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Acura Integra Rear Glass Replacement Cost Factors, Insurance Questions, and Glass Options

April 26, 2026 · Bang AutoGlass Editorial Team

What You Need to Know Before Replacing the Rear Glass on an Acura Integra

A broken rear window on your Acura Integra is the kind of problem that demands immediate attention. Whether it happened overnight in a parking lot or during a rear-end collision, you're probably dealing with a shower of small glass cubes, an exposed interior, and a lot of unanswered questions about what comes next. This guide walks through everything that actually affects your Acura Integra rear glass replacement — the cost factors, the insurance process, the glass options, and the technical details that make this job more involved than a lot of owners expect.

Why the Acura Integra Rear Windshield Can't Be Repaired

The Acura Integra's rear windshield is made from tempered glass, which behaves very differently from the laminated glass used on front windshields. Tempered glass is designed to shatter completely into small, rounded cubes when it breaks — that's actually a safety feature, since it reduces the risk of jagged shards causing serious injury. But it also means there's no such thing as a rear glass repair on this vehicle. The moment the glass breaks, a full replacement is the only option.

This is worth understanding early because it changes how you think about minor damage. Even a small stress crack radiating from the edge of the rear window, or a chip that might seem trivial on a front windshield, can signal that the tempered glass is already compromised. Tempered glass can fail suddenly once that internal tension is disrupted. If you're seeing cracks at the corners or edges of your Acura Integra's rear window, don't wait — have it evaluated before the whole pane goes at once.

Common Causes of Rear Glass Damage on the Integra

Vandalism and break-ins are among the most frequent reasons Integra owners need an Acura Integra back windshield replacement. Tempered rear glass is a common target for theft because a single strike causes the entire pane to collapse quickly and quietly. Road debris — rocks kicked up by trucks or construction equipment — is another frequent culprit, especially at highway speeds. Rear-end collisions can also compromise the rear glass even when the damage to the body panels looks minor.

Beyond those obvious causes, some owners first notice something is wrong through subtler signs: a whistling sound at highway speeds that wasn't there before, condensation building up inside near the rear corners, or a defroster grid that suddenly stops working. These can all indicate that the glass seal has failed or the glass itself has developed a crack you haven't spotted yet.

Sedan vs. Hatchback: Why Body Style Matters for Glass Fitment

The current-generation Acura Integra — the 2023, 2024, and 2025 models — is offered in two distinct body styles: a four-door sedan and a five-door hatchback. This matters a great deal when it comes to rear glass replacement, because the two variants use entirely different glass profiles. The hatchback features a larger, more steeply raked rear glass with an integrated wiper, while the sedan uses a more traditional backglass shape without a rear wiper.

Using the wrong glass part — even one that looks close — can result in improper sealing, water leaks into the trunk or cargo area, wind noise at speed, and potentially issues with the defroster grid connections. Before any Acura Integra rear window replacement is ordered or scheduled, confirming your exact body style is a necessary first step, not a formality. A good technician will verify this during the quoting process to make sure the correct part is sourced.

Features Built Into the Rear Glass You Need to Know About

The Embedded Defroster Grid

The Acura Integra's rear glass includes an embedded electric defroster — those horizontal lines you see printed across the inside of the glass. When rear glass is replaced, the defroster connectors must be properly reconnected and tested. A replacement glass that meets OEM specifications will have the correct grid layout and connector points to restore full defroster function. After your Acura Integra rear defroster replacement, a technician should verify the grid is working before calling the job complete. If it's not checked, you might not find out the defroster isn't working until you need it in cold or humid weather.

The Embedded Antenna

Many Integra rear windows also carry an embedded antenna for radio and connectivity systems. Like the defroster, this antenna requires proper reconnection during installation. If it isn't reconnected correctly, you may notice degraded radio reception or connectivity issues after the replacement — problems that are easy to miss initially but frustrating once you're back on the road. Verifying antenna function is part of a complete, professional rear glass installation.

ADAS and Camera Considerations After Rear Glass Replacement

The current-generation Acura Integra comes equipped with Acura's full suite of active safety features, which includes a rearview camera system. Depending on how the rearview camera is positioned relative to the rear glass assembly and trim, replacing the back glass may require camera inspection and recalibration following Acura's service procedures. This isn't optional — if the camera's mounting position or angle is disturbed during the glass removal and installation process, the rearview image can be skewed in ways that aren't always obvious at a glance but affect how accurately the system guides you while reversing.

There's another ADAS consideration worth knowing about. Acura's Blind Spot Information system uses sensors located in the quarter panels near the rear bumper area. While these sensors aren't part of the glass itself, any repair work in that general area — including rear glass replacement, especially if paired with any related trim or body work — should prompt a technician to verify sensor alignment. Honda and Acura's own position on collision and glass repair recommends pre- and post-repair electronic scanning to confirm all safety systems are functioning correctly. This is the kind of step that a thorough, qualified installer will include in the process, not skip over.

What Affects the Cost of Acura Integra Rear Glass Replacement

When customers ask about Acura Integra back glass cost, the honest answer is that several factors combine to determine the final price — and they vary enough that a single flat number doesn't apply to every situation. Here's what actually moves the price on this specific vehicle:

  • Body style: Sedan and hatchback glass are different parts with different sourcing costs.
  • Glass quality: OEM-quality glass that meets Acura's specifications for defroster grid layout, antenna embedding, and dimensional accuracy typically costs more than budget aftermarket alternatives, but it's what ensures everything works correctly after installation.
  • ADAS recalibration: If rearview camera recalibration is required after your replacement, that adds to the overall cost — but skipping it when it's needed creates a safety risk that isn't worth the savings.
  • Mobile vs. shop service: Mobile service eliminates the hassle of transporting a vehicle with no rear glass, which is both inconvenient and potentially unsafe.
  • Insurance coverage: Whether you're paying out of pocket or going through a comprehensive claim significantly affects your actual out-of-pocket expense.
  • Model year: Parts availability and pricing can vary across the 2023, 2024, and 2025 Integra model years as supply chains shift.

The safest approach is to get an accurate quote based on your specific vehicle — year, body style, and trim level — rather than relying on a general number you find online that may not apply to your situation.

Does Auto Insurance Cover Acura Integra Rear Window Replacement?

In many cases, yes — but the specific answer depends on the coverage you carry and the circumstances of the damage. Comprehensive coverage is the part of an auto insurance policy that typically covers non-collision glass damage, including vandalism, break-ins, and road debris strikes. If your Integra's rear glass was broken in any of those scenarios and you carry comprehensive coverage, there's a good chance your policy will cover the replacement either fully or after your deductible.

If the rear glass was broken in a rear-end collision where another driver was at fault, their liability coverage or your collision coverage may apply instead. The right coverage to use depends on the details of how the damage happened.

One common question is whether filing a glass claim will raise your insurance rates. Glass claims under comprehensive coverage generally don't affect premiums the same way at-fault collision claims do, but insurance policies vary and it's worth confirming with your own provider before assuming. If you haven't started the claim process yet and aren't sure where to begin, Bang AutoGlass can assist you in working through it — though the claim itself is filed through your insurance company directly.

Can You Drive Your Integra Right After the Rear Glass Is Replaced?

This is one of the most common questions after an Acura Integra back glass mobile replacement, and the answer involves understanding how the adhesive works. Professional rear glass installation uses a urethane adhesive to seal the glass into the vehicle's frame. That adhesive needs time to cure fully before it can be stressed by driving — and full cure typically takes longer than most people expect, often in the range of one to two days depending on conditions like temperature and humidity.

In practice, most replacements reach a safe-to-drive threshold in a shorter window, and your technician will give you guidance specific to your installation and conditions. But driving aggressively, going through a car wash, or slamming the trunk or hatch shortly after installation can compromise the seal before it's fully set. Following the post-installation instructions your technician provides protects both the seal and the glass itself.

What to Expect From a Mobile Rear Glass Replacement

Bang AutoGlass provides mobile auto glass service in Arizona and Florida, which means a technician comes to your location — your home, your workplace, wherever is most convenient — rather than requiring you to drive a vehicle that has no rear window.

Here's a general overview of how the mobile replacement process works for an Acura Integra rear window:

  1. Scheduling: You contact Bang AutoGlass and provide your vehicle details — year, body style, and any known features like the defroster or camera setup. Next-day appointments are available when scheduling allows.
  2. Glass sourcing: The correct replacement glass is confirmed and sourced based on your specific body style and model year — sedan and hatchback parts are different and are verified before the appointment.
  3. Old glass removal: The technician carefully removes the shattered or damaged glass and clears out any remaining fragments from the frame and surrounding trim.
  4. Frame prep and adhesive application: The frame is cleaned and prepped, and industry-approved urethane adhesive is applied before the new glass is set into position.
  5. Reconnection and testing: Defroster connections and antenna leads are reconnected and tested. Any required camera inspection or calibration steps are addressed.
  6. Cure and post-install guidance: The technician walks you through the cure period expectations and any specific instructions for driving the vehicle safely afterward.

The glass removal and installation itself typically takes around 30 to 45 minutes, though the total time at your location can vary depending on the vehicle's specific setup and whether any additional steps like camera recalibration are required. Every Bang AutoGlass replacement includes a lifetime workmanship warranty and uses OEM-quality materials, so you're not trading speed for quality when you go mobile.

OEM-Quality Glass and Why It Matters on the Integra

It might be tempting to look for the cheapest available glass when you're already dealing with the stress of a broken rear window, but the quality of the replacement glass has real, practical consequences on the Acura Integra. OEM-quality rear glass is manufactured to match the original specifications for the defroster grid pattern, the antenna embedding, the glass thickness, and the exact dimensional profile of your body style. Glass that doesn't meet those specs can result in a defroster that doesn't fully heat the grid, an antenna connection that degrades your radio signal, or a fitment gap that lets water and wind noise into the cabin.

On a vehicle like the Integra — which is engineered with tight tolerances and an active safety suite — cutting corners on the glass itself tends to create problems that surface weeks or months after the installation, not immediately. Getting the right glass from the start is genuinely the more cost-effective approach over time.

Getting Your Acura Integra's Rear Glass Replaced the Right Way

Acura Integra rear glass replacement involves more moving parts than a lot of owners realize going in — from confirming the correct glass for your specific body style to making sure the defroster, antenna, and camera systems all come back online correctly after installation. The good news is that when it's done right, by a technician who understands the vehicle and uses the correct materials, the process is straightforward and the result is a sealed, fully functional rear window that looks and performs like the original.

If your Integra's rear glass is broken, cracked, or showing signs of seal failure, getting it addressed promptly protects your interior from weather damage and keeps your safety systems operating as designed. Reach out to Bang AutoGlass to get an accurate quote for your specific year and body style, and to get the scheduling process started.

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