- Front side: 40% VLT or higher
- Back side: 25% VLT or higher
- Rear: 12% VLT or higher
- Front side: 40% VLT or higher
- Back side: 12% VLT or higher
- Rear: 12% VLT or higher
- Windshield
- Non-reflective tint is permitted on the windshield above the manufacturer’s AS-1 line.
- Reflectivity (front)
- No more than 20% reflective
- Reflectivity (back)
- No more than 20% reflective
- Side mirrors if back tinted
- Dual outside mirrors are required if rear-window tint limits visibility.
- Restricted colors
- Red, amber, and other colored tint that resembles emergency or signal lighting is prohibited.
- Sticker requirement
- A compliance sticker identifying the tint film is required.
- Manufacturer certificate
- Tint film must be certified by the manufacturer for use in the state.
- Medical exemption
- Available. Louisiana 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 Louisiana Office of Motor Vehicles.
What to show the officer
- Your film manufacturer’s certificate or installation receipt, kept in the glovebox. (Tint film must be certified by the manufacturer for use in the state.)
- Post-installation VLT reading receipt if you have one (tint shops will print it free on request).
- If you hold a Louisiana medical tint exemption, carry the official permit, physician form, or ID card in the vehicle at all times.
- Know the ±3% meter tolerance. If your window reads 40% VLT or higher, a reading of (minimum − 3%) or higher is within tolerance. See our Louisiana meter tolerance page.
Pre-install checklist
- Confirm your vehicle’s classification (passenger car vs MPV/SUV) via the door-jamb label.
- Choose a VLT at or above the 40% VLT or higher minimum for front side windows.
- Verify the film meets the Louisiana reflectivity cap.
- Use a manufacturer-certified installer (3M Pro Dealer, LLumar SelectPro, SunTek Pro Tint, or Solar Gard). See how to find a good tint shop.
- Require a printed post-install VLT reading for every window.
- Store the manufacturer certificate + installer warranty with vehicle registration.
Louisiana official references
Why you should carry a printed tint reference card
A single-page, printed reference card in the glovebox is the cheapest insurance you can carry against a wrongful tint stop in Louisiana. During a roadside conversation with an officer, being able to hand over a concise document that:
- Cites the current Louisiana VLT minimums for your vehicle class,
- Lists the reflectivity cap,
- References the state statute or administrative code,
- Shows your film brand, VLT, and install date,
… accomplishes several things at once. It demonstrates that you understand the law, it narrows the question to a straightforward reading, and it gives the officer something to anchor their notes on. Many stops end in a warning once the officer sees that the driver has done their homework.
What else to keep with your reference card
A complete glovebox tint-documentation kit for Louisiana includes:
- This reference card, printed single-sided on letter or A4 paper.
- Your installer’s original invoice showing film brand, model, rated VLT for each window, and install date. This establishes what was installed and proves the work was done by a professional.
- The manufacturer warranty certificate (3M, LLumar, SunTek, Solar Gard, XPEL, etc.). This lets the officer verify the film is a legitimate named product, not an uncertified import.
- A copy of your most recent VLT meter reading if you have one — taken by the installer at install or by a tint shop any time the film was re-measured.
- Medical exemption documentation, if applicable. Either the state-issued permit/sticker or the signed physician certification.
- Vehicle registration and proof of insurance. Standard glovebox items, but confirm they are current and accessible.
Store all these documents in a single labeled envelope. If you are stopped, you hand the officer the envelope, not a stack of loose papers.
When to update your reference card
- After each state legislative session (January–June typically), check whether the Louisiana tint statute has been amended. Our state pages are updated on a 6-month review cycle — the footer of your state page shows when it was last reviewed.
- After any new tint install or film replacement, re-print the card with the updated film brand, VLT, and install date.
- Annually on your inspection date (in states with annual inspection), print a fresh card while you are gathering the other documents for inspection.
- After you move or register the vehicle in a new state, print the new state’s reference card immediately — old cards become misleading the moment you cross state lines with updated plates.
Louisiana reference card FAQ
What is the minimum legal tint in Louisiana?
On a passenger car front side window, 40% VLT or higher. Back side and rear window rules may differ — see the table on this page or the full <a href="/states/louisiana/">Louisiana tint law page</a>.
Can I print this reference card?
Yes. Use your browser's Print function (Ctrl+P or Cmd+P). The card is optimized for letter-size paper and is glovebox-friendly.
Is this card a legal document?
No. It is a summary reference for quick checks during officer interactions and shop visits. Law enforcement and courts rely on the actual statute text. See the <a href="#references">official references</a> section for the primary sources.
How often is this card updated?
We review Louisiana window tint law and this card at least annually. Last reviewed: 2026-01-15. Material changes since that date may not yet be reflected; always confirm before installing.