Texas Window Tint Laws Explained: Legal VLT Limits for 2026
What tint is legal in Texas? The VLT limits for every window, windshield and reflectivity rules, medical exemptions, and what inspection actually checks, explained by DFW installers.
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Texas tint law is simpler than most drivers think, but the details decide whether you pass inspection. Here is the short version, then the specifics, from installers who tint Texas vehicles every week.
The Short Answer
In Texas, your front side windows must let in more than 25% of visible light. Windows behind the driver can be as dark as you like on most passenger vehicles. The windshield can only be tinted above the AS-1 line, and no window may be more than 25% reflective.
Over 25% VLT
Front side windows
Any darkness
Rear side windows
Any, with both mirrors
Back window
25%
Max reflectivity
What VLT Means
VLT stands for visible light transmission: the percentage of light that passes through the glass and film together. Lower numbers are darker. A 5% film is limo tint; a 70% film looks nearly clear.
Texas Limits, Window by Window
Front side windows must allow more than 25% of light through. Rear side windows can be any darkness. The back window can also be any darkness if the vehicle has outside mirrors on both sides; without both mirrors, it must stay above 25% as well. Reflectivity may not exceed 25% on any tinted window, and red, amber, and blue tints are not permitted.
| Window | Legal limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Front side windows | More than 25% VLT | Measured glass plus film |
| Rear side windows | Any darkness | No VLT limit |
| Back window | Any darkness | Requires outside mirrors on both sides |
| Windshield | Above AS-1 line only | Non-reflective; clear UV film by exemption |
| All windows | Max 25% reflectivity | No red, amber, or blue tint |
Windshield Rules
Tint is only allowed above the AS-1 line (or the top five inches if the line is not marked), and it must be non-reflective. Clear UV film below the AS-1 line can qualify as a medical exception; standard shade film there will fail inspection.
Medical Exemptions
Texas allows darker tint with a signed medical exemption statement from a licensed physician or optometrist. Keep the documentation in the vehicle; the exemption applies to the patient’s vehicle, not every car you own.
What Inspection Actually Checks
Texas safety inspections use a tint meter on the front side windows. Film that measures at or below 25% VLT fails, and remember the meter reads glass plus film together: factory glass already blocks a few percent, so a 28% film on tinted glass can measure under the limit.
Picking a Shade That Looks Right and Passes
For front windows, a quality ceramic film in the 30 to 35% range reads dark, beats the heat, and passes with margin. Behind the driver, most of our Dallas-Fort Worth clients run 15 to 20% for the factory-limo look. Ceramic film matters more than darkness in Texas: it rejects far more heat at the same VLT than dyed film.
The Bottom Line
Want a combo that looks right on your specific vehicle and passes inspection? Get a free quote and we will set it up.
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