Ceramic Auto Tint Installer
Next Level Tinting
Next Level Tinting appears in this directory for ceramic film and residential window film and shows enough public material to evaluate before driving in.
What the shop and its customers describe
A good first visit is half diagnosis and half estimate — if a provider commits to numbers before walking the job, treat that as a warning sign. Next Level Tinting shows up in Fargo, ND as a window tinting candidate worth scoping before booking. The notes below separate public-source documentation from what still needs to come from the dispatch line. Public-source signals for this window-tinting listing surface 2 cues: ceramic tint, residential tint. Use them as the anchor of the dispatch conversation, not as a guarantee of crew skill. Best-fit use cases (2): Automotive ceramic tint and heat rejection; Residential privacy and energy film. If your situation does not fit, ask whether they actually take that kind of job before booking. Before booking, ask the provider which exact services they handle in-house versus sub out, what their average response time is, and whether they offer a written estimate before any work starts. Vague answers usually mean overflow staff who do not know the company's actual practices.
What we have, where it came from
- Address
- 1200 55th St NE #6, Fargo, ND 58102, United States
- Phone
- +1 701-429-8773
- Website
- nextleveltintingnd.com/
- Source depth
- 79 of 100
- Indexable
- Standalone profile
Tint rules in ND — and why the AS-1 line is universal
ND sits in the Permissive band. North Dakota allows 50 % front-side and any darkness behind the driver.
Across all fifty states, the only zone of the windshield where any non-reflective tint is legal is the strip above the AS-1 line — usually four to five inches at the top, marked on factory glass with a small "AS-1" etching. Below that line, windshield tint is not street-legal anywhere in the United States, regardless of state side-glass rules. A reputable shop will measure from the AS-1 line down before laying film, not from the top of the glass.
Laws change. Confirm the most recent VLT minimum directly with the shop and, when in doubt, with the most recent text of your state's vehicle code.
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Six questions worth asking before the deposit
- Ask for the IRR and TSER numbers on the spec sheet.Heat rejection at a given VLT comes from infrared rejection (IRR) and total solar energy rejected (TSER). The shop's top ceramic line will publish both numbers. A dyed film and a top ceramic at the same VLT can differ by 30 percentage points on TSER.
- Confirm the shop measures front-window VLT before install.A shop that measures with a photometer before installation is the one most likely to keep you legal in your state. If they ask you to sign that compliance is on the customer, that's a quiet yellow flag. Tint stops are 50 % on the front in ND.
- Ask the cure time and what to do during it.Newly installed film cures for 3 to 5 days in summer, 7 to 10 in winter. During cure, do not roll windows down — the film can shift and the squeegee margins can lift. Light hazing or small water bubbles in this window are normal and clear up; bubbles after 30 days are not.
- Verify the AS-1 line on your windshield before booking strip tint.Across all 50 states, the only zone of the windshield where any tint is legal is above the AS-1 line — usually marked with a small "AS-1" etching at the top of factory glass. Below the AS-1 line, no tint is street-legal anywhere in the U.S., regardless of your state's VLT rule on side glass.
- Pull a window seal vs. cut on glass — ask what the shop does.Cut-on-glass installs save 15 minutes but risk scoring the rubber seal with a razor. The cleaner method pulls the rear-side or rear-glass window down a half-inch so the cut happens off-glass. It costs the shop time, not money — confirm during the quote.
About this profile. Built from Next Level Tinting's public website and Google Maps page. Source depth 79 of 100. No referral fees, no advertorial. Tell us if anything is wrong and we'll fix it.