Legal

Tinted headlights & taillights — are they legal?

Tinted covers on headlights and taillights are regulated separately from window tint. Here is why most smoked lenses are illegal, the FMVSS 108 lumen requirement, and which states actively enforce.

5 min read Verified for 2026 Reviewed January 15, 2026

Smoked headlight and taillight covers are popular cosmetic mods, but they are regulated under a completely different federal standard than window tint. Most aftermarket tint covers fail inspection and are ticketed as an equipment violation. Here is the rulebook.

The federal rule: FMVSS 108

Vehicle lighting is regulated by FMVSS 108, which sets minimum output in candela (light intensity) for headlights, taillights, brake lights, and turn signals. Anything that attenuates the output below the minimum is non-compliant — which includes tint film or smoked lens covers.

Because lighting compliance is federal, adding aftermarket tint to a headlight or taillight is essentially never legal for on-road use in any U.S. state.

State enforcement varies

Some states (California, New York, Pennsylvania) actively enforce headlight/taillight tint during annual inspections. Others may only cite during a traffic stop for a different reason.

Typical language in state statute: "all required lamps shall emit light of the required color and intensity without modification." That single sentence makes tinted covers non-compliant.

Specific products and their legality

  • Vinyl tint film on lens — illegal in every state for on-road use.
  • Smoked plastic lens covers — illegal; attenuate output below FMVSS minimum.
  • Factory-smoked OEM lenses — legal, because the vehicle was federally certified with them.
  • Spray-on "Nightshades" or "VHT" — illegal for on-road use.
  • Clear UV-protection film — legal because it does not reduce light output.
  • Paint-protection film (PPF) on lens — gray area; clear PPF is typically fine, tinted PPF is not.

Safety risk

Even a cosmetic smoked taillight that appears only "lightly" tinted reduces brake-light recognition time for following drivers measurably. The cost of a rear-end collision because a following driver did not see your brake lights far exceeds the fine.

State-by-state snapshot

Quick lookup for every U.S. state

Use the table below to jump straight to any state’s tint law page. Front side VLT is the most-cited number and is shown for sedans. Deep-link into any state for the full rule, SUV differences, windshield rule, medical exemption, and the statute citation.

Sedan front side VLT minimum · every U.S. state & D.C. (2026)
State Front side VLT Back side VLT Rear VLT Medical
Alabama 32% VLT or higher 32% VLT or higher 32% VLT or higher Yes
Alaska 70% VLT or higher 40% VLT or higher 40% VLT or higher Yes
Arizona 33% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Arkansas 25% VLT or higher 25% VLT or higher 10% VLT or higher Yes
California 70% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Colorado 27% VLT or higher 27% VLT or higher 27% VLT or higher Yes
Connecticut 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Yes
Delaware 70% VLT or higher 70% VLT or higher 70% VLT or higher Yes
Florida 28% VLT or higher 15% VLT or higher 15% VLT or higher Yes
Georgia 32% VLT or higher 32% VLT or higher 32% VLT or higher Yes
Hawaii 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Idaho 35% VLT or higher 20% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Illinois 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Indiana 30% VLT or higher 30% VLT or higher 30% VLT or higher Yes
Iowa 70% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Kansas 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Kentucky 35% VLT or higher 18% VLT or higher 18% VLT or higher Yes
Louisiana 40% VLT or higher 25% VLT or higher 12% VLT or higher Yes
Maine 35% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Maryland 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Massachusetts 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Michigan Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Minnesota 50% VLT or higher 50% VLT or higher 50% VLT or higher Yes
Mississippi 28% VLT or higher 28% VLT or higher 28% VLT or higher Yes
Missouri 35% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Montana 24% VLT or higher 14% VLT or higher 14% VLT or higher Yes
Nebraska 35% VLT or higher 20% VLT or higher 20% VLT or higher Yes
Nevada 35% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
New Hampshire 70% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
New Jersey Not allowed Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
New Mexico 20% VLT or higher 20% VLT or higher 20% VLT or higher Yes
New York 70% VLT or higher 70% VLT or higher 70% VLT or higher Yes
North Carolina 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
North Dakota 50% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Ohio 50% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Unclear
Oklahoma 25% VLT or higher 25% VLT or higher 25% VLT or higher Yes
Oregon 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Pennsylvania 70% VLT or higher 70% VLT or higher 70% VLT or higher Yes
Rhode Island 70% VLT or higher 70% VLT or higher 70% VLT or higher Yes
South Carolina 27% VLT or higher 27% VLT or higher 27% VLT or higher Yes
South Dakota 35% VLT or higher 20% VLT or higher 20% VLT or higher Yes
Tennessee 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Texas 25% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Utah 43% VLT or higher Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Vermont Not allowed Any VLT allowed Any VLT allowed Yes
Virginia 50% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Washington 24% VLT or higher 24% VLT or higher 24% VLT or higher Yes
Washington, D.C. 70% VLT or higher 50% VLT or higher 50% VLT or higher Yes
West Virginia 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Wisconsin 50% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher 35% VLT or higher Yes
Wyoming 28% VLT or higher 28% VLT or higher 28% VLT or higher Yes

This snapshot summarises sedan rules only. SUV, van, and pickup (MPV) rules differ in most states — see each state’s dedicated page for the full picture. All values are re-verified against primary sources for 2026 (see sources & methodology).

Tinted headlights & taillights — are they legal? — FAQ

Is smoked tail light film legal anywhere?

For public-road use, no. Federal FMVSS 108 requires minimum candela output; any film attenuates that output and makes the vehicle non-compliant. Off-road and show vehicles can run smoked tails.

Can I tint just a little bit, like 20%?

No. FMVSS 108 is not a percentage rule — it is a minimum-output rule. Even a 20%-opacity film typically pushes output below the federal minimum.

What about clear protective film on headlights?

Clear paint-protection film (PPF) on headlights is legal because it does not reduce light output measurably. Confirm the product is labeled "clear" and not "smoke" or "tint."

Sources & references

Editorial standards

How we verified this guide

  • Primary sources only. VLT limits, windshield rules, and medical exemption procedures cited in this guide are verified against each state’s statute, administrative code, or DMV publication. See our sources & methodology.
  • Annual re-review. Every guide is re-read against current state law at least once a year. This page was last reviewed on January 15, 2026.
  • No affiliate influence. Our rankings, recommendations, and ticket-fighting advice are never paid. See our editorial policy.
  • Not legal or medical advice. Enforcement is fact-specific; always verify with your local DMV, your state statute, or a licensed attorney before acting. See the legal disclaimer and medical disclaimer.
  • Report an error. Spot something wrong or outdated? Contact our editors — we publish corrections quickly and note them in our next review cycle.