Verified for 2026 Updated for 2026 Last reviewed January 15, 2026
At a glance
Oklahoma offers a medical window tint exemption. Oklahoma offers a medical window-tint exemption for drivers with a qualifying medical condition. A physician certification is typically required. Applicants should confirm the current process with the Oklahoma DPS.
Eligibility
Who typically qualifies
Drivers with a licensed physician’s certification of a medical condition requiring limited exposure to sunlight.
Requirements
What Oklahoma requires
Physician certification of medical necessity.
Submission to the issuing state agency per current instructions.
Carry documentation in the vehicle while operating it.
Where to apply
Application form & agency
Oklahoma does not link to a single standardized application form in our current reference set. See the official references below.
Editor’s note
Baseline information pending line-by-line re-verification against state statute and current agency forms. Always confirm with the official state agency before installing darker film.
Background
What a medical tint exemption actually is
A medical window tint exemption is a narrow, condition-specific authorization that lets
a driver install darker aftermarket window film than the state’s general Visible
Light Transmission (VLT) minimum would normally allow. It does not make the vehicle
invisible to enforcement — officers can still stop the vehicle, meter the windows,
and ask for documentation. It simply means that, when asked, the driver can present a
physician-signed statement (and in some states an agency-issued permit or sticker) that
shifts the question from “is this illegal?” to “does this driver have a
valid medical basis for an exception?”
Exemptions exist because a subset of the population has medical conditions where
prolonged exposure to visible light, ultraviolet radiation, or infrared heat through
vehicle glass causes measurable harm. These conditions are uncommon but well-documented
in peer-reviewed medicine. Without a way to drive with reduced light exposure, affected
individuals would face restricted mobility and increased disease burden. Every U.S.
state has had to decide how to balance traffic-safety concerns about driver visibility
with federal disability accommodation law and the medical reality of these conditions.
The scope of what an exemption allows is important to understand up front:
It typically relaxes the VLT minimum on front side windows only.
Back-window rules are already lenient in most states and usually do not need an
exemption.
It does not automatically permit tint on the windshield below the AS-1 line.
Windshield film is governed by FMVSS 205
and separate state rules that almost never yield to a medical exemption.
It does not relax reflectivity caps. Metallic and mirror-finish films
are usually still prohibited.
It is state-specific. An exemption issued in Oklahoma is
valid in Oklahoma; it carries no formal reciprocity to other states, though
many officers will exercise discretion when they see documentation from any state.
Clinical context
Common medical conditions that qualify
The conditions below are frequently cited in physician certifications for medical tint
exemptions. This list is educational — not a diagnosis and not a guarantee that
any specific patient will qualify under Oklahoma criteria. A licensed
physician must evaluate the individual case and document medical necessity.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
An autoimmune disease in which UV exposure can trigger cutaneous flares, joint
pain, and in severe cases renal or cardiac involvement. Sun avoidance is a
mainstay of lupus care per the
American College of Rheumatology.
Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP)
A rare inherited disorder of DNA-repair that causes extreme UV sensitivity and
dramatic risk of early skin and ocular cancers. Near-total sun avoidance and
window-film protection are standard of care.
Solar urticaria
A photodermatosis in which exposure to visible light or UV triggers hives,
angioedema, and in severe cases anaphylaxis within minutes of exposure.
Porphyrias (e.g., EPP, PCT)
Disorders of heme metabolism in which light exposure causes painful skin reactions
and, in some subtypes, long-term liver complications. Light avoidance reduces
flare frequency.
Polymorphous light eruption (PMLE)
A common photodermatosis producing itchy papules and plaques after UV exposure.
Can be severe enough to interfere with daily activities.
Ocular albinism & achromatopsia
Congenital conditions with absent or reduced retinal pigmentation causing
profound light sensitivity (photophobia) and impaired vision in bright light.
Post-melanoma photoprotection
After a confirmed melanoma diagnosis, dermatologists often recommend aggressive UV
avoidance as part of secondary prevention. Many states accept this as a basis for
exemption.
Photosensitive medications
Some drugs (tetracyclines, fluoroquinolones, amiodarone, photodynamic agents,
certain chemotherapies) cause severe photosensitivity during treatment.
Temporary exemptions may be issued during the course of therapy.
Chronic light-triggered migraine
Where photophobia is a documented and disabling migraine trigger and conservative
therapies have failed, some states accept neurology certification for exemption.
Application process
How to apply for an exemption in Oklahoma
While each state has its own form and workflow, the underlying steps are similar
almost everywhere. Use these as a checklist in addition to the state’s current instructions (see references below).
Schedule an evaluation with a licensed physician. Most states
accept an MD, DO, or in some cases a licensed optometrist. The physician must hold
an active license in Oklahoma (or a reciprocal state, in jurisdictions
that accept out-of-state certifications).
Discuss the clinical basis. Bring prior records if you already
have a diagnosis. Your physician may order photosensitivity testing or review
existing dermatology / rheumatology notes. The goal is to establish medical
necessity — not to argue for a cosmetic preference.
Obtain the signed certification or prescription. The physician
completes and signs the state form (if one exists) or writes a letter on office
letterhead stating the diagnosis, the necessity of reduced visible/UV/IR light
exposure while driving, the recommended VLT percentage, and the expected duration.
Submit to the issuing agency. In Oklahoma, submission
typically goes to the DMV, Department of Transportation, or State Patrol —
see the references section below for the correct office.
Wait for the permit, sticker, or acknowledgment. Processing time
varies by state. Some states issue a window sticker; some issue a paper permit;
some states (like California) simply require the physician letter to live in the
glovebox with no further state paperwork.
Install the tint at the authorized VLT. Use a certified installer
who understands medical-exemption installs. Keep the installer’s receipt
showing the exact film and VLT.
Keep documentation in the vehicle at all times. A citation can
happen any time, but is usually resolved roadside if you can produce a valid
physician statement and (where applicable) state-issued sticker or permit.
Enforcement
If you are stopped while driving with a medical exemption
An officer who observes visibly dark tint generally has reasonable suspicion to
conduct an equipment stop in most states. The interaction usually follows a
predictable sequence:
License, registration, proof of insurance — standard request.
Window meter reading — the officer may apply a calibrated VLT
meter to each window that appears tinted and record the reading.
Documentation request — at this point, present your
physician’s letter or state-issued exemption sticker / permit. Remain calm
and non-confrontational; the document is what resolves the stop.
Verification — the officer may call dispatch or the issuing
agency to verify the exemption. In states with electronic registration of
exemptions, this is essentially instant.
Resolution — in a valid-exemption case, the stop typically
ends with a warning or no citation. Officers occasionally write a citation anyway
and leave the judge to dismiss it on documentation; this is rare but not unheard
of.
Pro tip: carry a physical copy of the physician certification in the
glovebox and a photo of it on your phone in case the physical copy is missing
or damaged. If your exemption came with an official window sticker, place it where
an officer can see it from the driver’s side (check state-specific placement
instructions).
Limitations
What an exemption does not cover
It does not grant unlimited darkness. States typically specify a
minimum allowable VLT even with an exemption (often 20–35% on front side
windows, sometimes lower for specific diagnoses like XP).
It is not a universal defense. If the film is also illegal for
reflectivity or color, the exemption does not cure those violations. Metallic and
colored films can still trigger citations even with a valid medical exemption.
It does not transfer to rental or borrowed vehicles. Most
exemptions are tied to a specific VIN or owner. If you drive a rental car, the
exemption does not protect the rental’s windows.
It does not override federal laws. If you drive onto federal
property (national park, military base, post office), federal officers enforce the
applicable federal rules. State exemptions are still typically respected, but not
guaranteed.
It does not remove the need for installer competence. Film
certification, ASTM compliance, and workmanship still apply. Always use a
certified installer.
Common reasons applications are denied
If your request is rejected
Denials happen. The most common reasons, in roughly decreasing order of frequency:
Missing or illegible physician signature / license number. The
number-one cause of rejection. Ensure the physician prints and signs the
form, and includes their state license number.
Diagnosis language too vague. “Sensitivity to light”
is usually insufficient; a specific diagnosis code (ICD-10) plus a clinical
explanation of how light exposure worsens the condition is much stronger.
Physician not licensed in the state. Some states require a locally
licensed physician. Telemedicine evaluations from out-of-state providers can fail
for this reason.
Requested VLT below the state floor. Even with an exemption, most
states have an absolute minimum (often 20% VLT). Requests for 5% will be reduced
or denied.
Form is outdated. States update their forms periodically. Always
download the form immediately before your physician visit, not months in advance.
Missing supporting documentation. Some states require
dermatology / rheumatology / ophthalmology notes in addition to the form.
If you are denied, request the written reason, address the specific defect, and
resubmit. In most cases the denial is procedural, not substantive. If the denial is
substantive (the agency disputes medical necessity), you may have an administrative
appeal right — check the denial letter for the appeal deadline, which is often
short (30–60 days).
Interstate travel
Traveling outside Oklahoma with your exemption
Medical tint exemptions are not like driver’s licenses: there is no
federal reciprocity framework. Your Oklahoma exemption is valid in
Oklahoma; anywhere else, it exists at the discretion of the officer you
encounter.
In practice:
For short trips (vacation, road trip, visiting family), most
officers will accept a clearly-documented out-of-state exemption and resolve the
stop with a warning. This is not guaranteed.
For long-term moves, apply for a new exemption in your destination
state as part of your DMV transfer. Do not rely on the old state’s paperwork.
For regular cross-border commuters (for example, between Oklahoma and a neighboring state for work), apply for exemptions in both
states. The cost is usually trivial compared to the aggregate ticket risk over a
year of commuting.
For Canadian or Mexican border crossings, neither country honors
U.S. state medical exemptions. Canadian provinces have their own (typically
stricter) rules and separate application processes.
Alternatives & supplements
Other ways to reduce sun exposure while driving
If your condition is real but you do not qualify for a formal exemption — or
you prefer not to pursue one — several options can meaningfully reduce UV and
heat exposure without violating tint law:
UV-rejecting clear ceramic window film. Products at 70–90%
VLT can block 99%+ of UVA and UVB while remaining legal on all windows in most
states. These films are invisible to meters calibrated for dark tint and typically
pass inspection.
Interior sunshades for parked vehicles reduce cabin temperature
and UV loading. No legal concern.
UV-protective driving gloves and arm sleeves (UPF 50+) reduce
direct exposure to arms and hands, which receive the most UV during daytime
driving.
Daily-use sunscreen (SPF 30+, broad-spectrum) on any exposed skin
remains the baseline standard of care for photosensitive conditions regardless of
window tint.
Consult your treating physician for a care plan that combines these approaches with
any exemption-based film installation.
Does Oklahoma offer a medical window tint exemption?
Oklahoma offers a medical window tint exemption. Oklahoma offers a medical window-tint exemption for drivers with a qualifying medical condition. A physician certification is typically required. Applicants should confirm the current process with the Oklahoma DPS.
Who qualifies for a medical tint exemption in Oklahoma?
Drivers with a licensed physician’s certification of a medical condition requiring limited exposure to sunlight.
What form do I need to apply in Oklahoma?
Oklahoma does not publish a single standardized form, or the form reference may have changed. See the official references below for the most current guidance.
How long does an exemption last in Oklahoma?
Duration varies by state and agency. Confirm with the issuing agency.
What conditions commonly qualify for a medical tint exemption?
Physicians most often certify exemptions for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), severe solar urticaria, cutaneous porphyria, polymorphous light eruption, ocular albinism, post-melanoma photoprotection, severe light-triggered migraine, keratoconus with light sensitivity, and certain photosensitizing medications. The condition must create a genuine medical need to limit visible, UV, or infrared light exposure while driving — not merely a preference for darker windows.
Can I get a medical tint exemption in Oklahoma without a formal doctor visit?
A licensed physician (MD or DO) — and in some states, a licensed optometrist — must evaluate and sign documentation. Some states require an in-person visit; others accept a telemedicine evaluation from a state-licensed provider. You should confirm with the issuing agency whether a virtual visit is acceptable before scheduling.
Does a medical exemption let me tint my front windshield below the AS-1 line?
Almost never. A medical exemption typically lets a driver reduce VLT on the front side windows below the state minimum. The windshield below the AS-1 line is governed by separate federal (FMVSS 205) and state rules that are rarely relaxed, even for medical conditions. Only a small number of jurisdictions have explicit medical carve-outs for windshield film, and those usually require an additional physician certification of severe photosensitivity and a separate approval process.
Does my Oklahoma exemption work in other states?
Generally, no. Medical tint exemptions are state-specific and do not carry reciprocity between states. If you drive regularly across state lines, you should apply for an exemption in each state where you spend meaningful time on public roads, or accept the risk of a citation in states where your vehicle's tint exceeds local limits.
Official references
Sources below are the primary official documents we consulted for this page. If you notice
an outdated link or discrepancy, please report it to our editors.
TintLaws provides educational information only. Nothing on this page is medical or legal advice. Medical exemption
approval depends on your individual medical history, physician assessment, and the current rules of your state agency.
Always verify directly with the issuing agency before installing darker tint.
Read our full medical disclaimer and
legal disclaimer.