Updated April 2026

2026 Windshield Prices in Missouri: OEM vs Aftermarket

Quick Answer
$264 standard
$440 with ADAS
$79 chip repair
Windshield replacement in Missouri (2026). 41% below the national average. 100 glass shops. Check your insurance deductible before paying cash.

Windshield replacement in Missouri

Missouri’s I-70 corridor between KC and STL sees heavy truck traffic debris. Hail storms create seasonal glass damage spikes. Both KC and STL have competitive glass markets.

Windshield replacement costs in Missouri

Missouri Windshield Replacement
Budget
$264
Average
$440
High-End
$792
Standard sedanLuxury/ADAS
Service Cost in Missouri National Average Notes
Standard sedan (no ADAS) $264 $300-$500 Glass + labor, no calibration needed
Sedan with ADAS calibration $440 $500-$900 Glass + labor + camera calibration
SUV / truck $316-$528 $350-$1,000 Larger glass, higher labor
Luxury / Tesla $792+ $700-$1,500 Specialty glass, complex ADAS
Chip repair $79 $75-$150 Single chip, 20-30 minutes
How Missouri compares
Missouri$264
Midwest avg$275
National$450

ADAS calibration after windshield replacement in Missouri

Approximately 85% of vehicles built after 2017 require ADAS calibration after windshield replacement. In Missouri, calibration costs $150-$400 on top of the glass replacement. Always ask whether the quote includes calibration. A $264 quote without calibration is actually $464-$664 when you add it. Some Missouri shops include calibration in the all-in price while others list it separately.

Not all glass shops in Missouri can perform ADAS calibration in-house. Some subcontract it to a dealership or specialty shop, adding cost and time. Before booking, ask: “Do you perform ADAS calibration on-site for my vehicle make?” If the answer is no, get a quote from a shop that does.

Repair vs replace in Missouri

Small chips (quarter-sized or smaller) and short cracks (under 6 inches) can usually be repaired for $79 in Missouri. Repair takes 20-30 minutes and preserves the original glass and its factory seal. Cracks over 6 inches, edge cracks, cracks in the driver’s line of sight, or multiple cracks require full replacement.

Act fast on chips. In Missouri’s cold winters, chips spread rapidly as the glass contracts in freezing temperatures and expands in heated cabins. A $79 chip repair today prevents a $264-$440 replacement next week.

OEM vs aftermarket glass in Missouri

OEM glass (made by the original manufacturer) costs 30-50% more than aftermarket but matches factory specs exactly. OEE (Original Equipment Equivalent) glass offers similar quality at 10-25% less. Aftermarket glass meets federal safety standards but quality varies. For vehicles with ADAS, OEM or OEE glass calibrates more reliably. Most Missouri glass shops offer all three options. Ask which they recommend for your specific vehicle.

Insurance and windshield replacement in Missouri

Missouri does not mandate zero-deductible glass coverage. With comprehensive auto insurance, you pay your deductible (typically $250-$1,000). If the replacement cost is less than or close to your deductible, pay cash and avoid creating a claims record. If the replacement exceeds your deductible significantly (e.g., ADAS vehicle at $440+ versus a $500 deductible), file the claim. Windshield claims under comprehensive coverage typically do not increase your premium.

Windshield tip for Missouri

Missouri does not mandate zero-deductible coverage. The split KC/STL geography gives you two competitive markets. Missouri’s moderate pricing reflects the low overhead and strong competition.

Why windshield quality matters for safety in Missouri

Your windshield is not just glass. It contributes up to 60% of the cabin’s structural strength in a rollover and serves as the backstop for passenger-side airbag deployment. A poorly installed windshield can separate from the frame during a rollover, collapsing the roof onto occupants. A wrong-grade windshield may not withstand the force of an airbag deploying against it, allowing the airbag to blow through the opening instead of protecting the passenger.

This is why the cheapest quote is not always the smartest choice in Missouri or anywhere else. The glass itself accounts for 40-60% of the total cost. The remaining 40-60% is labor, adhesive, and calibration. Cutting costs on adhesive quality or installation technique creates invisible risks that only manifest during a collision.

Mobile vs in-shop replacement in Missouri

Mobile service (technician comes to your home or office) is available from Safelite and many local Missouri glass shops. It is the most convenient option and quality is comparable to in-shop for standard replacements. The limitation: ADAS static calibration requires specialized equipment that cannot be brought to your driveway. If your vehicle needs static calibration, you will need to bring it to a shop afterward, which negates some of the mobile convenience.

In-shop service provides a controlled environment (clean, temperature-controlled, out of wind and dust). This is preferable for vehicles with complex ADAS systems, heads-up displays, rain sensors, or acoustic windshields. The technician has immediate access to all calibration equipment. For standard vehicles without ADAS, mobile and in-shop quality is equivalent.

In Missouri’s cold winters, in-shop replacement is strongly recommended because the urethane adhesive cures more slowly in cold temperatures. Mobile replacements done outdoors in below-freezing conditions may require extended safe-drive-away times (4-6 hours vs 1-2 hours).

How to choose a glass shop in Missouri

Missouri has 100 glass shops, giving you reasonable options in Kansas City but fewer in rural areas. Ask every shop: is ADAS calibration included or extra? What glass grade? What warranty? AGSC certification indicates the shop follows the Auto Glass Replacement Safety Standard, which covers adhesive quality, installation technique, and safe drive-away time.

Red flags to watch for: Quotes that do not mention ADAS calibration (they may be hiding the charge or planning to skip it). Shops that cannot name the glass manufacturer or grade. Extremely low quotes that seem too good to be true (may use inferior adhesive or skip proper preparation). Shops that pressure you to commit immediately without allowing quote comparison.

Windshield replacement for the Ford F-150 in Missouri

The most popular vehicle in Missouri is the Ford F-150. Truck and SUV windshields are larger than sedan windshields, which means more glass and slightly higher costs. A standard windshield replacement on a Ford F-150 in Missouri costs $303-$528 depending on ADAS requirements. Truck windshields are also more susceptible to rock chip damage because of the higher hood profile that does not deflect debris as effectively as lower sedan profiles.

How Missouri’s climate affects windshield damage

Missouri’s freeze-thaw cycle is the primary driver of chip-to-crack propagation. Water seeps into a chip, freezes overnight (expanding and widening the damage), then thaws during the day. This cycle can turn a $75-$100 chip repair into a $300-$500 replacement within a single cold snap. Repair chips before winter arrives. If a chip occurs during winter, apply a windshield repair kit ($10-$15 from any auto parts store) as a temporary seal until you can get to a shop.

Insurance vs cash for windshield replacement in Missouri

Use insurance when: The total cost (glass + calibration) exceeds your deductible by $200+. Example: $440 replacement with a $250 deductible means you pay $250 and insurance covers $190. Worth filing.

Pay cash when: The total cost is less than or within $100 of your deductible. Example: $264 replacement with a $500 deductible means insurance covers nothing. Pay cash and keep your claims record clean. Also pay cash if you have filed multiple comprehensive claims recently (some insurers track claim frequency).

Key fact: Windshield claims filed under comprehensive coverage typically do not increase your premium. They are not considered at-fault incidents. However, filing many claims in a short period may draw insurer attention.

What to expect during replacement in Missouri

Windshield replacement takes 60-90 minutes for installation. The technician removes the old glass, preps the frame, applies urethane adhesive, sets the new glass, and verifies the seal. ADAS calibration adds 30-90 minutes. After completion, the adhesive needs 1-2 hours to reach safe drive-away strength in moderate temperatures. In Missouri’s cold winters, safe drive-away time extends to 4-6 hours. Schedule winter replacements at shops with heated bays for faster curing.

During the 24-48 hour full cure period: do not slam doors, avoid car washes, leave a window slightly cracked to prevent pressure buildup, and avoid high-speed driving on rough roads.

How Missouri compares to neighboring states

State Standard Sedan With ADAS Zero-Deductible?
Iowa $261 $435 No
Illinois $312 $520 No
Kentucky $261 $435 Yes
Tennessee $267 $445 No
Arkansas $252 $420 No
Compare Windshield Replacement Quotes in Missouri
Get free estimates from rated providers near you. Takes 2 minutes.

Get Free Quotes →

National guide: Windshield Replacement Cost – complete 2026 guide

Frequently asked questions about windshield replacement in Missouri

A standard windshield replacement in Missouri costs $264 for a sedan without ADAS. With ADAS calibration, the total is $440. Luxury vehicles cost $792+. Small chip repairs cost $79.

Yes, if you have comprehensive coverage. Missouri does not mandate zero-deductible glass, so you pay your deductible. If the replacement costs less than your deductible, pay cash.

Missouri has approximately 100 auto glass shops. Kansas City has the most options. Mobile services are available in most metro areas.

If your vehicle was built after 2017 and has a forward-facing camera behind the windshield, yes. Approximately 85% of modern vehicles require ADAS calibration after windshield replacement. In Missouri, calibration costs $150-$400. Skipping calibration means your safety systems may malfunction.

How we calculate these costs: All figures represent 2025-2026 market rates based on industry surveys, provider rate sheets, and regional cost-of-living data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Windshield replacement costs in Missouri prices are updated quarterly.


📅 Last updated: April 18, 2026