New York’s 2025 rule is brutally simple: any glass the driver looks through must transmit at least 70 percent visible light once factory and film stack up. That covers the windshield (minus the top visor strip) and both front doors on cars, pickups, minivans, and full-size SUVs. SUV owners who assume rear privacy glass gives them a free pass forget the rule still locks down the windshield and front pair regardless of body style. Installers now begin every quote with a meter reading, because luxury sedans often ship with 76 percent VLT—add a 35 percent “standard” film and you’re suddenly in the low forties, an automatic fail.
Two Tests, One Outcome
Drivers keep mixing up the DMV safety inspection with the optional insurance
photo check. The latter vanished for many policies after the 2024 Consumer
Relief Act; the former still happens every year and decides whether you leave
the shop with plates or with homework. A calibrated two-piece meter clamps on
each front pane. Score below 70 and the inspection printer spits out a
rejection while the shop uploads proof to Albany.
First ticket? Up to $150 plus surcharges. Second? $500. And Assembly Bill A4026
aims to make those figures mandatory while adding tint-only roadside sweeps and
a registration suspension after the third strike within two years. Factor in
film removal, re-inspection, lost work hours, and insurance surcharges and that
cheap tint can morph into a four-figure fiasco.
Read the full article → https://medium.com/@tintshoprocer/2025-new-york-tint-law-checklist-vlt-med-ex-waivers-and-the-inspection-photo-rule-227b7ff4d2af
