How Much Does It Cost to Tint a Car in Melbourne
Prices are right at the top. No scrolling. Real 2026 Melbourne market rates — plus the one Victorian tint law that catches most people out before they even book.
| Vehicle Type | Dyed Film | Carbon Film | Ceramic Film | Nano Ceramic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small Hatchback | $190–$270 | $270–$360 | $360–$460 | $460–$620 |
| Sedan | $210–$290 | $290–$400 | $380–$500 | $500–$680 |
| Medium SUV Most popular | $250–$330 | $330–$450 | $440–$560 | $560–$750 |
| Large SUV / 4WD | $290–$390 | $390–$520 | $520–$660 | $660–$880 |
| Ute / Van | $260–$360 | $360–$480 | $480–$620 | $620–$820 |
| People Mover (7 seat) | $320–$440 | $440–$560 | $560–$720 | $720–$960 |
All prices include full vehicle tinting — all side windows and rear glass. Front windscreen strip not included. GST included. Based on current Melbourne market rates May 2026.
Melbourne runs slightly more competitive on price than Sydney — more installers, more competition, slightly lower average overheads in outer suburban areas. If you are being quoted significantly below the bottom of any range, read the film quality section below before you commit. Cheap film in Melbourne's unpredictable climate — cold winters, hot summers, constant thermal cycling — degrades faster than almost anywhere else in Australia.
The Victorian Tint Law Most People Get Wrong
Before you book anything in Melbourne, there is one piece of Victorian tint law you absolutely must understand — because it is different from every other state in Australia and it catches people out constantly.
Front AND rear. No exceptions.
Every other Australian state allows 20% VLT on rear side windows and rear glass. Victoria does not. The minimum across every window is 35% — which is noticeably lighter than what most people picture when they think of tinted windows.
This catches Melbourne drivers out in two specific ways. First, people who move to Victoria from Queensland, NSW, WA or SA with 20% rear tint installed in their home state are technically driving an unroadworthy vehicle in Victoria the moment they register here. Second, tinters from interstate who do not know the Victorian rules will cheerfully install 20% rear tint — because that is legal everywhere else — and leave you with an illegal car and a potential defect notice.
Ask any Melbourne tinter: "What is the minimum legal VLT for rear windows in Victoria?" If they say 20% — find someone else. The correct answer is 35%. A tinter who does not know this is either new to the industry or has not been keeping up with compliance. Either way, you carry the legal risk on your registration.
Victoria is the strictest tinting state in Australia. The 35% minimum across all windows is non-negotiable. Any tinter offering darker rear tint in Melbourne without a medical exemption is putting your vehicle compliance at risk — not theirs.
— Alex Harry · 14 years professional tinting · 15,000+ cars · Window Tint SkoolCheap vs Quality Tint in Melbourne — What the Gap Actually Means
Melbourne's tinting market has a wide price spread. You will find quotes from $180 to over $900 for what appears to be the same job. The gap is almost always the film — and in Melbourne's climate specifically, the film choice matters more than in milder cities.
Melbourne's weather puts tint through its paces. Hot summers — particularly in the western and northern suburbs where temperatures regularly exceed 40 degrees — combined with cold winters and dramatic day-to-night temperature swings create a thermal cycling effect that degrades cheap dyed film faster here than almost anywhere else in Australia.
| Film Type | Price (sedan) | Melbourne Lifespan | Heat Rejection | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dyed | $210–$290 | 2–4 years | Poor | Not recommended for Melbourne |
| Carbon | $290–$400 | 5–7 years | Moderate | Solid entry point |
| Ceramic ⭐ | $380–$500 | 8–12 years | Excellent | Best value for Melbourne conditions |
| Nano Ceramic | $500–$680 | 10–15 years | Outstanding | Luxury / performance cars |
Dyed film in Melbourne is a particularly poor investment. The thermal cycling — hot days followed by cold nights — accelerates the degradation of the dye layer. Purple tint and bubbling within two to three years is common with budget dyed film installed in Melbourne. You then face a removal cost of $100 to $200 plus a new install. The cheap job ends up more expensive than the quality job would have been from day one.
For Melbourne conditions specifically, ceramic film is the clear recommendation. The additional heat rejection on a 40-degree day on the Monash Freeway or in a western suburbs car park is genuinely significant. Research from Melbourne installers suggests ceramic tint keeps cabin temperatures 8 to 10 degrees cooler than dyed film on the same vehicle on the same day — which translates directly to less air conditioning use and real fuel savings over time.
What Affects the Price in Melbourne Specifically
Mobile vs Shopfront
Melbourne has a strong mobile tinting market — partly because the city's sprawl makes shopfront trips inconvenient for outer suburban residents. Mobile tinters in Melbourne typically charge $40 to $80 less than shopfronts for equivalent film quality. The trade-off is workspace — you need a garage or covered carport. Melbourne's unpredictable weather makes outdoor installs risky; a sudden wind or dust change mid-install can contaminate the film before it seats properly.
Vehicle Complexity
A standard Toyota Camry or Mazda 3 is a straightforward job at the lower end of each range. Tesla Model 3, Model Y, European vehicles with complex door seals, panoramic sunroofs and vehicles with defroster-heavy rear glass all push toward the top end or slightly above. If your vehicle is unusual in any way — curved panoramic glass, wrap-around quarter windows, integrated rear spoiler — get a specific quote rather than assuming standard pricing applies.
Factory Tint Interaction
This is particularly relevant in Melbourne given the 35% minimum applies to all windows. Many modern vehicles — particularly popular SUVs like the Mazda CX-5, Toyota RAV4 and Hyundai Tucson — come with factory privacy glass on rear windows that already sits at 65 to 75% VLT. Adding a 35% film brings the combined total to approximately 23 to 26% — which is illegal in Victoria. A professional Melbourne tinter will always measure your existing glass with a VLT meter before recommending any film darkness. If they do not do this step, that is a red flag.
Should You DIY or Get It Done Professionally?
The DIY tinting market in Melbourne has grown in recent years — online film suppliers, YouTube tutorials and a cost-of-living squeeze have pushed more people to consider doing it themselves. The honest assessment: DIY tinting on a car you care about is a high-risk investment of time and money for anyone without proper training.
Film application on curved rear glass — particularly on the popular SUVs and hatchbacks that dominate Melbourne roads — requires heat shrinking technique, proper contamination management and precise cutting that simply does not come from watching a video. The most common outcome of an untrained DIY attempt is wasted film, visible finger marks, lifting edges and a car that looks worse than it did before.
The smarter path — particularly for anyone mechanically inclined or interested in building a skill — is structured training first. Learning to tint properly through a course means your first attempts are on practice vehicles, not your own car. By the time you tint your daily driver, you know what you are doing. And after that, you can tint family and friends' cars for free — then start charging Melbourne market rates to others.
Why Pay Melbourne Prices When You Can Charge Them?
Learn professional window tinting online in 4 weeks. Tint your own car correctly — then charge Melbourne rates to others. Full course covers cars, residential and commercial tinting.
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