Window Tinting Law
One of the cheapest but most popular methods of customising
cars these days is to apply tints to the windows. The procedure
itself is hardly new - tints to reduce sunlight glare have been
standard equipment for a very long time, and some manufacturers
are, partly for security reasons, producing cars with remarkably
dark glass in the rear side windows.
None of them supplies that kind of glass in the front side windows
or the windscreen because there is legislation to prevent them
from doing so. The regulations are reasonably straight forward
and would probably have no impact on the general public except
for the fact that they can be breached by aftermarket tints.
The responsibility for enforcing the rules among car owners in
this country now lies with the Vehicle and Operator Services Agency
(VOSA), which was created on 1 April 2003. Full details of the
organisation can be found online at www.vosa.gov.uk - the short
story is that VOSA looks after things like testing schemes (including
the MOT test), licence applications for bus and lorry drivers,
advice to commercial operators, accident investigation and so
on.
VOSA is itself empowered to stop vehicles for roadside checks
in North Wales, Cambridgeshire, Staffordshire, Northumberland
and Greater Manchester. Elsewhere it works in conjunction with
the police.
The legal position is that the front side windows on all cars
must allow 70% of light to pass through them. That figure also
applies to the windscreens of cars first used before April 1985;
any car first used from then onwards has to let 75% of light through
the windscreen.
This is, of course, a safety issue. The darker a window, the
less chance there is of the driver being able to see pedestrians
and other motorists, and take any avoiding action that may be
required. On the other hand, darkened windows do make a car look
quite dramatic, so it's easy to see their appeal among cruisers.