Windshield replacement cost: Kansas City vs Kansas City
Same metro, two states. Coverage and shop selection differ by side of the state line. Kansas City pricing tends to run roughly 5% higher than Kansas City for the same vehicle, mostly driven by vehicle mix and shop density.
MO · Jackson County
Kansas City
Population: 508,394
- • Largest city in the metro and primary commute hub
- • I-70 and I-35 corridors produce a high volume of rock-chip damage
- • Mix of older and newer vehicles — ADAS calibration needs vary
KS · Wyandotte County
Kansas City
Population: 156,607
- • Wyandotte County seat, west of the state line
- • Heavy industrial and freight traffic on I-635 and I-70
- • Part of the KC metro service area
What actually differs between these cities
Same metro, two states. Coverage and shop selection differ by side of the state line. For windshield replacement specifically, three factors drive most of the variance you'll see between Kansas City and Kansas City:
- Vehicle mix. Some KC-metro cities skew newer/luxury (Leawood, Lee's Summit); others have an older average fleet (Independence, Kansas City KS). Older vehicles without ADAS calibration are notably cheaper to replace.
- Shop density. The larger the city, the more competing shops, the tighter the pricing. Smaller cities sometimes have fewer mobile-service options, which can add to the bill.
- Insurance mix. Higher-income areas tend to have more comprehensive coverage with $0-deductible glass riders, which removes price as a customer-side concern entirely.
Run the estimator with your specific ZIP — it routes to the right local shop and calculates pricing for your exact vehicle. The intra-city variance you'll experience is typically smaller than the city-to-city variance, so your individual quote depends much more on your vehicle than your address.
See also: Kansas City pricing page, Kansas City pricing page, and the general cost guide.
Pricing tiers in either city
Regardless of which side of the metro you're on, the same tier system applies. An economy vehicle (Nissan Versa, Mitsubishi Mirage) runs around $250-$350. A standard vehicle (Toyota Camry, Honda Civic, Ford F-150) typically lands at $280-$480. Premium SUVs and trucks (Jeep Grand Cherokee, GMC Sierra) run $440-$700. Luxury vehicles (BMW 3 Series, Lexus RX, Audi Q5) start around $700 and reach $1,100. Exotic and EV (Tesla Model S, Range Rover, Porsche) regularly clear $1,500.
Add ADAS calibration ($150-$300) if your vehicle is 2018 or newer with a forward-facing camera. Add $45 for mobile service. Subtract your insurance deductible (or zero, with a glass-coverage rider). The vehicle-level differences swamp any city-level differences in pricing nine times out of ten — but the small intra-metro variance is real and reflected in our local price index above.