Homeowners with west-facing rooms that overheat in summer or furniture fading from UV exposure want to know heat rejection percentages, visible light transmission, and whether the film will affect their view. A website with film specs and sample photos earns the quote call. Free mockup, no commitment.

For Window Film in KC

Web Design for Window Film & Tinting Companies in Kansas City

Window film customers are motivated by one of three problems: rooms that overheat in the Kansas City summer despite the AC running constantly, furniture and flooring fading from UV exposure through large windows, or glare making screens and televisions unusable in certain rooms during parts of the day. The product decision involves understanding a few key specs: total solar energy rejected (TSER) measures how much heat the film blocks and ranges from 30% on light films to 80% on darker ceramic options, visible light transmission (VLT) tells the customer how much their view and natural light will change, and UV rejection — most quality films reject 99% of UV regardless of the tint level, which is what prevents fading. Film brands that customers research include 3M, LLumar, Vista, Huper Optik, and Solar Gard — the ceramic and nano-ceramic technology films from these brands offer high heat rejection with lighter appearance and no signal interference. Decorative and privacy films are a separate category for bathrooms and entry glass. Commercial window film for offices and storefronts involves larger scope, potential utility rebates, and requires a commercial liability insurance certificate. Security film that holds glass together on impact is a growing residential and commercial category. A window film website that explains the spec numbers, shows the brands you carry, and includes before-and-after room temperature comparisons earns the homeowner who has been living with a hot room for three summers.

What homeowners research before choosing window film

  • Heat rejection — TSER percentage, what it means for room temperature, how ceramic differs from dyed film
  • Visible light — VLT percentage, how dark the tint looks from inside and outside, view impact
  • UV blocking — 99% UV rejection regardless of shade, what it prevents, fading protection for furniture
  • Film brands — 3M, LLumar, Vista, Huper Optik — nano-ceramic vs. dyed vs. metalized technology
  • Warranty — manufacturer warranty vs. installer warranty, bubble and delamination coverage

What your window film website would include

  • Film specs explained — TSER, VLT, UV rejection — what each number means for your home
  • Brand lineup — 3M, LLumar, Vista — ceramic and nano-ceramic products, performance tiers
  • Residential applications — heat control, UV protection, glare reduction, privacy film, decorative
  • Commercial film — office buildings, storefronts, utility rebate eligibility, insurance documentation
  • Security film — glass retention on impact, applications, thickness options
  • Quote form with window count, problem to solve (heat/glare/UV/privacy), preferred darkness, timeline

What clients say

“Window film is a spec product — customers research TSER percentages and brand comparisons before they ever call anyone. I was losing those customers to bigger companies because I had no online presence to be part of the research phase. The new site explaining what the spec numbers actually mean, showing our 3M and LLumar lineup, and including a before-and-after of a west-facing room temperature brought in better leads immediately. Customers arrived already knowing what film they wanted and asking for a quote on ceramic, not just the cheapest tint.”

— A. Bergmann, window film installer, Leawood, KS

Simple pricing

A window film site with film specs, brands, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with commercial section, security film, and application guide is $425–$850. One whole-house residential job covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.

Ready to get started?

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(816) 520-5652