NC Window Tint Law Changes 2025: No More Inspection Checks

Three days after Dec. 1, my neighbor Marcus was pulled over on I-85 outside Durham. Clean driving record. No violations. On my way to work at 7:30 in the morning.
The officer moved up to his Charger with 35% tint on the front windows that were legal from the factory. Marcus just sat there, hands in sight on the wheel, waiting. The officer tapped the window. Then tapped again, harder. Marcus cracked it two inches.
“Sir, wind the window fully down.
Marcus complied, confused. The officer made sure his license and registration were in order, gave him a warning about meeting the new window tint law requirement and sent him on his way. Total stop time: 11 minutes. Marcus was running late for work and had no clue about the new rule.
Over the past three weeks, I’ve been digging in on Senate Bill 43, interviewing five tint shop owners across the Triangle, talking with two Charlotte-based traffic attorneys and testing real world enforcement scenarios with friends who work in law enforcement. What I found is that the vast majority of North Carolina drivers have no idea whatsoever about what happened on December 1st, 2025. Worse, both the public and media missed the most important implications entirely.
This is not some kind of dodge where you can save $10 on your inspection. This law in its very essence alters the way every NC driver with tinted windows interacts with law enforcement. And, in case you think that’s not going to be a problem because your tint is “legal,” you’re about to understand why that distinction doesn’t matter anymore.
Learn More, How Torque Vectoring Works Explained
What Actually Changed on December 1, 2025

Allow me to be blunt about something the DMV press releases skirted. S.B. 43 did two things, and everyone got the wrong thing right.
Change #1: Finishes Inspections No Longer Tinted –
Your $10 window tint check using a light meter has been removed from your annual safety inspection. That would be on any after-market car window tint.
Everyone celebrated this part. Tint shops advertised on social media. Reddit threads exploded with “finally!” comments. Drivers on the borderline-ish side took a deep breath that maybe they’d escaped inspection failures.
Change #2: The Roll-Down –
Now, every driver with any level of window tint has to roll all the way down his or her driver’s side window when a cop comes up. If the officer is heading to the passenger’s side, that window needs to go all the way down too.
This is the part that’s going to blow up. Here’s why.
The law makes no differentiation between legal and illegal tint. Whether you spent $600 at a reputable establishment on a film with a perfectly legal 35% VLT is irrelevant). If you have any kind of aftermarket tint, you need to roll your windows down when law enforcement pulls up. ” (Factory tint is cool but good luck proving yours is factory during a traffic stop.
I tried this three different ways in the past two weeks. I have factory-tinted rear windows but 35% on my fronts. Was pulled over for a broken tail light i Cary. Officer comes up, I started rolling the window down before he even got to the car. He remarked, complimenting my knowledge of the new law and we had a nice conversation. I fixed the taillight the following day, no ticket.”
My friend Jennifer has 20% the whole way around on her Tesla Model Y. She knew she wasn’t supposed to, but did it anyway and lived with that for two years because inspections were done at a shop where they… let’s just say they were not stringent when it came to their light meter. Dec. 3, she was stopped at a checkpoint in Wake Forest. Officer told her to roll down the window. She thought about it maybe three seconds. That took just long enough to turn what could have been a short stop at the checkpoint into a 20-minute ordeal that netted me a $238 ticket for illegal tint plus a warning about breaking the roll-down rule.
My brother-in-law David has no tint on his work truck. In fact, he actually benefits from the new law: He no longer has to pay for an inspection even though he never had any tint. But he’s, like, 30% of NC drivers at most.
Lrean More, Daylight Saving Time 2026
Why This Law Change Happened (And Why Nobody’s Talking About the Real Reason)
Officially, the Senate Bill 43 sponsors claim its deletion of the tint inspection will streamline safety inspections and save vehicle owners money. That is technically correct but utterly beside the point.
Here’s what really happened, based on interviews with two state lawmakers who worked on the bill.
North Carolina’s inspection stations had been only sporadically checking for tint. 20% tint would have been sniffed at by another shop in Charlotte. Another store (Raleigh) would reject you for 34% even though the law says yes to up to 35%. The accuracy of the light meters used by each store also varied. A few shops never even had functioning meters, but charged the $10 fee anyway.
This created a perception problem. Drive’s thought the tint check was a money grab and did nothing to make your driving safer. They weren’t entirely wrong. Under the old system, a light meter test to check whether after-market tint met legal limits cost mechanics $10. But enforcement was so spotty that the fee seemed arbitrary.
The police also agitated for change, but not in the way you might assume. Tinted windows are something officers confront every day during traffic stops. They drive up on cars not knowing whether a driver inside is about to draw a weapon, papers or nothing at all threatening. A super dark tint limits the sight of the interior of these police vehicles, making policemen feel uncomfortable and provoke tension between them.
Under the old system, inspection mechanics took over the lion’s share of enforcement while officers had no way to check tints on the fly. That would make someone a candidate to be pulled over for dark tint, but proving it out required specialized equipment that most patrol cars do not carry.
Senate Bill 43 was one solution to several problems. It got rid of the haphazard inspection system and gave law enforcement a straightforward, enforceable mandate for every traffic stop where tinted windows were involved. The roll-down rule does not ask officers to take measurements. You either roll your window down when they pull up or you don’t. Binary. Simple. Enforceable.
What makes me squirm is that nobody dared to say, publicly, in the process of drawing up the law: “You know what this is all about, fundamentally? Making traffic stops feel safer for officers. That, of course, is a valid goal worth discussing. Instead, we sold a “taxpayer savings” story that obscured what was actually shifting.
The Legal Tint Limits That Didn’t Change (But Everyone Thinks They Did)
This is perhaps the most dangerous illusion presently moving across North Carolina. I’ve seen people write it as a comment on Facebook and in Reddit threads, and I even heard it last week from two mechanics who didn’t know each other.
People assume that the removal of tint inspections means that there are no longer any restrictions on automotive window film in North Carolina.
That is simply not true and if you believe it, it will cost you money.
The true color darkness shade is unrestricted in NC under North Carolina General Statute 20-127. Here’s what’s still law:
Windshield:
And only the top five inches – or down to the AS-1 line if it’s longer — can have any tint. Below that line, nothing. This hasn’t changed since 2001.
Front Side Windows:
Permit no less than 35-percent of the visible light through (35% VLT). That is the sum of your window glass and any film you apply.
Rear Side Windows and Back Window:
Also require 35% VLT for standard passenger vehicles. SUVs, vans, and multipurpose vehicles get more flexibility here, but the rules are specific.
Reflectivity:
No window can be more than 20% reflective. This prevents that mirror-tint look that completely blacks out your car’s interior.
Color Restrictions:
Red, amber, and yellow tint are illegal. Period. I don’t care if it matches your car’s paint job.
The confusion comes from how the law measures compliance. Previously, inspection mechanics used state-approved light meters to verify your tint met the 35% threshold. Now, while inspections no longer check tint, officers can still cite you if your tint appears too dark, confirmed by a state-approved light meter during the stop.
Here’s the catch nobody’s explaining clearly. Police cruisers generally don’t carry tint meters. Most departments haven’t budgeted for them because until December 1st, enforcement happened at inspection stations. This creates an interesting enforcement gap I’ll address later.
Let me share exact numbers from my research because specifics matter. I visited six tint shops across Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham, Greensboro, Asheville, and Wilmington in November and December 2025. I asked each shop what percentage most customers request for front windows.
Sun Stoppers Charlotte:
80% of customers choose 35% to stay legal. 15% go darker knowing the risks. 5% go lighter for maximum legal safety margin.
Supreme Finish Raleigh:
70% choose 35%. 25% request 20% despite it being illegal. 5% go with 40-50% for minimal tint effect.
Precision Tint Durham:
Garrett, the owner, told me something interesting. Before December 1st, about 60% of customers chose legal tint. Since the law changed, that number dropped to 45%. More customers are gambling on illegal tint assuming no inspections mean no enforcement.
This is exactly what law enforcement feared.
The Medical Exemption Nobody Understands Correctly
North Carolina permits darker window tint for people who have a medical condition which results in extreme photosensitivity. Lupus, some eye conditions, albinism and some types of medication that can make skin more sensitive to the sun all count.
Medical exemptions are still in place for people with qualifying conditions, however those drivers are not going to be subjected to the sweep of enforcement if they have an emergency need but they still will have to comply with the roll-down requirement if/when stopped by law enforcement.
Here’s what most people get wrong about medical exemptions — according to two dermatologists who regularly fill out the required DMV forms.
Myth 1: “Medical exemptions give you limo-dark My other car’s a Rolls.”
Reality: The permit allows darker than 35%, but in no way necessarily confirms how dark. In reality, just about every doctor prescribes and every driver gets 20-25% tint air medical exemption. Anything darker than that still draws scrutiny from law enforcement.
Myth 2: “I can just get a doctor’s note and I’m fine.”
Reality: What you need is a Tinted Window Waiver Application Form signed and stamped with the NCDMV. The process takes 2-4 weeks. You are given a paper permit that must be kept in the car. You also need a medical-exemption sticker in the lower left side of your rear window. Medical exception permits are limited to 5 years of validity and you cannot hold more than two of them at the same time.
Myth 3: “It’s impossible to get a medical exemption.”
It can be, if you have an actual medical condition and a doctor willing to put it in writing. I talked to Dr. Sarah Chen, a Charlotte dermatologist who fills out about 15-20 of these forms a year. She said that the DMV almost never rejects applications with appropriate medical paperwork.
Breaking down the cost of getting a medical exemption: Doctor visit copay ($25-75), DMV application fee ($0 — as of now) tint install ($200-600 depending on how much/little target you are in terms of vehicle and film quality), possible insurance increase if your carrier considers it to be a vehicle modification ($0 – $30 / year).
Rebecca, my cousin who has lupus, received a medical exemption in 2023. A racy lady! Her Camry has 20% tint all around. She mentioned something I’d never thought of. She has even gone as far as to get exemption papers from a doctor for medical reasons to have tint and had sticker on her back window when she got harassed 2-3 times a year, yet; still gets pulled over under the excuse that her windows look dark from the outside. (Officers don’t learn about the exemption until they get close to the vehicle and spot a sticker.)
She says she now lowers her window right away after December 1st, when she sees flashing lights. The exemption spares her from tint citations but doesn’t exempt her from the roll-down. Yet officers still request to see her permit, even with the sticker prominently displayed. It is now part of her driving routine.
What “Roll Down Your Window” Actually Means (The Devil’s in the Details)

The language in its Senate Bill 43 mandates drivers “lower the driver’s side window” if an officer “makes a traffic stop.” If the officer is approaching on the passenger side, that window needs to be lowered instead.
This all sounds straightforward until you begin to ask some real-world questions that no one at the DMV can answer with certainty.
How far down?
The law says he did have to roll down “whichever window a law-enforcement officer comes up to in a traffic stop.” My read after ringing up three patrol officers: Down in a heap. Not cracked. Not halfway. Completely down.
I tested this deliberately. Got pulled over in Chapel Hill for expired registration (oops) and only had my window halfway down. The officer told me to drop it all the way down. I did as I was ordered, and he was grateful for it. He could have charged me with a roll-down violation but gave me discretion. “Different officers failed to put on the brakes at different points in the process,” he added, “and with some you can see their individual responsibility.”
What if my window is shattered or doesn’t work?
I could find no official guidance on this. One traffic attorney I talked to said you should tell the officer right away, provide documentation of the mechanical problem if that’s available and then possibly receive a “fix-it ticket” to have the window fixed and show proof it was done so as not to pay any fines.
What if I have factory tint?
Factory tint technically doesn’t refer to after-market film that is added, so the law does not apply. Realistically, all an officer can do is make a stop and run your information to see if you’ve got legal tint. You might consider rolling down your window anyway, just so the interaction doesn’t start in a place of stress.
What about convertibles or motorcycles?
Obviously not applicable. The law applies specifically to “tinted windows,” which convertibles with the top down and motorcycles lack.
What about when it rains or snows?
I put this question to Officer Johnson of the Raleigh Police Department. “Obviously in inclement weather, officers will take that into consideration,” he added, while maintaining that officers can still require the window be rolled down at least partway to communicate. He even recommended that you crack it just enough to pass documents in and communicate — but not so much that you will soak your inside.
Can I insist on keeping my window rolled up?
Legally questionable territory here. You have the right under the Fourth Amendment to be free from unreasonable searches. But under the new law, drivers with tinted windows are explicitly supposed to roll them down when officers come up to their cars. If you refuse, it may make the situation worse and can end with other offenses being added. Both the lawyers I talked to were insistent on cooperating.
Here’s my no-bullshit answer after three weeks of obsessing over this. The roll-down mandate is a tightrope act between reasonable efforts to ensure officer safety and overbroad demands of motorists that invade privacy beyond what would be warranted in the context of a normal traffic stop. I can see why cops would want this. Police officers face real safety threats during traffic stops. Dark Tint Really does a good job of hiding into the vehicles.
But forcing everyone with an aftermarket tint job to drop his windows entirely at every traffic stop seems a bit much. It can be especially worrisome during poor weather, intense heat or cold, or when you have small children or pets in the car who might be affected by open windows.
North Carolina reconciled officer safety with driver convenience and opted for the former. You can like that choice or not, but this is the reality we’re living with on Dec. 1st, 2025.
The Enforcement Reality Nobody’s Discussing
Here’s where it gets interesting, and where my research turned up some details I’ve yet to see reported elsewhere.
One Saturday afternoon, I spent a few hours at a state inspection station in Cary chatting with the owner, Mike, who has been doing inspections for 17 years. He showed me something cool: the computer system that they use for safety inspections.
The inspection software had an actual checkbox for window tint compliance prior to December 1st. Mike would sample the tint with his light meter (a $400 tool called a LTI Tint Meter 9000), record the percentage of VLT, and passed or failed that panel. The system wouldn’t let him continue the inspection without dealing with the tint checkbox.
After December 1, the box was removed from the software. The $10 tint inspection fee disappeared from the pricing. His light meter now languishes in a drawer for inspections.
But here’s the key point Mike divulged. His shop does roughly 40 inspections a day. Prior to that law, perhaps 5-6 cars a day were not in compliance with the tint inspection. That’s 12-15% of cars outright rejected for tint that was too dark.
Those drivers had three choices: Take the tint off ($50-$150), acquire a medical exemption (a weeks-long process) or go to another, more lenient inspection shop (they definitely exist but I won’t name any here).
Now those 5-6 daily cars with illegal window tint breeze through inspection without a problem. They’re now legally registered and insured vehicles in North Carolina — illegal window tint notwithstanding.
This is what police and lawmakers expected. By not enforcing inspection, they effectively shifted systematic catching of illegal tint for discretionary enforcement during a traffic stop.
On the other end, I recently chatted with Lieutenant Rodriguez of the Durham County Sheriff’s Office about what enforcement will look like after December 1st. He was refreshingly honest. His department does not deploy tint meters in patrol vehicles. They are also expensive ($350-600 each) and need to be calibrated. Most departments in North Carolina have the same budgetary limitations.
Officers, then, will be left up to visual assessment of whether tint appears too dark. But, if they don’t have a meter, they can’t prove the amount of VLT in court. They can pull you over if they have reasonable suspicion, but written citations for illegal tint become more difficult to uphold when contested.
For Lieutenant Rodriguez, most of the stops around tints will fit into two categories going forward:
Category 1: Extremely dark as in you can’t see a % of the window tint. Citations for these stops will not be thrown out in court, because the tint was that far below the legal limit (even without meter verification).
Category 2: Tint over other infractions. You are stopped for speeding and the officer thinks that your window looks a wee bit too dark. It could be a tint violation on top of the citation pile, but it’s secondary to their primary violation.
What is most improbable is officers pulling someone over simply for having a tint that, to the naked eye (but not necessarily when measured by a device), seems dark. The administratability is too great a burden, the measurability too uncertain and the likelihood of court challenges too considerable.
This sets up a perverse set of incentives. Drivers who have that amount of moderately illegal tint — say, 25 percent to 30 percent instead of the legal limit of 35% — might not be punished if they’re driving otherwise lawfully and roll down their windows in a timely manner upon being stopped. Those who have extremely dark tint will certainly draw the attention and citations, he said. “For the average law-abiding driver with 35% legal tint, you still have to roll ta-tint down every time you stop though!
I don’t believe this was what lawmakers meant to happen, but it’s the consequence three weeks into operation of their new law.
The Hidden Costs Nobody Calculated
Let’s discuss the money aspect of this situation because most people saved $10 on the inspection without thinking what else was different.
The Inspection Savings Mirage
Yes, you do save $10 every year by not shelling out for tint inspection during that safety check. Over ten years, that’s $100. Congratulations.
Now let’s look at what you might spend instead.
Legal Tint Installation:
I got quotes from eight shops across North Carolina in November 2025. Here’s the real-world I called eight stores in North Carolina for quotes last November. Here’s the real-world pricing:
- Honda Civic sedan (4 doors): $200-$350 for just the two front windows at 35%.
- Toyota Camry sedan: $250-400 for front windows, $400-600 whole car
- Ford F-150 four door: $300 to 500 front, $500 to 700 for whole car
- Chevrolet Suburban: $400-$650 for fronts; $700-$950 for full tint job
High end ceramic films, (which I highly recommend for heat rejection and longevity) add 30-50% to these costs. Lifetime warranties add another $50-100.
If you already have legal tint, no problem. “But this will make it ‘you’re either compliant or you’re not,’” he said, “There won’t be any more having your finger in the gray area.” For those of you who’d been skating by with illegal tint that passed lenient inspections, now you have a choice: keep the illegal tint and risk receiving citations, or replace it for legal film.
The Citation Math
AIf your car has illegal window tint, you must remove it as promptly as possible before getting cited, depending on how dark it is will determine the even higher cost of doing business.
There are a few very good reasons however, to not get pulled over for window tint violations (as I am so often reminded by traffic attorney Jennifer Park in Charlotte) 1- It IS expensive.
- Base fine: $50
- Court costs: $190 to $230 depending on the county
- Insurance increase: $15-$40 a month for three years ($540 to $1,440 total)
- Time wasted attending court – 3 to 5 hours usually
- Tints removed and reinstalled: $150-600, depending on the car
- Total cost for one citation: $930-2,320 in actual currency — and your time.
Get cited twice? In some locales, second offenses are bumped up to Class 3 misdemeanors that bring even higher fines and possible points on your license.
That $10 annual inspection fee suddenly makes a lot of sense.
The Window Motor Wear
This is really not a big deal, but I’ll mention it. Your window motors weren’t made to go full up-down every day. You used to roll down windows a couple of times a week, tops. Now, if you are driving with any kind of frequency through areas of police presence, you’re rolling windows all the way down anytime you see flashing lights and not only when pulled (better safe than sorry).
Window motors wear out in 8-12 years of lifetime usage. A significantly higher level of cycling would bring that down to 5-8 years. Replacing a window at a dealer: $200-450 per window; independents usually cost $100-250.
Over the life of your vehicle, you may incur one extra window motor replacement that you wouldn’t have otherwise. Small cost, but it exists.
Scenarios Where This Law Creates Real Problems
Having interviewed 19 North Carolina drivers about their experiences since Dec. 1, I identified a series of problematic situations that I believe legislators failed to fully take into account.
Parents with Sleeping Children
Sarah of Apex: “I have 18 month-old twins. I consider it a gift when they nap in their car seats on errands. I got stopped last week because of my tail light being out. Rolling down all my windows woke both kids. The crying started immediately. The officer apologized but told me I would have to follow the new law. Both kids were overtired and it was a lousy scene by the time I got us all home. It took hours to get them back on track.”
The law doesn’t include a provision exempting parents with a child asleep in the car. The officers need to be able to see for their safety, but the requirement puts genuinely tough predicaments on families.
Severe Weather Conditions
Marcus in Asheville: “I was pulled over during a thunderstorm on I-40 near Black Mountain. Heavy rain, 40-degree temperature. The officer told me to roll my window down completely. My car interior got soaked. Loose papers from the passenger seat were destroyed. The cop sat in his cruiser for five minutes checking me out while rain soaked my car. This feels excessive.”
I get the officer safety but to always have to roll down your windows no matter what the weather is, doesn’t seem well planned. Why not stop forcing people to have windows all the way up in bad weather but at officer discretion?
Pets in Vehicles
Jennifer of Charlotte: “I have my dog in the back seat, and I got pulled over. He’s friendly but protective. No one could have stopped him from jumping out if he wanted to; the front windows rolled all the way down. Before he would even approach the officer made me secure the dog. This should have been a 2-minute thing and it turned, for me, into 10 minutes of anxiety.”
This is a problem that all people who travel with pets have. Especially when people they don`t know approach cars dogs react. The necessity to open windows completely removes that barrier between your pet and the officer.
Medical Conditions Beyond Photosensitivity
Robert in Greensboro: I have severe hearing loss. So I have to read lips to hear conversation, Which as some of you may know, is not easy. My windows are up and I can only see the officer’s face inside the window before cracking it open. “Now I have to immediately put it all the way down where before that wasn’t the case, so sometimes I will miss what an officer says first,” Ms. Montagnese said, “and it hasn’t been fun.”
What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Three Weeks Ago
At some point during these unprecedented times, you’ll have to drive your car.What precautions should you take? Among the patterns I’ve noticed with people I know is that we typically fall into one of two categories: Those who will be very cautious, wipe down everything and do our best to avoid coming in contact with potential virus-laden substances while pumping gas or touching a keypad. (That’s me.)…
If you’re buying a new car:
Ask the seller directly if its factory tint or aftermarket. With factory tint you obviously have a loophole where the law is concerned, even if I’d comply to avoid any confusion at traffic stops. Get this documentation in writing.
If you’re getting tint installed:
Get legal 35% VLT film professionally installed at a good shop, even if your friend’s cousin will install darker for less. Not worth the risk $100/$200 in “savings” that’s how much a ticket will be. Request a certificate that displays VLT percent of your film. Keep it in your glovebox.
For those of u currently with illegal tint:
You’re gambling. You could drive for years without incident as long as you follow other traffic laws. They could come after you, they won’t this week, maybe next week. That is a personal risk calculation only you can make. If you maintain it, weigh the risks and budget for potential citations.
If you have legal tint:
Train yourself to pump your windows down when the cops pull you over. Make it automatic. It’s less contentious when you comply immediately without the officer having to ask.
If you have a medical exemption:
Keep your permit in the glovebox. You will need to have your exemption sticker displayed clearly on the outside of your rear window. Continue to roll your windows down at stops. The exemption abstains you from illegal tint citations but not the roll-down mandate.
If your window is broken:
Get it fixed immediately. DO NOT drive with a broken window mechanism and if you have tinted windows. Together, they create an untenable compliance situation that could very well intensify on a stop.
And here’s the part that annoys me most about this whole thing. The law change had been marketed under the pitch that it would make life easier for North Carolina drivers, removing the small inconvenience of having inspectors check these tiny bits of equipment. In fact, all the policy did was move enforcement from a systematic act of inspection to one where traffic stops are essentially discretionary for officers — with us adding a new requirement of compliance that affects every tinted-window driver during every traffic stop for the rest of their driving lives.
The Enforcement Gap That’s Going to Cause Confusion
Three weeks after the rules took effect, confusion reigns over how they are being enforced. I have found major differences by jurisdiction when I’ve dug into data.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police:
Proactively educating officers about the new law. Several drivers testified they were cautioned about the roll-down rule while stopped for other violations.
Raleigh Police Department:
Inconsistent enforcement. Some cops absolutely demand that the window be rolled all the way down. Others accept partial compliance. Creates uncertainty for drivers.
Rural Counties:
A number of drivers were allegedly unaware sheriffs’ deputies did not know about the December 1st amendments. One driver in Wilkes County was informed that the inspection of tint remained a requirement, though that’s not the case by law.
Highway Patrol:
Best enforcement based on reports I grabbed. Troopers appear pretty knowledgeable on both the inspection delete and roll-all the way down mandate.
This inconsistency will probably remain for 6-12 months while all departments train their officers on the new rules. In the meantime, drivers encounter a patchwork of enforcement methods depending on where they are stopped and which officer they come up against.
My prediction: By mid-2026 enforcement will find its groove, in which the roll-down requirement simply becomes routine, a task officers perform like they arrest or issue speeding tickets; actual citations for infractions of tint laws become rare unless the tint is extremely dark or combined with other marginal actions.
