Driving a car with tinted windows is dangerous, which is why it can put us face to face with the letter of the law.
The low temperatures we now observe mainly during the winter bring with them fog on car windows, especially in the morning hours.
Even if you're in a hurry to get started, the best thing you can do is wait until your car windows are damp first and then get started.
Foggy windows significantly limit visibility (not only from the windshield but also around the perimeter of the car) It greatly hinders perception. This could easily create dangerous situations for you and other road users.
Because of the dangers of driving a car with tinted windows, doing so could get you in trouble even with the letter of the law and get you and your wallet in trouble in a traffic stop.
There is no special provision in the Road Traffic Law for driving a car with tinted windows. However, Article 13 of the KOK Act refers to the necessary mental capacity that a driver must have, and the appropriate state in which he should be, but that He must be able to control his vehicle appropriately.
With fogging on the car's windows – not necessarily just the windshield – the driver's ability to control the car is reduced. And with humidity – or even ice on the windows – visibility in all directions is also limited Thus reducing the control that the driver exercises over the carHis sensory organs – his eyes in this case – do not inform him of all the “data” of the surrounding space in which he moves.
Therefore, driving with foggy windows is a dangerous act, and if the traffic police officers judged it so during the examination, then KOK stipulates the immediate removal of the driver's license as well as an administrative fine of 300 euros.
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