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Window Tint Film
11 productsWindow Tint Film for Privacy, Glare Control, and a Cleaner Vehicle Profile Window tint film changes the way a vehicle looks from the outside and feels from the inside. The...
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VLT 70% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 70% Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 7.6% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 5% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 36% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 35% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 25% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 18% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 16% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 15% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film -
VLT 13% Heat Rejecting Ceramic Window Tint Film
About this collection
Window Tint Film for Privacy, Glare Control, and a Cleaner Vehicle Profile
Window tint film changes the way a vehicle looks from the outside and feels from the inside. The right tint can add privacy, reduce visible glare, make glass look cleaner against the body color, and help the whole build feel more finished.
Quick answer: how should you choose window tint film?
Choose window tint by VLT, film type, comfort goal, and local law—not darkness alone. A lower VLT percentage looks darker, but heat comfort also depends on film construction and performance. If you are unsure, compare samples in daylight before buying a full roll.
| Goal | What to compare | Best next step |
|---|---|---|
| More privacy | Lower VLT shades and legal limits for each window position | Check your local tint rules before choosing the darkest option |
| Less glare while driving | Shade, visibility, windshield/front-side restrictions, and daily driving conditions | Choose a shade you can still see through comfortably at night |
| More heat comfort | Film construction and stated heat/IR performance, not shade alone | Read the tint guide, then compare ceramic/carbon style options when available |
| Cleaner exterior styling | How the tint works with wrap color, PPF finish, wheels, and trim | Use a sample to preview the look on your actual vehicle glass |
Best for: side windows, rear glass, privacy styling, glare reduction projects, cleaner exterior contrast, and builds that need glass to visually match vinyl wrap, colored PPF, or trim upgrades.
Important: window tint laws vary by state, country, and window position. Veloro content is for shopping guidance only, not legal advice. Always confirm local VLT rules before installation.
Window tint FAQ
- What does VLT mean for window tint?
- VLT means visible light transmission. A lower VLT percentage lets less visible light through, so the tint looks darker.
- Does darker tint always keep a car cooler?
- No. Darker tint can reduce visible light, but heat comfort depends on film construction, infrared rejection, and total solar energy rejection—not just darkness.
- Should I choose ceramic or carbon tint?
- Ceramic tint is usually chosen for stronger heat and infrared performance, while carbon tint is a practical daily-driver option for privacy, glare reduction, and non-metal signal-friendly styling.
- Should I order a window tint sample first?
- Yes. Samples help you compare shade, visibility, and exterior appearance under real daylight before committing to a full install.
Helpful tint guides: Window Tint VLT Explained · Ceramic Tint vs Carbon Tint · Does Darker Tint Mean a Cooler Car?
Related shopping paths: Window Tint Samples & Tools · Vinyl Wraps · Colored PPF · Paint Protection Film · Car Wrap Guides
Window tint film for shade, privacy, and interior comfort
Quick answer: Window tint film is automotive film used on glass to change shade, reduce glare, improve privacy, and help manage cabin comfort. It is different from vinyl wrap and PPF because tint is chosen for glass visibility, shade, and driving comfort rather than exterior color change or paint protection.
Choose window tint when the project goal is glass appearance, privacy, glare reduction, and interior comfort. Choose vinyl wrap when the goal is exterior color or finish change. Choose PPF or colored PPF when the goal is paint protection on body panels.
- Best for: side windows, rear windows, privacy-focused builds, glare-sensitive drivers, and coordinated exterior styling.
- Check before ordering: visible light transmission, shade appearance, local tint rules, installation difficulty, and whether the tint looks right from inside and outside the vehicle.
- Sample first: compare shade, reflectivity, interior visibility, and real-light appearance before choosing a larger roll.
- Pairing path: tint can pair with vinyl wrap, colored PPF, clear PPF, and roof or mirror accent projects without replacing those materials.
Veloro offers free worldwide shipping where shipping is available at checkout. International buyers should still review delivery estimates and any duties, taxes, brokerage, GST/HST, or customs charges before ordering. Always check local window tint laws before installation.
Helpful guides: Film Samples Guide · Car Wrap Guides · Vinyl Wraps · Paint Protection Film · Complete Sample Book
Is window tint film the same as vinyl wrap?
No. Window tint film is made for automotive glass shade, privacy, glare, and visibility. Vinyl wrap is used mainly on body panels for color, texture, and finish changes.
Should I order window tint samples first?
Yes. Samples help compare shade, reflectivity, visibility from inside the vehicle, exterior appearance, and real-light behavior before choosing a larger roll or tint direction.
How to choose window tint by VLT, visibility, and heat comfort
Quick answer: Choose window tint by VLT, local law, night visibility, glare goals, privacy goals, and heat-performance needs—not darkness alone. A darker-looking tint is not automatically the coolest option, and a legal daily-driver shade should still be comfortable to see through at night.
| Buyer goal | What to compare first | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| More privacy | VLT percentage and local rules | Lower VLT usually looks darker, but legality varies by window and region. |
| Less glare | Shade, visibility, and driving conditions | Glare reduction should not make night driving uncomfortable. |
| More heat comfort | Film construction, IR rejection, and TSER | Heat comfort depends on performance specs, not just darkness. |
| Premium daily driving | Ceramic vs carbon tint | Ceramic is often chosen for heat/IR performance; carbon is often a practical value path. |
Always confirm local tint laws before installation. Veloro shopping guidance is not legal advice. If you are unsure, compare samples in daylight and from inside the vehicle before buying a larger roll.
Helpful tint guides: Window Tint VLT Explained · Ceramic Tint vs Carbon Tint · Does Darker Tint Mean a Cooler Car? · Film Samples Guide · Complete Sample Book
Should I choose window tint by darkness?
No. Darkness is only one part of the decision. Compare VLT, local law, night visibility, glare, privacy, and heat-performance specs before choosing a tint direction.
Is ceramic tint always darker than carbon tint?
No. Ceramic and carbon describe film construction, while VLT describes visible darkness. A lighter ceramic tint may deliver stronger heat comfort than a darker basic film depending on the product specs.