GuideNiagara region

Window Film Types Explained: A Simple 2026 Guide

Architectural window film comes in a handful of main types: dyed, metalized, carbon, ceramic and spectrally selective film for heat and UV, plus security/safety film, privacy film (frosted and one-way) and decorative film. Each does one job best. Dyed and carbon films are budget picks, ceramic and spectrally selective films give the most heat rejection with a clear view, security film holds broken glass together, and privacy or decorative film changes how the glass looks. The right type depends on whether your goal is comfort, safety, privacy or style.

What are the main types of window film?

There are three families of architectural window film, sorted by the job they do: solar/heat-control film, security/safety film, and privacy or decorative film. Most homes and businesses start with solar film for comfort, then add security or privacy film where they need it. The window film association groups films by how they're built and what they're for, and it lists the same core constructions you'll see quoted: dyed, metallized, ceramic and nano films for architectural glass.

Solar-control films are ranked by two measured numbers, not marketing. Federal building guidance explains that real performance comes down to Total Solar Energy Rejected (TSER) and Visible Light Transmission (VLT), which tell you how much heat a film stops and how bright the glass stays. Here's a quick comparison of the common types before we break each one down:

Film typeHeat rejectionClarity / lookRelative costBest for
DyedLowDarkens glass, non-reflective$Budget glare and privacy
MetalizedHighSlightly mirrored/reflective$$Max heat, if signals don't matter
CarbonMediumMatte, fade-resistant$$Better-value glare and heat
CeramicHighestClear, neutral, signal-safe$$$Comfort with a clear view
Spectrally selective (low-E)HighNear-invisible, high light$$$Bright rooms, all-season
Security / safetyLow (unless solar-hybrid)Clear, thick$$$Holding broken glass together
Privacy (frosted/one-way)VariesFrosted or mirrored$$Blocking the view in
DecorativeLowPatterned, coloured, etched$$Style and light branding

Dyed, metalized and carbon film: the budget-to-mid options

These three are the older, more affordable heat and glare films. They work, but they trade off clarity, lifespan or signal.

  • Dyed film is the cheapest. A layer of dye absorbs some light and heat, which cuts glare and darkens the glass for a little privacy. The downside: it rejects the least heat and the dye fades over time, so it's the shortest-lived option.
  • Metalized film puts a thin metal layer in the film to reflect heat away. It blocks a lot of solar energy and resists fading, but that metal can interfere with cell phone, GPS and Wi-Fi signals and gives the glass a slightly mirrored look. It's a strong pick only if reflectivity and signal loss aren't dealbreakers.
  • Carbon film uses carbon particles instead of dye or metal. It gives a matte, non-reflective finish, better heat rejection than dyed film, and it won't fade the way dye does or block signals the way metal does. It's the middle-ground value option.

If you're weighing pure heat performance, see our [heat and solar-control film](/services/heat-solar-control-film) page for how these compare on real jobs.

Ceramic and spectrally selective film: the premium clear options

Ceramic and spectrally selective films are the top tier for comfort, because they reject a lot of heat while keeping the glass clear.

Ceramic film uses nano-ceramic particles instead of metal to stop infrared rays, the part of sunlight you feel as heat. Because there's no metal, the glass stays clear and neutral and your phone, Wi-Fi and GPS keep working normally. Quality solar film also protects your health and your home: the Skin Cancer Foundation notes that window film can block 99% or more of UVA and UVB rays, which also stops floors, furniture and art from fading.

Spectrally selective film is engineered to be picky about wavelengths. It lets most visible light through while rejecting UV and infrared, so rooms stay bright and the film is nearly invisible. Many of these are also low-emissivity (low-E) films. The U.S. Department of Energy explains that low-E films reflect heat and can cut winter heat loss as well as summer heat gain, which makes them a genuine all-season choice for Niagara's hot summers and cold winters. Both types cost more than dyed or carbon film, but they last longer and look the best. Explore options on our [residential window film](/services/residential-window-film) page.

Security and safety film: holding glass together

Security and safety film is a completely different job from solar film. Instead of blocking heat, it's a thick, tough layer that bonds to the glass so that when the pane breaks, the pieces stay stuck to the film instead of flying into the room. That slows down a break-in, protects people from flying glass in a storm or accident, and buys time.

This film is measured against impact and safety standards rather than TSER, and it's much thicker than a standard solar film. Some products are solar-security hybrids that add heat rejection on top, but a pure security film is chosen for protection, not comfort. It's a popular upgrade for ground-floor windows, storefronts, glass doors and schools. We cover the details, thicknesses and use cases on our [security and safety film](/services/security-safety-film) page. Note that heat rejection and warranty vary by the exact film chosen, so the right product depends on your building and goals.

Privacy and decorative film: changing how glass looks

Privacy and decorative films are about what people can see, not how much heat gets through.

  • Frosted (translucent) film gives glass an etched, foggy look that lets light through but blocks the view both ways, day and night. It's popular for bathrooms, office partitions, sidelights and meeting rooms.
  • One-way (reflective) privacy film uses a mirrored surface so people outside see a reflection while you see out during the day. Keep in mind it works on light difference: at night, when it's brighter inside than outside and your lights are on, the privacy effect reverses. So one-way film is best where daytime privacy matters most.
  • Decorative film covers patterned, coloured, gradient and custom-cut designs, plus frosted logos and stripes for storefronts and glass walls. It adds style or light branding without replacing the glass.

See our [privacy film](/services/privacy-film) page for frosted, one-way and decorative choices, and if you want the full comparison of security versus privacy, we break it down across the site.

How do I read window film specs and compare types?

Compare films on their rated numbers, not the sales pitch. Three specs do most of the work:

  • TSER (Total Solar Energy Rejected): the headline heat number. It combines UV, visible light and infrared into one figure. Higher is better, and it's the most honest measure of heat control.
  • VLT (Visible Light Transmission): how much light comes through. A higher VLT keeps rooms bright and the view clear; a lower VLT means a darker film.
  • UV rejection: the best solar films block 99% of UV, protecting both your skin and your furnishings from fading.

The good news is these numbers are independently checked. The National Fenestration Rating Council tests, certifies and labels window films for energy performance, so you can compare products on the same scale. The window film association also publishes the health and energy benefits that quality film delivers. A common mistake is shopping on "infrared rejected" alone, since infrared is only one slice of the sun's energy. Ask your installer for the rated spec sheet and compare on TSER first.

Which window film type is right for you, and what does it cost?

Start with your goal, then pick the family. Want a cooler, brighter home with a clear view? Go ceramic or spectrally selective. On a tighter budget? Carbon or dyed. Worried about break-ins or flying glass? Security film. Need to block the view into a bathroom or office? Privacy or decorative film. Many buildings mix types, using solar film on sun-facing glass and privacy film on ground-floor windows.

Cost depends on the film type, your total glass area, the number of windows and how easy they are to reach, so we don't publish a fixed price. As a general Canadian industry range (not our quote), installers report residential window film runs roughly $6 to $15 per square foot installed, with premium ceramic and security films sitting toward the top and one Canadian guide putting whole-home projects at a few thousand dollars depending on window count. You can ballpark your own project with our [window film cost estimator](/tools/window-film-cost-estimator).

100th Meridian Window Film is run by Joey and serves homes and businesses across the [Niagara region](/areas-served), with a 5.0-star rating across 28 Google reviews. Warranties are by film type: lifetime on residential and 15-year on commercial. The only way to get an exact number and the right film for each window is to have someone look at your actual glass. Call 905-359-7077 for a free, no-pressure quote.

FAQQuick answers

Common questions.

Still unsure? Call Joey at 905 359 7077.

01What are the different types of window film?
The main architectural window film types are dyed, metalized, carbon, ceramic and spectrally selective film for heat and UV control, plus security/safety film that holds broken glass together, privacy film (frosted and one-way) that blocks the view, and decorative film for style. Solar films are compared on TSER (heat rejection) and VLT (light), while security and privacy films are chosen for protection or the look, not heat.
02What is the difference between ceramic and metalized window film?
Ceramic film uses nano-ceramic particles to block heat, so the glass stays clear and your cell, Wi-Fi and GPS signals work normally. Metalized film uses a thin metal layer that reflects heat well and resists fading, but it looks slightly mirrored and can interfere with wireless signals. Ceramic costs more but is the better pick for most homes that want a clear view and no signal issues.
03Which window film blocks the most heat?
Ceramic and spectrally selective (low-E) films block the most heat while keeping the glass clear, and metalized film also rejects a lot of heat if you don't mind a reflective look and possible signal loss. Compare films on their TSER (Total Solar Energy Rejected) rating rather than infrared alone, since TSER combines UV, visible light and infrared into one honest number.
04Does privacy window film work at night?
Frosted (translucent) privacy film works both day and night because it diffuses light in both directions. One-way reflective film only gives privacy during the day, when it's brighter outside than inside; at night, with your interior lights on, people outside can see in. Choose frosted film for 24-hour privacy and one-way film where daytime privacy matters most.
05What type of window film is best for security?
Security or safety film is best for protection. It's a thick, tough layer that bonds to the glass so broken pieces stay attached to the film instead of flying loose, which slows down break-ins and protects people from flying glass in storms or accidents. It's measured against impact and safety standards rather than heat, and some hybrid products add solar heat rejection too.
06How much does window film cost in Canada?
As a general Canadian industry range and not our quote, residential window film runs roughly $6 to $15 per square foot installed, with premium ceramic, spectrally selective and security films toward the top of that range. Your actual price depends on the film type, total glass area, window count and access. For an exact number on your windows, request a free quote.
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