Can I drive with a cracked windshield in Colorado?

Technically yes, but Colorado law (CRS 42-4-228) prohibits driving with any damage that impairs the driver's clear vision — a crack in your line of sight can result in a fix-it ticket. More critically, a cracked windshield weakens your vehicle's rollover protection by roughly 30%.

Updated June 2026

A chip or crack in the driver's direct field of view is a moving violation under state law. A chip outside the vision line is lower legal risk, but both create structural vulnerability. Traffic enforcement along Colorado's Front Range has increased for this violation in recent years.

Your windshield contributes roughly 30% of your vehicle's roof strength in a rollover. A cracked windshield — especially one with a crack that crosses the glass — can fail on impact, increasing the risk of roof crush. This structural argument matters more than the ticket risk.

Cracks grow fast in Colorado's climate. Daily temperature swings of 40°F or more cause glass to expand and contract repeatedly, widening hairline fractures. A two-inch chip in October can become a 12-inch crack by November. Chip repair is possible up to about 6 inches — after that, full replacement is the only option.

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