GEORGIA STATE PATROL
NEWS RELEASE
May 6, 2005
HOUSE BILL RESTORES GEORGIA’S WINDOW
TINT LAW
(ATLANTA) - Governor Sonny Perdue has
signed House Bill 20 which reinstates Georgia's window
tint law on motor vehicles. Colonel Bill Hitchens,
commander of the Georgia State Patrol, said the law became
effective Monday, May 2, with the signature of Governor
Perdue. The Georgia State Patrol will be issuing
educational warnings during the month of May. He said
troopers will begin issuing citations on June 1.
Georgia's window tinting law was struck
down as unconstitutional last year because the provisions
applied only to vehicles registered in Georgia. "House
Bill 20 corrected the language so the law applies to all
vehicles, whether registered in Georgia or another state,"
Colonel Hitchens said. "The window tint law is a safety
issue, not only for law enforcement officers as they
approach a vehicle during a traffic stop, but also for
drivers so they can better see approaching vehicles while
they drive."
The law allows for the same light
transmission standards as the previous law.
It is now illegal
for window tinting material to be applied to the rear,
side and door windows of motor vehicles that does not
allow for more than 32 percent of light transmission
(plus or minus three percent). It is also illegal for
materials to be applied to the windows that increase the
level of light reflected to more than 20 percent.
Additionally, except for the top six inches of the
windshield, no material or glazing can be applied that
would reduce the light transmission through the
windshield.
Among the
exemptions to the window tint law are: adjustable
sun visors not attached to the glass; signs or stickers
displayed in a seven-inch square in the lower corner of
the passenger side of the windshield or in a five-inch
square in the lower corner of the driver's side of the
windshield; law
enforcement vehicles; and any federal, state or
local sticker or certificate which is required by law to
be placed on any windshield or window.
Also exempted
under the law are the rear windshields and side windows,
except the windows to the left and right of the driver, on
multipurpose passengers vehicles; school buses and
buses used for public transportation; buses and vans owned
or leased by any religious or non-profit organization;
limousines; and any other vehicle where the windows or
windshields have been tinted or darkened before factory
delivery or permitted by federal law or regulation.
Violation of the law by either driving
a vehicle with illegal window tint or installing the
illegal material is a misdemeanor and punishable by a fine
up to $1,000 and/or up to 12 months imprisonment.
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