Estimated total
Honda windshield replacement cost in Kansas City, MO
Typical Honda windshield replacement in Kansas City, MO runs $300 – $700 all-in. The lower end is a sedan without ADAS; the upper end is an SUV or pickup with forward-facing camera calibration and trim-specific features (HUD, heated wiper park, rain sensor). The estimator computes your exact number once you enter year + ZIP. Honda Sensing launched on the 2015 CR-V Touring and reached the 2016 Civic + Accord shortly after. Near-standard across the lineup by 2018. Calibration is dynamic — a road test with a scan tool — so mobile service works for most Honda jobs.
Kansas City sits in Jackson County, Missouri, and serves as the metro's primary commute hub, which means heavy daily mileage on the I-70 and I-35 corridors and a correspondingly high volume of rock-chip and crack damage from freeway debris. The city's vehicle mix skews broad, from older daily drivers to newer cars with camera-based driver-assist systems, so some replacements need ADAS recalibration while many older ones do not. Missouri is not a zero-deductible glass state, so a Kansas City replacement runs as a comprehensive insurance claim against your policy's deductible rather than free glass.
Good news
Insurance may cover most of the bill
If you have a $0 glass-coverage rider, out-of-pocket may be $0. Most standard comprehensive policies carry a $100–$500 deductible. Check your declarations page or ask the matched shop — if they offer direct billing (most do), they'll handle the claim with your insurer.
MarketRange™ estimate
$— – $—
How we got there
- Base Glass Installation
- $0
- Specialty Safety features
- included
- ADAS calibration
- + $0
- Typical KC-metro price
- $0
MarketRange is a planning range, not a shop quote. Built from distributor costs, vehicle complexity, and KC-metro labor. The matched shops below give you their actual prices — they confirm the exact glass and final price after seeing the car.
Honda pricing in Kansas City: what to expect
For a standard-tier vehicle like the Honda, the windshield itself is the primary cost driver — anywhere from $200 for older models to $1,200+ for newer ADAS-equipped vehicles. Kansas City's labor market sits right at the KC-metro baseline, so labor adds roughly $80–$120 on top of parts. ADAS calibration on 2016 and newer Honda models adds another $200–$500.
The popular Honda models we see most often in the Kansas City area are: Civic, Accord, CR-V, Pilot, Odyssey. Pricing within a make can swing significantly across these — a base trim of the Civic is typically the floor of the range; the top trim of the Odyssey is closer to the ceiling.
What varies inside the Honda lineup
Honda Sensing was bundled into nearly every trim from 2018 onward, so calibration is the assumption for any 2018+ Honda. The price split shows up at the model level: Civic and Accord glass is at the lower end of the range, CR-V and Pilot a step up, and Odyssey at the top because of the larger curved windshield. Pre-Sensing Hondas (most trims pre-2016) skip calibration entirely and use older flatter glass that is widely stocked aftermarket — meaningfully less expensive to replace.
Honda models we see in Kansas City: typical bands
Within the Honda lineup, body class drives most of the price variation. The sedan and hatch trims are at the lower end of the standard tier; the crossovers, SUVs, pickups, and minivans land higher because of larger glass and more involved install labor. ADAS calibration first appeared on these models in the years shown — anything earlier skips the $200–$500 calibration adder.
| Model | Body | All-in range | ADAS from |
|---|---|---|---|
| Honda Civic | Sedan | $300–$600 | 2016+ |
| Honda Accord | Sedan | $300–$600 | 2016+ |
| Honda CR-V | SUV/Crossover | $320–$700 | 2015+ |
| Honda Pilot | SUV/Crossover | $320–$700 | 2016+ |
| Honda Odyssey | Minivan | $330–$700 | 2018+ |
Bands are typical KC-metro pricing; the live estimator computes your exact price after you enter year and ZIP. Trim-specific features (HUD, heated wiper park, rain sensor, acoustic interlayer) can shift the final number within or slightly above the band.
Common Honda models in Kansas City and what changes the price
- Honda Civic (Sedan)
Pre-2016 Civics skip Honda Sensing calibration. 2016+ Touring has it standard; 2019+ across the lineup.
- Honda Accord (Sedan)
2016+ has Honda Sensing standard. 2023+ 11th gen uses a redesigned camera; new procedures still being refined at non-Honda shops.
- Honda CR-V (SUV/Crossover)
2015 CR-V Touring was the FIRST Honda Sensing vehicle. 2017+ EX and EX-L standard. LX often skipped pre-2020. 2023+ redesign uses a different windshield.
- Honda Pilot (SUV/Crossover)
Pre-2016 Pilots have no ADAS. 2016+ Touring/Elite has Honda Sensing; standard across the lineup from 2019.
- Honda Odyssey (Minivan)
2018+ Odysseys have Honda Sensing standard. Calibration is dynamic (road test).
ADAS calibration on your Honda
Honda was an early adopter of forward-facing ADAS, with widespread rollout starting in 2016. If your vehicle is 2016 or newer, calibration after windshield replacement is essentially required.
Honda uses dynamic calibration (scan-tool road test). This means the calibration happens on a road test with a scan tool plugged in, so mobile service is fine for most installs.
Insurance, OEM, and what to ask the shop
Most comprehensive auto policies in Missouri cover Honda windshield replacement with either a $0 deductible (if you have a glass-coverage rider) or your standard comprehensive deductible. The shop you choose can file the claim directly. See Kansas City, MO general windshield pricing for a broader breakdown.
For a standard-tier Honda, the OEM-vs-aftermarket question matters more than for an economy vehicle. Quality aftermarket glass is functionally identical to OEM on most Honda models and saves $100–$300. See the OEM vs aftermarket guide for the full breakdown.
Coverage in Kansas City
We match Honda owners in Kansas City with vetted KC-metro shops to choose from, covering all the surrounding ZIPs: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106, 64108, 64109, and 43 more. Most replacements in the Kansas City area can be scheduled same-day or next-business-day, with the shop you pick typically reaching out within 15 minutes during business hours after your estimate (the next business morning otherwise).
Ready to see your specific quote? Run the estimator at the top of the page. We'll route your details to a local shop with the right calibration capability for your Honda.
Honda in Kansas City: FAQ
How much is a Honda windshield replacement in Kansas City?
Honda windshield replacements in Kansas City, MO typically land in the $300-$700 all-in range, depending on body style, model year, and trim. A sedan without ADAS sits at the lower end; an SUV or pickup with forward-facing camera calibration and HUD lands toward the upper end. Run the estimator with your year and ZIP for a price specific to your vehicle.
Does my Honda need ADAS calibration?
If your Honda is a 2016 model year or newer, almost certainly yes. Honda typically uses dynamic calibration (scan-tool road test) after windshield replacement. Honda Sensing launched on the 2015 CR-V Touring and reached the 2016 Civic + Accord shortly after. Near-standard across the lineup by 2018. Calibration is dynamic — a road test with a scan tool — so mobile service works for most Honda jobs.
Will insurance cover my Honda windshield in Kansas City?
In most cases, yes. Comprehensive coverage handles glass damage from rocks, debris, and break-ins. Missouri does not mandate $0-deductible glass, so your out-of-pocket depends on your policy. With a glass-coverage rider you typically pay nothing; without, you pay your comprehensive deductible (usually $100-$500). Filing the claim does not raise rates.
Should I get OEM or aftermarket glass for my Honda?
For most Honda models, quality aftermarket glass is functionally identical to OEM and saves $100-$300. The exception is if your specific model year has a known calibration-sensitive camera (less common on Honda than on luxury brands).
Other vehicles in Kansas City
Honda in other KC metro cities