andrew K.
Verified on Trustpilot5 Apr 2024
quick easey good price and very friendly
quick easey good price and very friendly
Instant quote across 35 Volkswagen Transporter variants in under 60 seconds, fitted by trusted local fitters — booked in under two minutes.
Make
Volkswagen
Model
Transporter
No card required · Free to quote
Pricing varies based on generation, rear-door configuration, and glass specification. Single-door and twin-door variants require different glass shapes; vehicles with integrated brake lights or heating elements carry higher calibration and sourcing costs. Older Transporters typically cost less than newer models, whilst solar-control or acoustic-equipped variants command a premium.
| Year | Price range | Variants | Quote |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2026 |
| 2025 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2025 |
| 2024 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2024 |
| 2023 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2023 |
| 2022 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2022 |
| 2021 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2021 |
| 2020 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2020 |
| 2019 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2019 |
| 2018 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2018 |
| 2017 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2017 |
| 2016 | £265 — £420 | 15 variants | Price my 2016 |
| 2015 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2015 |
| 2014 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2014 |
| 2013 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2013 |
| 2012 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2012 |
| 2011 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2011 |
| 2010 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2010 |
| 2009 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2009 |
| 2008 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2008 |
| 2007 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2007 |
| 2006 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2006 |
| 2005 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2005 |
| 2004 | £265 — £401 | 12 variants | Price my 2004 |
| 2003 | £249 — £571 | 31 variants | Price my 2003 |
| 2002 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 2002 |
| 2001 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 2001 |
| 2000 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 2000 |
| 1999 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 1999 |
| 1998 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 1998 |
| 1997 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 1997 |
| 1996 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 1996 |
| 1995 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 1995 |
| 1994 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 1994 |
| 1993 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 1993 |
| 1992 | £249 — £571 | 20 variants | Price my 1992 |
| 1991 | £249 — £571 | 21 variants | Price my 1991 |
| 1990 | £373 — £471 | 3 variants | Price my 1990 |
| 1989 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1989 |
| 1988 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1988 |
| 1987 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1987 |
| 1986 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1986 |
| 1985 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1985 |
| 1984 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1984 |
| 1983 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1983 |
| 1982 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1982 |
| 1981 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1981 |
| 1980 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1980 |
| 1979 | £405 — £405 | 1 variant | Price my 1979 |
The displayed range is an indicator — the final price is produced by the quote form after you confirm your variant. Older Transporters can still be booked.
Showing 2 reviews from verified Volkswagen Transporter owners. Across the whole of UK Car Glass, 4.82/5 from 1,422 Trustpilot reviews.
Booking your Transporter rear window through UKCG is straightforward — our guided quote identifies your exact variant, then matches you with a local fitter.
Answer a quick quiz about your Transporter's configuration (generation, rear-door layout, and any integrated features like heating or brake lights).
Receive an instant quote based on your specific variant.
Choose your fitting date and location — mobile at your address or at a workshop nearby.
A technician from our network arrives with your matched rear-window glass and fits it in typically 30–60 minutes of active work.
Your fitter will remove accessible broken glass during the fit, though we recommend a professional valet afterwards for thorough interior detailing — shards can lodge in places our technicians can't reach on the day.
You're covered by a two-year warranty on the workmanship and glass quality.
All fitted through vetted specialists on our network, backed by Trustpilot reviews and a two-year warranty.
Most Transporter rear-window replacements are fitted mobile at your address — we match you with a technician who arrives with your glass and completes the job on-site. Workshop fitting is available if you prefer and may be recommended during heavy rain or if your location lacks suitable parking.
Since the Transporter is a commercial vehicle and our BrandKnowledge research did not identify camera-based ADAS systems on this model, calibration requirements are minimal, meaning mobile fitting remains the default for the vast majority of bookings.
We confirm the specific answer for your vehicle when you book.
Tap a feature to see what it is, how to spot it on your car, and how it affects glass replacement. We confirm the exact match for your vehicle when you book.
Green tint reduces glare and improves visual comfort by filtering certain light wavelengths.
Green tint is a light-filtering coating applied to the glass during manufacture. It absorbs and reduces transmission of certain wavelengths of light, primarily to cut glare from sunlight and reflections. The tint is subtle — often barely visible to the naked eye — but measurably improves visual comfort during prolonged driving, particularly in bright conditions. It's a factory specification chosen by the vehicle manufacturer to balance daylight comfort with interior visibility and aesthetic consistency across all glass in the vehicle.
The easiest way to check is to roll your side window halfway down and hold a piece of white paper behind it. Look carefully for a tint cast — green tint will appear as a subtle green hue compared to clear glass. Your windscreen will have the same tint as your side windows. You can also ask your vehicle's dealership or service centre — they'll have the original specification on file.
Green-tinted replacement glass must match the original tint specification to maintain visual consistency across all windows and preserve the vehicle's interior aesthetics. Aftermarket OE-equivalent (OEE) green-tinted glass is widely available, though some vehicles may require original equipment (OEM) dealership glass if the tint specification is proprietary. Tint does not affect calibration, cure time, or installation procedure — it's a cosmetic and functional specification only.
Clear windscreen glass has no tint; most cars have a slight tint as standard.
A clear windscreen contains no added tint layer. Most modern windscreens incorporate a subtle tint (typically blue, green, grey or bronze) as standard to reduce glare, provide UV protection, and improve cabin comfort. A genuinely clear windscreen is the absence of this tint. Clear glass is less common than tinted variants and is sometimes specified for aesthetic or operational reasons, though the tint difference is usually imperceptible to the naked eye.
Lower your side window halfway and hold a white piece of paper behind it. If you see a noticeable colour cast (blue, green, grey or bronze) in the side glass, your windscreen has the same tint. If the side glass appears colourless, your windscreen is likely clear. You can also ask your vehicle's dealership or service centre to confirm the windscreen specification in your service records.
Clear windscreen replacement uses the same installation process as any other windscreen. No special calibration or extended cure time applies. Sourcing is straightforward — clear glass is widely available as an aftermarket replacement. Installation time and drive-away restrictions follow standard windscreen replacement timings. If your vehicle has ADAS features (forward-facing camera or radar), calibration may be required after replacement depending on your specific vehicle; we confirm this when we look up your car details.
Solar control glass absorbs infrared rays to reduce heat and improve cabin comfort.
Solar control is a coating applied to the windscreen that absorbs the sun's infrared radiation rather than allowing it to pass through into the cabin. This reduces solar heat gain, helping to keep the interior cooler and more comfortable, particularly in warm weather or direct sunlight. The coating is transparent to visible light, so it doesn't darken the windscreen or affect visibility. It's a passive thermal management feature that works continuously whenever the sun is shining on the glass.
Check your vehicle's specification sheet or contact your dealership service centre to confirm whether solar control glass is fitted. Some manufacturers list it as 'solar control windscreen', 'heat-reflective glass', or 'thermal management glass'. It's a factory-fitted feature and won't be visibly obvious from outside the car — the coating is integral to the glass itself.
Solar control glass is a factory-fitted specification. When replacing the windscreen, a solar control variant must be sourced to match the original. This is a standard glass type with no special fitting implications or calibration requirements. Cure and drive-away times follow normal windscreen bonding procedures. Confirm with your fitter that the replacement glass includes solar control to maintain the original thermal performance.
Left side window — choose this if your car has a left-side door window that needs replacing.
The left side window is the glass panel in the door on the driver's side of the vehicle (or front passenger side in right-hand-drive markets where the driver sits on the right). This is an operable window — it rolls up and down using the window mechanism in the door. Unlike the windscreen or rear window, side windows are typically toughened glass, which means they shatter into small fragments if broken rather than cracking into large shards. Replacing a left side window is a straightforward job that doesn't involve adhesive bonding.
Look at the driver's side of your car — the left side window is the glass panel in the front-left door that you can wind down. If this glass is cracked, chipped, or missing, you need a left side window replacement. You can also check your vehicle's documentation or ask your dealer's service centre to confirm which positions are affected if you're unsure.
Left side window replacement is typically faster than windscreen work because there is no adhesive bonding and no calibration involved. The glass is held in place by clips, seals, and the door mechanism. However, if the window has shattered, glass fragments may lodge in hard-to-reach areas inside the door or trim. We recommend a professional interior valet afterwards to ensure all shards are thoroughly removed from seat mechanisms, seatbelts, and door channels.
A brake light integrated into the rear window glass itself, requiring a matching replacement to reconnect the original lighting circuit.
A brake light integrated into the rear window glass is a lighting element built directly into the glass panel during manufacturing. Rather than using a separate lamp cluster mounted to the vehicle body, the light circuit is routed through conductive elements — typically a silkscreen pattern, wire network, or bracket assembly — embedded in or bonded to the glass itself. When you brake, this integrated light illuminates to warn following traffic. It combines functionality with design integration, reducing the number of separate components on the rear of the vehicle.
Check your vehicle's rear window for a visible pattern of fine lines or wires running across the glass, usually near the top edge or spanning the upper portion. Look at your vehicle's manual or contact your dealer's service centre — they can confirm whether your rear window carries an integrated brake light. If you see a separate brake-light cluster mounted to the bodywork instead, your vehicle does not have this feature.
The replacement rear window must carry the identical integrated brake-light pattern so the original lighting circuit reconnects without modification. The conductive elements — whether silkscreen, wiring, or bracket fittings — must align precisely with the vehicle's electrical connections. Using a standard rear window without this pattern would disable the brake light. We source the correct OE-specification glass to ensure a seamless fit and restore full functionality.
Your vehicle has two rear doors, so a four-door configuration.
This attribute identifies whether your vehicle is a four-door or two-door model. Four-door cars have a rear door on both the driver and passenger sides; two-door cars have only front doors. This classification affects which glass panels are present in your vehicle — four-door models include rear side windows and rear doors, whilst two-door models do not. Knowing your door configuration helps us identify the correct glass type and position for your windscreen or window replacement.
Count the doors on your vehicle. If you can open a door behind the front passenger and driver seats on both sides, you have a four-door (right) configuration. If only the front doors open, you have a two-door model. You can also check your vehicle's documentation or ask your dealer or service centre — they'll confirm the exact door count in seconds.
Four-door models have rear side windows and rear doors that may require replacement. This affects the range of glass panels we can supply and fit for you. All standard glass types in four-door cars — windscreen, rear window, front and rear side windows — are within our service scope and follow the same replacement and fitting process as two-door variants. The door configuration itself does not alter calibration or cure-time procedures.
Dark green tint on rear and side windows is a factory colour choice, not a safety or performance feature.
Dark green is a factory tint applied to the glass during manufacture. It's purely aesthetic — a colour variant chosen by the vehicle designer to complement the body paint and interior trim. Unlike some tints that reduce solar heat or glare, dark green is decorative. Most vehicles have standard or light green glass; dark green is less common and typically found on specific trim levels or model years.
Look at your rear and side windows from outside the car in daylight. If they appear noticeably darker or more saturated green than the front windscreen, you likely have dark green glass. You can also check your vehicle's specification sheet from the dealer or original documentation — tint colour is sometimes listed under 'glass' or 'exterior finishes'. If uncertain, ask your local dealership service centre.
Dark green replacement glass must match the original tint colour exactly — a standard or light green windscreen will look visibly mismatched against dark green rear windows. Sourcing the correct variant can take slightly longer than standard glass, as it's less common. No calibration is involved with tinted glass itself. Fitting and cure time are unaffected.
A rear window without heating elements — selected when the model's standard specification includes a heated rear glass option.
An unheated rear window is a variant specification where the rear glass does not include integrated electric heating wires. Many vehicle models offer heated rear glass as standard or as an option to demist the window quickly in cold or wet conditions. An unheated rear window omits this feature entirely. It is a cost-conscious choice and remains fully functional for visibility and weather protection — demisting simply takes longer and relies on the vehicle's cabin heating system alone.
Check your vehicle's specification sheet or service documentation. If your model range lists 'heated rear window' or 'rear demister' as a standard or optional feature and your car does not have it, you have an unheated variant. You can also look at the rear window itself — a heated rear window shows a faint pattern of horizontal heating wires when you look closely at the glass. An unheated window appears completely clear with no wire pattern visible.
Replacement glass must match your original specification. If your vehicle has an unheated rear window, the replacement must also be unheated — you cannot fit a heated variant without additional wiring and control-module work, which falls outside standard glass replacement scope. Conversely, if heated glass is standard for your model and you wish to stay unheated, confirm this choice at booking. No calibration is involved with rear-window replacement.
Factory-fitted brackets and mounts bonded to the glass, pre-assembled and ready to fit without sub-assembly.
Other Hardware refers to factory-fitted brackets, mounts, connectors, or trim pieces bonded permanently to the windscreen or other glass during manufacturing. These are integral to the vehicle's design but do not activate or control a specific feature — they simply secure or position components like sensors, trim strips, or mounting points. Unlike feature-specific hardware, these items are passive structural elements. A replacement carrying Other Hardware arrives pre-bonded and ready to install without additional assembly or modification.
Check your vehicle documentation or ask your dealership service centre whether your windscreen or glass panel carries factory-bonded brackets or mounts. Visual inspection may reveal trim strips, sensor housings, or antenna mounts bonded to the edges or interior surface of the glass. Your original invoice or parts list will specify if Other Hardware is present.
Replacement glass carrying Other Hardware must be sourced as a complete assembly — the brackets and mounts come pre-bonded from the supplier and cannot be transferred from the old glass. Installation is straightforward: the fitter removes the old glass and fits the replacement with its hardware already in place. No additional sub-assembly, bonding, or recalibration of the hardware itself is required. Fitting time is unaffected.
Dark Blue tint is factory-applied pigmentation on the rear half of many vehicles for privacy and heat reduction.
Dark Blue (or Privacy Glass) is a factory tint applied during manufacturing through a deep-dipping process. Automotive-grade pigment is bonded into the inner surface of the glass itself, creating a permanent dark blue or grey appearance. This differs from aftermarket film applied after purchase. The tint reduces heat transmission into the vehicle, improves cabin privacy, and is standard on rear door windows and rear windows on many new vehicles. It serves both aesthetic and functional purposes without affecting the glass's structural properties.
Look at your rear door windows and rear window. If they appear noticeably darker than the front windscreen and side windows, you have factory tint. You can also check your vehicle's specification sheet or ask your dealership service centre — they'll confirm whether Privacy Glass was factory-fitted to your model and year. The tint will be consistent across the glass and cannot be peeled off like a film.
Dark Blue tint is a visual characteristic only and does not affect glass replacement procedures, calibration, or fitting time. When we replace a tinted window, we source a replacement with matching factory tint to maintain the vehicle's original appearance and heat-rejection properties. Tinted glass is standard stock for most vehicles; availability is not typically a concern. The fitting process is identical to non-tinted glass.
Privacy glass is a darker tint applied to rear and side windows for passenger comfort and security.
Privacy glass is a factory-applied dark tint coating on the rear window and side windows (or a selection of them) to reduce visibility into the vehicle's interior. It serves two purposes: it helps protect passengers and cargo from the sun, and it provides visual security by obscuring the view of occupants and valuables from outside. The tint is integral to the glass itself — either applied during manufacture or as a permanent coating — and is not the same as an aftermarket film.
Look at the rear window and rear side windows from outside the vehicle. If they appear noticeably darker than the windscreen and front side windows, the car has privacy glass. Check your vehicle documentation (handbook or service history) under 'glass specifications' or 'optional equipment', or ask your dealership service centre — they can confirm which windows have the tint applied.
Privacy glass must be replaced with OEM (original equipment manufacturer) glass of the same tint specification. Aftermarket alternatives are available but may not match the original colour or darkness exactly. The replacement is a straightforward swap with no calibration implications. Availability is standard for mainstream models; lead time may be slightly longer for less common variants or older vehicles.
The Volkswagen Transporter has been in continuous production since 1979, evolving through multiple generations as one of Europe's most recognisable commercial vehicles. Rear windows across the range typically feature toughened glass, with many variants carrying integrated heating elements or brake-light circuits.
Variation exists across generations and trim levels — some models include green or dark-tinted rear glass, whilst others feature solar-control coatings to reduce cabin heat. The diverse cabin configurations (single rear door, double rear doors, or fixed side panels) mean rear-window geometry and fitment hardware differ significantly between variants.
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