respected. Compliance helps avoid citations, fines, and potential tint removal. Please speak with us about all options we offer to help accomedate you.






