Georgia tint ticket penalty
Illegal tint in Georgia is a misdemeanor punishable by fines and, in some cases, court costs; non-compliant film must be removed.
Actual costs vary by court, with standard court costs and surcharges that often add 30–100% on top of the base fine. Always check your exact citation for the specific figure your court assigned.
The VLT thresholds that trigger a Georgia citation
On a sedan in Georgia, any front side window reading below 32% VLT or higher on an officer’s tint meter (after the ±3% tolerance) is actionable. Back side and rear-window rules often differ for SUVs and vans — see the Georgia tint percentage page for every window.
How to get the ticket dismissed
- Read the correction deadline on the citation (usually 14–30 days).
- Remove the illegal film at a tint shop. Keep the receipt and a printed post-removal VLT reading.
- Bring the receipt — and the vehicle if your court requires it — to the court clerk by the deadline.
- Pay the small dismissal fee (usually $10–$25).
If you believe the ticket was wrong, see our guide to fighting a tint ticket.
Avoiding the ticket with a medical exemption
Georgia allows drivers with a physician-diagnosed medical condition to request an exemption for darker tint. Documentation is issued through the Georgia Department of Driver Services process.
See the full process, qualifying conditions, forms, and renewal rules on our Georgia medical exemption page.
Georgia primary sources
The real cost of a tint ticket in Georgia
The sticker fine on the citation is usually the smallest part of the total cost. A realistic budget for a typical tint ticket in Georgia looks like this:
| Cost component | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory fine | $25 – $250 | Varies by jurisdiction and whether first offense |
| Court costs & surcharges | $30 – $150 | Added to almost every ticket regardless of plea |
| Film removal (professional) | $75 – $200 | Pro removal on all windows; DIY can damage defroster lines |
| Post-removal VLT metering | $0 – $30 | Some shops bundle with removal; some courts require |
| Dismissal / fix-it fee | $10 – $25 | Paid to court clerk on proof of compliance |
| New compliant film (if re-tinting) | $250 – $800 | Optional, but most drivers re-tint within the legal range |
| Missed-work time | Varies | Some courts require appearance; factor this in |
| Auto insurance impact | $50 – $300 / year | Only if ticket is written as a moving violation (rare for tint) |
Bottom line: a “$75” tint fine frequently becomes a $500–$1,200 out-of-pocket event once removal and optional re-tint are included. Compliance at install is almost always cheaper than any post-ticket path.
What happens on a second or third offense in Georgia
Most states escalate penalties for repeat tint violations. The pattern in Georgia and most jurisdictions:
- First offense: usually eligible for dismissal on proof of compliance (fix-it ticket). The citation itself may still appear on your driving history.
- Second offense: often not eligible for dismissal. Fine typically 2–3x the first-offense amount. Court costs apply. In some jurisdictions, a second tint violation can be escalated to a misdemeanor-level equipment violation.
- Third offense and beyond: maximum fines, mandatory court appearance in some states, potential for vehicle impoundment in the strictest states, and typically no dismissal path. A pattern of tint violations can be considered by prosecutors in unrelated traffic matters.
If you have a prior tint violation on your record, the single best investment is to have a certified shop meter every window on the vehicle and replace any film that reads below the Georgia minimum by more than 3 percentage points.
What to expect (and what to do) during a Georgia tint stop
- Pull over safely and cooperate with the initial request. Have license, registration, and insurance ready. Keep hands visible.
- You may politely ask why you were stopped. If the answer is “your tint looks too dark,” the officer has established reasonable suspicion for an equipment stop.
- You are not required to consent to a search. A tint equipment stop does not authorize a vehicle search. Decline politely if asked.
- If the officer produces a VLT meter, watch the reading. You have a right to see the number. Ask when the meter was last calibrated and request the reading of each window be noted on the citation.
- If cited, sign the citation. Signing is not an admission of guilt; it is an acknowledgment that you received the ticket and will respond by the date stated.
- Keep all paperwork. The citation, any meter reading slip, photos of the vehicle and the tint, and the installer’s original invoice are your best evidence if you plan to contest.
For a detailed walkthrough of contesting a citation, see our nationwide how-to-fight-a-tint-ticket guide and the appeal-process appeal process guide.
Georgia tint ticket FAQ
How much is a window tint ticket in Georgia?
Illegal tint in Georgia is a misdemeanor punishable by fines and, in some cases, court costs; non-compliant film must be removed.
Is a tint ticket in Georgia a moving violation?
In Georgia, an illegal tint ticket is almost always a vehicle equipment violation, not a moving violation. Points on your license are rare; insurance impact on a first offense is unlikely. Repeat and misdemeanor-level offenses can be different.
Can I fix a tint ticket instead of paying it in Georgia?
Many Georgia tint citations are correctable violations: remove the illegal film, show proof of compliance with a meter reading, and the court will usually dismiss the ticket for a small fee. See our <a href="/guides/fix-it-ticket-tint/">fix-it ticket guide</a>.
What VLT gets me ticketed in Georgia?
Anything below <strong>32% VLT or higher</strong> on a sedan front side window is the first thing an officer will cite, after applying the ±3% meter tolerance. Back-side and rear-window rules vary; see the full <a href="/states/georgia/tint-percentages/">Georgia tint percentage guide</a>.
Can I fight a Georgia tint ticket?
Yes. Common winning arguments are calibration challenges, tolerance defense, MPV misclassification, and a valid medical exemption. Details in our <a href="/guides/how-to-fight-tint-ticket/">how to fight a tint ticket</a> guide.